Jealous Again

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (49 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 5   Total Length: 6:23

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Couldn't Agree More...

verve825

with chrismangus: If anything, "White Minority" is simply an embarrassing tarnish on Black Flag's legacy. And I, too, am an atheist WASP. Great music, but that track is always cringe-inducing.

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To the Retard Below

chrismangus

Boo-hoo. WASP'S aren't the majority anymore. Waaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhhh! (sniffle). This is the MELTING POT JACK-ASS! And I am a WASP, by the way.

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Legendary

OCpunk

This is an awesome EP featuring the time during the filming of "The Decline of the Western Civilization". Chavo was on vocals then. Somewhat of a midpoint in the Black Flag history that cannot be ignored. "White Minority" seams quite prophetic today.

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They Say All Media Guide

When the four-song vinyl EP Jealous Again came out in 1980, Black Flag had yet to provide a full-length LP or hire Henry Rollins as its vocalist. But even in those pre-Rollins days, Black Flag was regarded as one of the most important bands on the Los Angeles punk scene — and rightly so. In fact, it’s safe to say that no 1980 release captures the raw, explosive anger of L.A. punk better than Jealous Again. Black Flag’s second vocalist, Chavo Pederast (the one who came after Keith Morris and before Rollins), has no problem expressing his rage on such in-your-face classics as “No Values,” “White Minority,” “Revenge,” and “You Bet We’ve Got Something Against You!.” In 1980, some fans of corporate rock couldn’t begin to understand the appeal of a punk band like Black Flag and dismissed this EP as unmusical. But to criticize Jealous Again (whose contents would, in the 1990s, be placed on SST’s CD reissue of Damaged) for its lack of chops or technique completely misses the point: punk wasn’t about technique, it was about feeling. Punk was rock & roll stripped down to its rawest, most naked, gut-level emotions. And on this EP, those emotions make for some compelling moments. – Alex Henderson

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