| | Against All Authority All Fall Down CD Against All Authority Discography of CDs
(4 Customer Reviews)
The follow-up to their debut album, Destroy What Destroys You, All Fall Down consists of more politicized ska-punk from Florida's Against All Authority. The band can get preachy at times, but the conviction on display here is refreshing. Ska purists should note that the music owes just as much to punk, if not more. ~ Steve Huey
Photographer: Brian Baisch.
Unknown Contributor Role: Jeremy Kaiser.
Personnel: Danny Lore (vocals, guitar); Joe Koontz (guitar); Tim Coats (brass); Kris King (drums).
Recording information: West Beach Recorders.
Against All Authority All Fall Down Songs All Fall Down Music Review Purchase All Fall Down CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Anti-Flag Die For The Government CD (1996)
All Fall Down album
$10.45 Admittedly, it's strange that an old school-sounding punk trio would criticize punk scene denizens thusly: "Covered in leather, or plaid patches, or metal studs/Your hair is dyed or spiked with glue/You only talk to those who look and act the way you do/You scoff at how the cops treat you/But they're no worse than dicks like you!" ("Punk by the Book"). ...
| | Less Than Jake Hello Rockview CD (1998)
All Fall Down CD music
$11.69
| | Against All Authority 24 Hour Roadside Resistance CD (2000)
All Fall Down music CDs
$11.85
| | Skatenigs Stupid People Shouldn't Breed CD (1992)
All Fall Down songs
$9.79 A strange album, this one -- or maybe not so strange in light of the future, but still odd. Whatever bandleader Phil Owen was on at the time, it helped in creating an album that in its own way almost predicted nu metal, though without that particular compressed explosion Ross Robinson brought on the production front to Korn and Limp Bizkit. Instead, it's an uncredited Al Jourgensen effort that, with the occasional samples and general noise level, is pretty well in keeping with his contemporaneous Ministry and particularly Revolting Cocks work, though without the chaotic level of detail expected from those bands. Songs like the catchy enough riffing of "Chemical Imbalance" are more straight-ahead charges that aren't industrial rock, per se, and the trebly sound on "Shit Authority" suggest demos only slightly cleaned up. If anything, Stupid People Shouldn't Breed is a more hip-hop dabbling and less completely powerful romp through what Pantera was getting up to -- and if more of the album sounded like that band's ...
| | Fury Of The Aquabats CD (1997)
All Fall Down album
$11.99 The Aquabats' second album, The Fury ...
| | Choking Victim No Gods, No Managers CD (1999)
All Fall Down CD music
$10.59 Well, it's about time! After three singles and lord knows how many years of squatting on the East Coast, Choking Victim has finally released an album on Epitaph. Of course, this doesn't mean that they'll be off the streets anytime soon, but at least they'll have that occasional royalty check coming in to pay for their beer money. So with No Gods, No Managers, the artwork is covered with blasphemous symbols that range from upside-down crosses to pentagrams to drawings of the dark lord himself. The addition of many ...
| | Trojan Box Set: Singles CDs (1999) Remastered
All Fall Down music CDs
$14.15 Showcasing a decade of the Trojan label, from 1968-1978, the sleeve notes claim this three-CD box set is "an ideal introduction to the company's output." However, this is a rather disingenuous statement considering that a number of the label's biggest stars are missing, and there's few enduring hits to be had within. So once again, Trojan offers up a box that is not really what fans want, yet inevitably contains tracks they need, scooping up minor hits and rarities, the crucial and the disposable willy-nilly. As is all too typical, no attention is paid to sound quality, and a number of the tracks are taken off vinyl, with the Silverstars' badly scratched "Old Man Say" reaching a nadir of virtual unlistenability. For non-specialists, the points of entry are the Maytals' exuberant "54-56 That's My Number," Derrick Morgan's inspired reggae remodel of his ska classic "Fat Man," and Ken Boothe's pop-soul delight "Keep My Love From Fading." Most everything else will draw a blank, although the many names of artists and bands will convince fans to take a chance. Disc one, which covers 1968-1969, includes such small masterpieces as Clancy Eccles' devaluation classic "Bangarang Crash," the Silvertones' harmony-laden "Promises," and two excellent numbers from former Paragon vocalist Tyrone Evans. Scintillating instrumental versions are strewn across this disc and the entire box. Disc two, culling from 1970-1973, boasts a pair of soulful singles from the much underrated Joe White, two songs from the always-fabulous Jackie Edwards, and the Deltones' phenomenal cover of "I'll Take You There." By this point in time, Trojan was moving toward a much more mass-market sound, a style that both the Pioneers' offerings amply illustrate. Disc three, which encompasses the remaining five years, takes this style to its obvious conclusion. It's an acquired taste, but for those who like their reggae light and their production slick, there's a treasure trove of tracks here -- and a comedy of errors. John Holt's "Reggae From the Ghetto" ...
| | Morgan Heritage Protect Us Jah CD (1997)
All Fall Down songs
$9.99
| | Frankie Paul 20 Massive Hits CD (1990)
All Fall Down album
$9.79 The title is a misnomer; there aren't 20 Massive Hits here, not that even that many would begin to do justice to Frankie Paul's prolific propensity for placing discs in the charts. A more appropriate title would be 20 Classic Vintage Cuts, because that is what you get. With a distinct lack of information provided, buyers are left to work out for themselves just what they're getting. And what precisely is that? A set drawn exclusively from the mid-'80s, and culling mainly from three magnificent Paul albums, one cut for Junjo Lawes, and the other two for George Phang. The Lawes cuts bundle up five numbers off the singer's mighty Pass the Tu-Sheng-Peng set, backed by the Roots Radics and including the smash hit title track (under an alternate spelling), the equally impressive "Jump No Fence" (retitled "Curfew in the Dace"), the magnificent "War Is in the Dance" (aka "Worries in the Dance"), ...
| | Reggae Platynum 2002: Renaissance Mix Tape, Vol. 4 CDs (2002)
All Fall Down CD music
$14.39
| | Josh White, Jr Heritage Of Music CD (2003)
All Fall Down music CDs
$6.59
| | Great Melodies Of The 50'S CD (2005)
All Fall Down songs
$9.79 Acrobat's Great Melodies of the 50s spotlights 25 of the era's top pop hits. Among the highlights are "Swedish Rhapsody" ...
| | Oscar Peterson At Newport CD (1958) Remastered
All Fall Down album
$8.09
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