Food for Thought/Take It Back

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (27 ratings)
Food for Thought/Take It Back album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 18   Total Length: 46:36

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Excellent melodic punk rock.

bubalator

Have the vinyl version and I Am the Walrus, which is missing here, is one if the best punk covers other than Sid Vicious singing My Way.

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Great, but Incomplete...

bikepower1234

this contains two albums - Food for Thought (tracks 1-9) from 1985 and Take it Back (tracks 10-16) with the rest of the songs being bonus tracks off of radio, etc. Take it Back (tracks 10- 16) is their best album with the title track (track13) being one of my favorite songs of all time. For some reason probably relating to money, Dischord leaves off covers from the digital download versions of albums including stepping stone from the 1st minor threat album, imagine from the 1st shudder to think, and in this case, I am the walrus originally done by the beatles was left off the "food for thought" album. a little frustrating. If you can live with that, It's a worthy download. If you can't live with it, you'll have to buy the cd and rip it yourself.

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Don't miss it!

slickdpdx

From Chutes and Ladders through Head an absolute must have for any discriminating fan of melodic DC hardcore or rock, for that matter.

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They Say All Music Guide

Another in Dischord’s series of value for money releases, this CD puts together the contents of both releases, along with three extra goodies for a full overview of the band’s first phase of existence. One, an early version of “Walk the Line,” was the group’s recording debut, surfacing on the Alive and Kicking compilation. Compared to the later take, here the band is in full garage punk mode, sounding at points more appropriate for a Voxx label compilation. The other two songs, “Phobias” and “The Spy,” were, at the time, unreleased demos. The first is a fairly straightforward D.C. punk number of its day (1984), in this case providing no particular surprises outside of proof of the individual musical abilities of its members, especially Haggerty. “The Spy” is good enough fun, though, a bit of a ’60s surf/James Bond instrumental played with the right amount of rough humor. Near-complete lyrics and a variety of archival pictures complete the expectedly exhaustive packaging. – Ned Raggett

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