Live At CBGB's

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ALBUM INFORMATION
LIVE

Total Tracks: 21   Total Length: 54:18

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Not the 1989 album

neilaggro

This is Live at CBGB - 25 Years of Blood, Honor and Truth. They put the wrong album cover up. Not anywhere near as good as the 1989 album.

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live at cbgb's 1989?

mokeymina

this cant be right because rogers voice is way more matre and the playing is different from the original(the red,white and blue cover with boots) and some of the songs werent even written yet like gotta go and others. icall BSon this one but still, it is AF so put this album in your ears!

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Huh?

STANDOFF

Until now, I didn't know there were 2 different versions of this album, 2 different shows. The one I got, about 15 years ago, has 19 songs, some titles different than these, different versions & different cover art. The album offered here is good, excellent sound quality & an overall good feeling to the show. I'd recommend it, but I've never seen it anywhere else. (I guess that's a good thing, right?)

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They Say All Media Guide

Led by singer Roger Miret and guitarist Vinny Stigma, New York’s cataclysmic Agnostic Front made quite a name for itself with records like Victim in Pain and Cause for Alarm. As one the first truly pioneering NYHC (New York Hard Core) bands to successfully bridge the gap between metal, punk, and hardcore, the band rose to legendary cult status up and down the East Coast. Recorded in the flesh at New York’s punk rock Mecca CBGB’s in August of 1988, Live at CBGB captures the band in all its ferocious glory. As Miret announces “this is the title track from our first album Victim in Pain, the song’s also called “Victim in Pain,”" the band is off. “Pain” is quickly followed by “Public Assistance” and later a song that calls for unity between punks and skins, “United Blood.” The recording contains 19 fast and furious cuts highlighted by the band’s hardcore anthem, “Crucified.” Prior to “Liberty & Justice,” Miret offers, “Since we’re an American band, let’s recite the pledge of allegiance.” This gives way of course to “Liberty & Justice” only to be upstaged by all 35 seconds of “Discriminate Me.” Other highlights include Cause for Alarm’s “Your Mistake” (later covered by Negative Approach on Total Recall). Beneath all the band’s political lambasting and calls for unity (although many of their shows were anything but), there’s a good musical lesson to be learned from all of this. Because, if you’ve ever been just the slightly bit curious about what NYHC is all about, this release is a solid launching point. – John Franck

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