| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 24629 (lower is better) |
| Price as of: | 12/01/2008 7:10:32 PM MST |
| Price Used: | $3.99 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Release Date: | 2003-08-19 |
| Label: | Epitaph |
| UPC: | 093624852926 |
| Binding: | Audio CD |
| Published By: | Epitaph |
| ASIN: | B0000AI44R |
| Category: | Music |
Tracks on Indestructible by Epitaph
- Indestructible
- Fall Back Down
- Red Hot Moon
- David Courtney
- Start Now
- Out of Control
- Django
- Arrested in Shanghai
- Travis Bickle
- Memphis
- Spirit of '87
- Ghost Band
- Tropical London
- Roadblock
- Born Frustrated
- Back Up Against the Wall
- Ivory Coast
- Stand Your Ground
- Otherside
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Album Description
Rancid, one of rock's most influential indie bands of the 90s, finally makes its major-label debut with indestructible, it's first album in three years. 19 tracks packaged in digipak format. Hellcat. 2003.
Amazon.com
Where Rancid's eponymous 2000 album saw the band attempting to re-seize the moral high ground by aping the hardcore sound of the early 1980s, Indestructible is a return to the eclectic mix of their own breakthrough album And Out Come the Wolves. Thus "Red Hot Moon" and "Memphis" are melancholy, Clash-inspired grooves, "Arrested in Shanghai" and "Back Up Against the Wall" are melodic pop rock, while "Out of Control" and "Born Frustrated" are screaming punk assaults. Their politics, naturally, remain sound, as evinced by "Ivory Coast" and the anti-violence anthem "Spirit of '87". --Dominic Wills
Customer Reviews
Indestructible? - Reviewed on 2007-03-15
1 customer found this review helpful.
In spite a bigger production than before and distribution to Warner Bros., "Indestructible" is very much a Rancid record. And pretty much every sound you enjoyed from them is on here. It's not even that bad a starting point from the band. It wasn't intentional, but this was my first full album from the band (found this one at a local library). I enjoyed the variety of the tracks and the band's energy and execution through the record. There is even a few songs that show a more mature side of the group that wasn't even so much present on the predecessors.
How you enjoy the record will depend on what type of fan you are. If you were disappointed that LP5 was not enough in the more ska route of "Life," then I think you may find this as a slight redemption. However you slice it though, to say the whole thing's aggressive and/or the whole thing's soft is very much wrong. They do both of these things and more on the record.
The record starts (title tracks) and ends ("Otherside") with a bang. The first track in particular is one of their greatest songs ever written and performed. Then elsewhere you get some nice ska on the likes of "Red Hot Moon," hardcore on tracks like the awesome "Out of Control," and you'll be singing along with catchy tracks like "Spirit of '87" and "Born Frustrated," even with the politic-themed lyrics in both. The pop-rock tracks in "Start Now" and "Arrested in Shanghai" are something I hadn't heard before in Rancid, even after going through their back catalog. It adds a nice melodic side to them and is not totally edgeless, either.
Admittedly, there are a few tracks that they could've done without on the record, even if none were terrible. But they are sub-par tracks nonetheless. "Memphis" sounds just a bit too much like a re-hash "Journey to the End of East Bay" from their "...wolves" album, and I'd rather listen to that album if I were to listen to that song. "Roadblock" does nothing for me and is kind of boring.
Some people will argue that this is the band's weakest recording. I don't know about that, they haven't ever made less than a four-star album by my standards, so I guess I'd feel as though I were splitting hairs on that one. I think I like it a bit more than the eponymous debut though. This album has more mmph that that one didn't always have.
great album - Reviewed on 2006-12-11
2 customers found this review not to be helpful.
this isn't so much a punk record as it is a soulful and truly redeeming rock album. It seems like these guys were inspired by Lou Reed's "New York", but I could be wrong. I couldn't believe someone here actually thinks the Dropkick Murphies and Flogging Molly are "real" punk bands. I wouldn't call this "real" punk, or really even "punk" at all so much as just good rock music. for real punk, try listening to the Virus(RIP), Defiance, Cro-mags,lower class brats, the adicts, black flag, minor threat, the aplicators(pop candy, but still decent all-chick band), XXXdeathstarXX(hardcore), the scapegoats(johnson county's finest, and personal friends of mine), the unseen, old Varukers, GG Alline(america's most sincere transgressive artist and advocate of hate and misanthropy- RIP),etc...early norwegian black metal is also pretty cool because it embodies the DIY attitude, abrasive low-fi recording, and true hardcore values i.e. mayhem, darkthrone, and emperor.
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Book Subjects
- Pop
- Pop/Rock Music
- Punk
- Punk Revival
- Punk-Pop
- Rock
- Ska-Punk