×
Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.
For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.
0045778648122
$12.64
$12.99
Save 3%
Current price is $12.64, Original price is $12.99. You Save 3%.
View All Available Formats & Editions

CD
Members save with free shipping everyday!
See details
See details
12.64
In Stock
Overview
To hear it told, the reason why yet another Descendents reunion happened might have been because Epitaph wasn't going to sign All on their own. Then again, it all depends on who one talks to. Regardless of rationale or the nagging suspicion that the mid-'90s breakthrough of Green Day and the Offspring was the only reason this album got recorded, one fact remains: take this out of its surrounding context and this was and is a prime Descendents album. All the humor and heart-on-sleeve showcasing one could hope for are here, and if the band is essentially just All with Aukerman back on vocals, said band had been playing the old Descendents classics for long enough to know their way around great pop-punk, straight up. Aukerman's not the snot-nosed brat from Milo Goes to College anymore, of course, but as the logical continuation of his half-goofy/half-emotional persona from the mid-'80s he's more than fine. All it takes to demonstrate that is to hear the great, affecting "I'm the One," a perfect tug-the-heartstrings hooky roar, immediately followed by the half-minute long jokey romp "Coffee Mug." All the band members write one thing or another throughout, an admirable democracy that follows the everyone-does-something approach found on earlier albums, and the hits outweigh the misses -- anyone dismissing this as just like any other pop-punk around misses the point that these characters helped found it as much as anyone! That the Descendents aren't interested in simply rehashing the past comes up more than once. Consider "Caught," which uses certain allegations about President Clinton (at least the earlier ones) as a starting point on responsibility and truth, and the just wistful and wondering enough "When I Get Old" ("will I still hate the cops/and have no class?"). A welcome, wonderful return to action.
Product Details
Release Date: | 09/24/1996 |
---|---|
Label: | Epitaph |
UPC: | 0045778648122 |
catalogNumber: | 86481 |
Rank: | 22143 |
Tracks
Album Credits
Performance Credits
Descendents Primary ArtistKarl Alvarez Bass
Milo Aukerman Vocals
Stephen Egerton Guitar
Chad Price Background Vocals
Bill Stevenson Drums
Frank Navetta Guitar
Tony Lombardo Bass
Technical Credits
Bonnie Raitt ComposerStephen Egerton Producer,Engineer
Bill Stevenson Producer,Engineer
Sylvester "Sly Stone" Stewart Composer
Tony Lombardo Composer
Jason Livermore Engineer
Grey Stool Illustrations
Moss Composer
Customer Reviews
Related Searches
Explore More Items
In the wake of the Offspring's success, Rancid became a hot band, earning a dedicated ...
In the wake of the Offspring's success, Rancid became a hot band, earning a dedicated
cult and sparking a major-label bidding war. After flirting with a handful of major labels, the band decided to stick with Epitaph and returned with ...
In 2017, Tom Waits announced remastered reissues of his entire Warner Bros. catalog as well
as several recordings on Island and Anti. Among the latter are the three individually titled offerings packaged in a 2006 box entitled Orphans. When originally ...
Originally issued in 1982, Born Innocent was the debut full-length release from Redd Kross, a ...
Originally issued in 1982, Born Innocent was the debut full-length release from Redd Kross, a
band of suburban L.A. youth fronted by brothers Jeff (guitar, vocals) and Steve McDonald (bass). Aged 18 and 14, respectively, the aspiring punks are aided ...
Since the early 2000s, what's now known as post-hardcore has been consistently codified into something ...
Since the early 2000s, what's now known as post-hardcore has been consistently codified into something
eminently marketable. Screaming bloody murder over churning angular guitars has suddenly salable qualities, as long as the rage is offset by whimpering pianos and heart-flailing ...
This 2004 edition of Generator is part of a bulk of remastered and/or expanded Bad ...
This 2004 edition of Generator is part of a bulk of remastered and/or expanded Bad
Religion material from Epitaph. Like its tweaked brethren, the digitally revitalized Generator is louder overall, and more crisp. The newfound clarity gives the whip crack ...
When the Descendents finally ended their first run as an on-again/off-again pop-punk band in 1987, ...
When the Descendents finally ended their first run as an on-again/off-again pop-punk band in 1987,
a pair of live albums (Liveage and Hallraker) was compiled by their only constant member, founding drummer Bill Stevenson. As Stevenson writes in the liner ...
After the departure of Chuck Ragan, his bandmates were determined to soldier on, but no ...
After the departure of Chuck Ragan, his bandmates were determined to soldier on, but no
longer under the Hot Water Music name. Wanting to make a clean break with the past, the remaining trio dubbed themselves the Draft, and with ...
Ire, the fifth LP by Australian behemoths Parkway Drive, shows the veteran band branching out
from their signature metalcore roots and embracing a more nuanced and straightforward metal sound. With vocalist Winston McCall transitioning from full-time screaming to a cleaner ...