Bad Religion
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Punk / Pop Punk / Indie
| Date | Time | Location | Watching | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mar 26, 2010 | 5:00 pm | Bad Religion Las Vegas Buy tickets | ||
| Mar 27, 2010 | 5:00 pm | Bad Religion Las Vegas Buy tickets |
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The L.A. outfits thirteenth studio album co-written and co-produced by vocalist Greg Graffin and guitarist Brett Gurewitz also finds Bad Religion raising its sonic stakes. With the discs centerpiece, "Let Them Eat War," the band fires a roaring, three-minute missive at a certain so called compassionate conservative. Structured around a breakneck beat, blistering riffs and an apocalyptic chorus, the song which houses a ferocious verse by rising hip/hop intellect Sage Francis advocates an impoverished populace duped by the very Washingtonian prevaricator theyve supported with their vote and their military service.
When Graffin sneers the following heated prose atop the bands sparking charge, Bad Religion asserts its deep-seated interest in probing for the truth:
"Theres a prophet on a mountain and hes making up dinner With long division and a riding crop Anybody can feel like a winner when its served up piping hot But the people arent looking for a handout Theyre Americas working corps Can this be what they voted for?"
Meanwhile, power-packed proclamations like "Sinister Rouge" and "Social Suicide" see straight through Bible-thumping deceit. The bulk of Empire is just as fiery, evidenced by the mid-disc torcher "Los Angeles Is Burning." Here, bristling guitars escort Graffin's doomsday rant about palm trees as candles in the murder wind while exploring the news media's role as either reflector or purveyor of reality.
If Epitaphs flagship band sounds better than ever on The Empire Strikes First, Graffin says the roar that accompanies such scathing commentary is no accident. After so many years of doing this, were really only interested in making a record, writing the songs and producing if we know it will be really good, he explains. Picking up where the troupe left off on 2002's outstanding comeback The Process of Belief which saw Gurewitz re-join the creative fold after a lengthy hiatus Empire manages to trump that disc making it arguably the fiercest and most focused Bad Religion offering to date.
The groups wall of guitars courtesy of Gurewitz, Greg Hetson and Brian Baker roar feverishly, driving vibrant, melodic anthems throughout the disc with the rhythmic virtuosity of Brooks Wackerman and co-founding bassist Jay Bentley pouring the musical foundation. And while each track is topical, Graffin says that, the songs are universal enough that in ten years time they should still hold up quite well.
Juxtaposing intellectual rigor with faith based conviction, provocative offerings like Beyond Electric Dreams Atheist Peace and Gods Love explore religions interface with science in our society. And with the stellar Live Again The Fall of Man, the singer who now holds a Ph.D in Biology closes out this standout album of thinking persons punk by pondering, What good is something if you cant have it until you die?
Bad Religion have been stunning the music world by mixing thought, melody, attitude, speed and ability since 1980, when Graffin, Gurewitz and Bentley formed the band in suburbs of L.A.'s San Fernando Valley. In an era where major labels refused to consider American punk groups, Gurewitz formed Epitaph Records as a medium for the band's message and a crudely recorded self-titled EP was born.
The group's first long-player, 1982s How Could Hell Be Any Worse, helped define the Southern California punk sound. By 1987, with guitarist Greg Hetson of the iconic Circle Jerks in the fold, Bad Religion crafted the epic Suffer, which is often credited for revitalizing the punk movement and ushering it into the 1990s. A prolific period yielded three acclaimed discs 89s No Control, 90s Against The Grain, and 92s Generator and with its fan base ballooning the band jumped to Atlantic Records after 1993s Recipe For Hate.
A year later, Epitaph which experienced remarkable growth through its first decade became an unprecedented indie phenomenon as a result of the punk renaissance it helped to instigate. Gurewitz left the band to oversee his record company full time but Bad Religion forged ahead by recruiting one-time Minor Threat and Dag Nasty guitarist Brian Baker for three Atlantic offerings and respective touring. By the start of the 21st Century, Gurewitz and Graffin had rekindled their collaborative pursuits; Gurewitz had rejoined the group and Bad Religion released its widely hailed comeback disc, The Process of Belief.
Now with the arrival of The Empire Strikes First, the band enforces the theory that the finest punk rock has always housed opinions to bolster its spirit and attitude. Quite simply, Empire is a musical Molotov, and Bad Religion is as vital as ever.
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Nov 20, 2009 4:11 PM
Warped Tour supports medical research for children's charity
Several bands on this year's Warped Tour including--Flogging Molly , 3OH!3 , Bad Religion and Less Thank Jake--have built and hand-painted drums for a...

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