What a blast!
From the past! What a great stumble upon of great music from the more simpler days..full of raw energy & innocence.
From the past! What a great stumble upon of great music from the more simpler days..full of raw energy & innocence.
Agreed...how is this not a pick? Flippin crazy good album. Keep on rollin Mike!
Maybe I am biased because this was the first fIREHOSE album (yes, that classic piece of vinyl) I heard (Ragin' Full On somehow slipped under my radar), but I consider this their best release. Every song is a classic, as far as I am concerned. Twenty three years later and I still listen to this in its entirety. I won't bother rating the songs, as every one is a standout (though, I do have to say that hearing Ed paying tribute to his hometown in "Soon" makes it a favorite - when he sings "Ohio" it sends shivers through me every time). If you are starting out with fIREHOSE, do yourself a favor and download this entire album. (Oh, and it doesn't hurt that the cover features the greatest band of all time!)
Considering the mindset of Watt in the initial days of fIREHOSE, it's amazing and maybe kind of a fluke that Ragin' Full-On is such a tasty record. Beginning with that first record and continuing with If'n, there is a sound forming here that reaches its apex on Flyin' the Flannel: a masterpiece of an album, which sadly Sony/Columbia hasn't allowed eMusic to distribute (go get it!). The open sound of Making the Freeway, Operation Solitaire and Thunder Child are classics, throw in Sometimes, For The Singer Of R.E.M., and.. alright - I love this record.
Their music quickly became very idiosynchratic, mirroring the mindset of leader Mike Watt ... it doesn't quite cohere, doesn't quite add up to much. The first and last track are the highlights here, in their strange ways.