- Little Man With a Gun in His Hand
- Political Song For Michael Jackson to Sing
- I Felt Like a Gringo
- Jesus and Tequila
- Courage
- King of the Hill
- Bermuda
- No One
- Mr. Robot's Holy Orders
- Ack Ack Ack
- History Lesson Part Two
- This Ain't No Picnic
- The Cheerleaders
- Time
- Cut
- Split Red
- Shit You Hear at Parties
- Hell
- Tour-Spiel
- Take Our Test
- The Punch Line
- Search
- Bob Dylan Wrote Propaganda Songs
- Badges
- Tension
- If Reagan Played Disco
- No! No! No! To Draft and War/Joe McCarthy's
5
1
0018861006819
Mike Watt Bass,Vocals
George Hurley Drums
D. Boon Guitar,Vocals
Carlos Cavazo Composer
Frankie Banali Composer
Fluke Composer
Richard Hell Composer
Richard Andrews Editing
Mike Watt Composer,Producer,Liner Notes
Chuck Dukowski Composer
Robert Smith Composer
Howard Rosenberg Photography
Martin Tamburovich Composer
Trevor Rabin Composer
Paul Shortino Composer
Kendall Jones Composer
Boris Williams Composer
Kira Roessler Composer
Joe Carducci Composer
John Golden Editing,Mastering
Porl Thompson Composer
Roky Erickson Composer
Perry Bamonte Composer
The Tragically Hip Composer
George Hurley Composer
Gilli Moon Composer
Simon Gallup Composer


Vinyl LP(Long Playing Record)
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Overview
Before they had even released 3-Way Tie for Last in the fall of 1985, the Minutemen had blocked out plans for their next album, which was to be a sprawling three-LP set featuring three sides of studio material and three sides of live recordings. Initial pressings of 3-Way Tie included a ballot so fans could vote for the songs to be included on the live half of the upcoming album; the tragic death of D. Boon meant the Minutemen would never make another studio album, but Mike Watt and George Hurley compiled the ballots sent in by fans and used the results as the basis for this album, which uses radio broadcasts, studio outtakes, rehearsal tapes, and audience recordings to assemble a final tribute to their fallen comrade. As you might expect, the quality of the sound varies quite a bit from track to track (though there's nothing as awful as the stuff on side two of The Politics of Time), and there are a few items here that were outtakes for a good reason (like the overlong version of "Mr. Robot's Holy Orders" or the spontaneous soundtrack improvisation "Hell"). But for the most part, Ballot Result is a fitting memorial that makes clear the Minutemen were just as strong onstage as they were in the studio and that their songs were smart, provocative, adventurous, and stand up well to the test of time. The fiery first side of material from the WREK-FM broadcast previously bootlegged on Just a Minute, Men alone makes this album well worth owning, and there are plenty of other gems scattered through the rest of the set. Ballot Result is hardly the ideal Minutemen live album, but it offers tangible evidence that they were one of the greatest American bands of their time, and that's not an accomplishment to be sneezed at. ~ Mark Deming
Product Details
Release Date: | 10/17/1990 |
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Label: | Sst |
UPC: | 0018861006819 |
Tracks
Album Credits
Performance Credits
Minutemen Primary ArtistMike Watt Bass,Vocals
George Hurley Drums
D. Boon Guitar,Vocals
Technical Credits
D. Boon ComposerCarlos Cavazo Composer
Frankie Banali Composer
Fluke Composer
Richard Hell Composer
Richard Andrews Editing
Mike Watt Composer,Producer,Liner Notes
Chuck Dukowski Composer
Robert Smith Composer
Howard Rosenberg Photography
Martin Tamburovich Composer
Trevor Rabin Composer
Paul Shortino Composer
Kendall Jones Composer
Boris Williams Composer
Kira Roessler Composer
Joe Carducci Composer
John Golden Editing,Mastering
Porl Thompson Composer
Roky Erickson Composer
Perry Bamonte Composer
The Tragically Hip Composer
George Hurley Composer
Gilli Moon Composer
Simon Gallup Composer
From the B&N Reads Blog
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