Blue Skies, Broken Hearts...Next 12 Exits

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 35:41

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AlaskaDave1047FM

Talk about 'Broken Hearts' who knew Youth could be so bland and yet sound musically kinda good... Look I was young and disenchanted once, if you must call your self anything don't label it 'PUNK' Guess I'll keep looking for new music elsewhere

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These reviews are great entertainment!!- - !!!!!

STANDOFF

Who the hell are The Ataris??? The main review talks about them like they're "punk gods," yet having been in "the scene" since the mid 80's, this is the first I've heard of them. I sampled this album & I don't see or hear anything "punk" about it. "Things were great, she broke my heart, life sucks?" Ok, so what? You have my sympathy. Isn't that what most bands, in general, sing about? That review read like it was written by their spokesperson. "Guilty pleasures?" What does that mean? Are they one of the many bands to have used "punk" only to move on to the real money? Maybe that's why I haven't heard of them. Nostalgia?? Again, I fail to see your point. What nostalgia? This is crap. Lighten up people! The seriousness of these reviews are too funny!!!!!!!

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Don't tell your friends

JCBurchett

AnIdiotSavant is absolutely right. This is a great guilty pleasure album. Recalls high school, early college days, breakups, and all the good stuff that goes along with that. Great bit of advice whispered in "Your Boyfriend Sucks," but it doesn't work too well anymore with power locks.

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One not to miss

OrkyDoc

This album was clearly The Ataris' stepping stone album. Anywhere But Here was great, but it blended in with many other bands at the time. Here, Kris Roe and the Ataris beautifully flex their story-telling, song writing muscle here. So Long, Astoria is their fourth full length, and most mature album to date. But without Blue Skies, it would be nothing. It is here where they adopted their style and built onto it with experience and the improving benefits of time. This is very heartfelt album with great stories to tell. Lyrically, Roe took from the usual "things were great, she broke my heart - life sucks" idea, incorporated it into his own experiences and wrote great relateable, not cliche, lyrics to it. Musically, the chord progressions and melodies are superb and un-matchable for the time, and even today. Just listen and read into songs like 1*15*96, the infamous San Dimas Highschool Football Rules, In Spite of the World and ESPECIALLY My Hotel Year, you'll get what I mean.

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Mmm...

AnIdiotSavant

*The* A #1 guilty pleasure pop-punk album. Nothing else can touch it. Just don't play it in front of your friends. Strictly for the Saturday morning, "I'm still drinking with my people at 3am becuase all the sissies went to bed"/goofy crowd. Nostalgia? Yeah.

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They Say All Media Guide

Possibly the most country-sounding record title in punk rock history, Blue Skies, Broken Hearts…Next 12 Exits proved to be the breakout disc for Santa Barbara punkers the Ataris. Sporting fine production thanks to Lagwagon’s Joey Cape, this follow-up to the band’s surprising debut solidified the Ataris’ position among the leaders of late-’90s pop-punk. The tempos settle down a little on this 1999 release, giving songs like “I Won’t Spend Another Night Alone” more of an alt-rock feel, but the tight compositions never stray too far from the group’s post-revivalist, almost emo punk. When Cape takes a chance by adding a melodic cello line to the acoustic “My Hotel Year,” the Ataris almost dare the punk community to question their integrity but, with its one-and-a-half-minute running time and furious guitar strumming, the track maintains the record’s intensity and never panders to the listenership of complaint-saturated soft rock, which somehow became known as alternative in the mid-’90s. True to form, the Ataris give solid performances of first-rate pop-punk material on this, perhaps their best release. – Vincent Jeffries

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