Still Stuck in Your Throat

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Still Stuck in Your Throat album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 55:50

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Freakin' Sweet Album!

grapeape2k

Although I wrote this review once already and also downloaded the album previously (it dissappeared from emusic for awhile and then it came back but I can't download it again for free even though I already paid for it) I will say it again. If you ever listened to Fishbone and enjoyed their music, get this one. It's every bit as good as anything they ever did. Great stuff, ignore the lackluster review from AMG. They've always had a revolving lineup, who cares? The heart and soul is still there and they still rock!

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They Say All Music Guide

Although Fishbone has not troubled the charts in over a decade, the Los Angeles-based ska/punk band never broke up or stopped touring; on the contrary. With only singer/saxophonist Angelo Moore and bassist John Norwood Fisher remaining from the original lineup, the group has passed the 20-year mark as a performing unit, which is long enough for it to have become established in the ’80s nostalgia circuit. Not surprisingly, its last two albums have been live collections, Live at the Temple Bar and More (2002) and Live in Amsterdam (2005). The guest-star-filled The Psychotic Friends Nuttwerx (2000) was the band’s last studio album until Still Stuck in Your Throat, the title of which is both a play on Fishbone’s name and a reminder that the group hasn’t ever gone away. Like many bands making a new album after many years, especially those that have undergone extensive personnel changes, the group seems to have been concerned with delivering tracks that sound like classic Fishbone. Those frantic ska rhythms and that belligerent punk attitude are therefore in place, along with Fishbone’s characteristic quirkiness in titles like “Jack Ass Brigade,” “Let Dem Ho’s Fight,” and the slightly dated “Party with Saddam.” Moore, Fisher, and co. also evoke such funk predecessors as Parliament-Funkadelic, notably in the lengthy “We Just Lose Our Minds.” But if Still Stuck in Your Throat sounds convincingly like a Fishbone record, that’s not to say it sounds like a great one. David Kahne, who produced some of their great albums, returns to mix this one, but he would have been more useful in his old job, helping to sort out arrangements and performances that sometimes become raucous to the point of near-chaos. It isn’t until the end with their cover of Sublime’s “Date Rape” (repeated from the tribute album Look at All the Love We Found) that the current members of Fishbone actually sound like they’re enjoying themselves on an album they probably would prefer not to call a comeback attempt. – William Ruhlmann

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