Complete Vol. 1 1981 - 1983

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Complete Vol. 1 1981 - 1983 album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 20   Total Length: 53:59

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MonkeyGrip

I grew up outside Chicago in the late 80's and for me this was the mother of all hardcore albums. And outside of the Chicago scene these guys are virtually unknown. Put away your emo, your Green day, your Blink-182 and download tracks 10-20, the tracks from their Give Thanks album. The guitars blister, the vocals are off the charts and their sound is totally original. Every track rages. This is the real stuff. Nuff said.

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They Say All Music Guide

The wonderful thing about punk rock as a recorded medium is its short songs and its penchant for releasing anomalous formats with shorter running times, such as singles and splits, so that one can comprehensively encapsulate a long career in a single disc, such as with the indispensable Minor Threat Complete Discography, or in two discs, as Articles of Faith did. The title leaves nothing to the imagination — the disc is the first three years of the history of the semi-legendary Chicago troupe, which in this case are the band’s contribution to the early The Mastertape compilation, the band’s What We Want Is Free EP, and the entire Give Thanks debut LP accompanying two bonus tracks. Fortunately, the music is as bold as the disc’s title is generic. Taking cues from Hüsker Dü (whose Bob Mould produced some of the material here), Articles of Faith came into life kicking and screaming before melodic intervention would firmly take hold. Volume one shows those neophytic years where vocalist Vic Bondi is screaming for change as loudly as he can while his band is playing as fast as they can. It’s a simple enough formula, but the vestiges of the band’s future still show up, even amidst the most cacophonous clamor of the early material, and better yet, still stand up on their own two decades later, with a shimmering timelessness that defies the relative lack of innovation that would come about soon enough. – Brian O’Neill

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