The Suicide Machines (album)

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The Suicide Machines
The Suicide Machines cover
Studio album by The Suicide Machines
Released February 15, 2000
Recorded 1999-2000
Genre Punk rock, Pop punk
Label Hollywood Records
Producer Julian Raymond
Professional reviews
The Suicide Machines chronology
Battle Hymns
(1998)
The Suicide Machines
(2000)
Steal This Record
(2001)

The Suicide Machines is the third album by the Detroit, Michigan punk rock band The Suicide Machines, released in 2000 by Hollywood Records. It was the band's first album with drummer Ryan Vandeberghe, replacing Derek Grant who had left the group the previous year. The album's musical direction shifted away from the ska punk and hardcore styles of their previous albums and exhibited heavy pop influence, leading many to classify the album as pop punk. A music video was filmed for the single "Sometimes I Don't Mind," which reached #27 on Billboard's Modern Rock charts.[1] The album itself ranked at #188 on the Billboard 200.

The album's closing track, "I Never Promised You a Rose Garden," was originally recorded for the soundtrack to the 1998 movie SLC Punk and was included on the film's soundtrack album.

Contents

[edit] Track listing

All songs written by The Suicide Machines except where noted

  1. "Sometimes I Don't Mind"
  2. "Permanent Holiday"
  3. "The Fade Away"
  4. "Too Many Words"
  5. "No Sale"
  6. "Green"
  7. "Extraordinary"
  8. "I Hate Everything"
  9. "All Out"
  10. "Perfect Day"
  11. "Sincerity"
  12. "Reasons"
  13. "Goodbye for Now"
  14. "I Never Promised You a Rose Garden" (written & originally performed by Joe South)

[edit] Performers

[edit] Album information

[edit] References

  1. ^ Billboard.com. Retrieved on 2007-3-19.