Showing posts with label rollins band. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rollins band. Show all posts

28 January 2024

GONE All The Dirt That's Fit To Print 1994

 


Discogs

 

Gone is an instrumental trio put together in 1986 by guitarist Greg Ginn. The group was originally rounded out by Andrew Weiss (bass) and Sim Cain (drums). After recording 2 albums and touring heavily, Ginn disbanded the group in 1987 to concentrate on running SST Records. Weiss and Cain would soon join the Rollins Band. In the early 1990s, Ginn revived the group with a new rhythm section and recorded several more albums before going on haitus in 1998 (coinciding with the start of a long period of hibernation for SST Records). Ginn revived the Gone name again in 2008, this time with himself handling both the guitar and bass duties and, for the first time, featuring vocals (provided by H.R. of Bad Brains fame).

 

Tracklist

1
Upward Spiral1:02
2
Mutilated Fade3:17
3
Damage Control2:52
4
Kattiwompus3:32
5
390513:10
6
White Tail3:29
7
Crawdad2:19
8
Meet Me In The Van2:44
9
Bosco Pit2:18
10
Huntin' With A Rich Man4:32
11
4 A.M.5:07
12
Picket Fence Asylum1:11

 

29 August 2021

GODMONEY (MOTION PICTURE SOUNDTRACK) Various Artists 1997


 

Discogs

 

Tracklist

1PennywisePeaceful Day

2MxPxDoing Time

3DescendentsLucky

4StavesacreTranewreck

5Chance 22Hollow

6Stanford Prison ExperimentThe Accomplice

7Rollins BandSaying Goodbye Again

8Down By Law (2)Independence Day

9FarsideHope You're Unhappy

10Dance Hall CrashersNuisance

11Blink 182*Voyeur

12AFIWake Up Call

13Slick ShoesRusty

14GuttermouthA Day At The Office

15Ten Foot PoleIt's Not Me

16MxPxSmall Town Minds

17Voodoo Glow SkullsYou Don't Have A Clue

18GuttermouthCut Off

19FiresideSucking The Dust

20Living SacrificeReject

21StrifeUntitled

22FarAll Go Down

 

13 September 2020

SMOKIN' SUMMER SAMPLER '97 - Various Artists 1997

 

 

Tracklist

1 Veruca Salt Shutterbug (Clean Version)
2 The Seahorses Love Is The Law (Rock Edit)
3 Days Of The New Touch, Peel And Stand (Edit)
4 Melony Big Dipper (LP Version)
5 Black Lab Wash It Away (LP Version)
6 Misfits Dig Up Her Bones (LP Version)
7 Rollins Band The End Of Something (Edit)
8 Snot Stoopid (Radio Version)
9 Powerman 5000 Tokyo Vigilante #1 (Edit)
10Manbreak Ready Or Not (Radio Edit)
 

22 March 2010

ROLLINS BAND The End of Silence 1992

 


Discogs


Rollins Band Biography by Greg Prato

Almost immediately after the legendary punk/hardcore band Black Flag called it quits in 1987, lead singer Henry Rollins issued his first solo releases, Hot Animal Machine and Drive By Shooting (the latter an EP credited to Henrieta Collins & the Wifebeating Childhaters), featuring longtime friend Chris Haskett on guitar, bassist Bernie Wandel, and drummer Mick Green. But Rollins missed being part of a true band, hence the formation of the Rollins Band. Similar in style to the Flag's latter direction (Sabbath-esque riff-heavy hardcore metal), the Rollins Band enlisted ex-Gone members Sim Cain (drums) and Andrew Weiss (bass), while Haskett remained onboard. The group quickly made a name for themselves with their explosive concerts and nonstop touring, as soundman Theo Van Rock signed on as well (Van Rock's contributions were so great that he was often credited as a fifth member of the band).

A steady stream of releases followed: 1988's Life Time (produced by Fugazi's Ian MacKaye), 1989's Do It and Hard Volume, as well as the 1990 live set Turned On. 1990 also saw the release of Fast Food for Thought, a one-off experimental side project by Rollins and Weiss, dubbed Wartime. But the Rollins Band caught their big break when Perry Farrell invited them to join his inaugural Lollapalooza festival tour in the summer of 1991 (which also included such acts as Nine Inch Nails, Living Colour, Ice-T, Siouxse & the Banshees, and headliner Jane's Addiction). Opening up the day's multi-band concert proved to be quite a challenge -- playing in the baking early afternoon heat while concert-goers were still arriving -- but the thousands who had never even heard of the Rollins Band were now well aware of the group's gripping, thought-provoking heavy rock. The buzz on the band was growing and their next release, 1992's The End of Silence (their first for Imago Records), proved to be their best-selling album thus far, spawning such popular MTV videos as "Low Self Opinion" and "Tearing," while Henry Rollins began appearing regularly on the network as a guest VJ or on specialty programs.

Weiss left the band after the tour in support of End of Silence wrapped up (later turning up on releases by the Butthole Surfers, Helios Creed, Yoko Ono, Pigface, and Ween) and was replaced by New York City funk bassist Melvin Gibbs, recommended by Living Colour's Vernon Reid. The Rollins Band's 1994 release Weight proved to be the biggest hit of their career, due to MTV's heavy rotation of the striking Anton Corbijn-directed clip for "Liar" (which saw Rollins wearing different costumes and, at several points, covered from head to toe in red paint). A memorable appearance at Woodstock '94 followed shortly thereafter as the band continued their relentless touring schedule. 1997 saw the release of the band's debut for the massive DreamWorks label, Come in and Burn, but stagnation began setting in and Rollins dismissed his bandmates shortly after the conclusion of its supporting tour. Haskett later played on David Bowie's Hours, as well as continuing a solo career, while the others showed up on other artists' records as well. The stopgap live set, Live in Australia 1990, was issued in 1999 as Henry Rollins assembled a whole new Rollins Band lineup consisting of L.A. rockers Mother Superior. 2000's Get Some Go Again was the new lineup's first album together.


Tracklist

1
Low Self Opinion5:24
2
Grip4:50
3
Tearing4:58
4
You Didn't Need5:30
5
Almost Real8:03
6
Obscene8:50
7
What Do You Do7:22
8
Blues Jam11:46
9
Another Life4:51
10
Just Like You10:56