Rancid (2000 album)
Rancid (also known as Rancid 5 or Rancid 2000) is the eponymous fifth studio album by the American punk rock band Rancid. It is the second eponymous album and was released on August 1, 2000 through frontman Tim Armstrong's label, Hellcat Records. It was the band's first album released through Hellcat. It is Rancid's most hardcore offering to date, which was released as a follow-up to the more ska and reggae oriented Life Won't Wait. It spans 22 tracks in under 40 minutes, resulting in over 3/4 of the songs clocking at under 2 minutes. The Japanese version includes one bonus track, "Sick Sick World". Songs on the album make reference to famous gangster Al Capone, as well as Norse God Loki, John Brown, Ulysses S. Grant, Nelson Mandela, Charles Van Doren, Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and Don Giovanni. Brett Gurewitz (Bad Religion) reunited with Rancid and became their producer for this album. It was 6 years since he co-produced the band's second album Let's Go (1994), although he engineered the band's third album, …And Out Come the Wolves (1995). Rancid and Gurewitz would continue their collaboration for their next three albums, Indestructible, Let the Dominoes Fall and their upcoming album which is supposed to be released in 2012.
Reception
The album received mostly positive reviews, though it failed to meet the success of Rancid's three previous albums. Rick Anderson of Allmusic noted "After several fine, if rather derivative, albums of ska-inflected punk rock, and after years of being criticized for relying unduly on gestures lifted from the Clash, Rancid has come roaring out with the harshest and most consistent album of their career. It wouldn't be entirely accurate to say that they've left their influences behind; rather, they've integrated them more completely and created a sound that is completely satisfying without having to prove anything about its own originality. That sound ends up being something like a cross between the Clash circa 1978 and the hardcore punk of the early-'80s Los Angeles scene. "Rwanda" is a stutter-step anthem of sympathy for a devastated country; "Corruption" has an atonal power-chord progression and headlong tempo that Minor Threat would have killed for; and "Blackhawk Down" is built on a ridiculously catchy descending bassline and a distinctly Oi!-flavored singalong chorus. No ska, no reggae, no dub, just 22 tracks in 38 minutes with barely a pause between songs and high tempos all the way. If you're looking for artistic subtlety, go back to the catalog; if all you need is a half-hour of undiluted adrenaline, you've come to the right place."[4]
Track listing
All songs written and composed by Tim Armstrong, except where noted.
Lead vocals |
1. |
"Don Giovanni" |
Armstrong |
0:35 |
2. |
"Disgruntled" |
Armstrong |
1:00 |
3. |
"It's Quite Alright" |
Armstrong |
1:29 |
4. |
"Let Me Go" |
Armstrong |
3:13 |
5. |
"I Am Forever" |
Frederiksen |
1:04 |
6. |
"Poison" |
Armstrong |
1:17 |
7. |
"Loki" |
Frederiksen |
0:47 |
8. |
"Blackhawk Down" |
Armstrong |
1:41 |
9. |
"Rwanda" |
Armstrong |
1:20 |
10. |
"Corruption" (written by Armstrong, Lars Frederiksen, Matt Freeman) |
Frederiksen, Freeman, Armstrong |
1:50 |
11. |
"Antennas" |
Armstrong |
1:10 |
12. |
"Rattlesnake" |
Armstrong |
1:42 |
13. |
"Not to Regret" |
Armstrong |
2:16 |
14. |
"Radio Havana" |
Armstrong |
3:42 |
15. |
"Axiom" (written by Armstrong, Frederiksen, Freeman) |
Frederiksen |
1:40 |
16. |
"Black Derby Jacket" (written by Freeman) |
Freeman |
2:35 |
17. |
"Meteor of War" |
Armstrong |
1:21 |
18. |
"Dead Bodies" (written by Armstrong, Frederiksen) |
Frederiksen |
1:49 |
19. |
"Rigged on a Fix" (written by Freeman) |
Freeman |
1:16 |
20. |
"Young Al Capone" (written by Frederiksen) |
Frederiksen |
1:52 |
21. |
"Reconciliation" (written by Freeman) |
Freeman |
1:20 |
22. |
"GGF (Golden Gate Fields)" |
Armstrong |
3:39 |
23. |
"Sick Sick World" |
1:18 |
Total length:
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38:24 |
Personnel
References
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Studio albums |
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EPs |
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Other albums |
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Singles |
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Related articles |
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