Truth And Soul

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (120 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 41:34

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Essential Piece of Work

Nikolai082700

If you want to understand Funk, Punk and Ska of the last 20 plus years you have to have this album. It is a masterpiece of groove and energy from start to finish and a source of influence and inspiration to young musicians of the time.

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One of the best albums of the 80's

DesertED

Truly an original and uncompromising breath of fresh air in the musically challenged 1980's. The world wasn't ready for Fishbone to break but you were a convert if you saw them live...

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the best...

mh2thman

This album evokes the same ass-shaking joyful emotions now as it did for me when it came out 20 years ago. Hell yeah.

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They Say All Media Guide

By 1988, alternative/college rock was becoming a recognizable force in the mainstream. Several bands were big enough to play arenas, and many even earned gold and platinum albums. The tide was clearly changing for such previously misunderstood bands such as Fishbone. Their second full-length release Truth and Soul was issued that year, and remains one of the band’s (and the ’80s) very best. On past albums, Fishbone’s sound was a melting pot of ska, punk, and funk. This time, hard rock has been added to the mix — especially evident in guitarist Kendall Jones’ six-string work, with often-spectacular results. Also, the songwriting has improved tremendously and has become much more focused here. The party anthem “Bonin’ in the Boneyard” is one of the band’s finest (with superhuman bass work by Norwood Fisher), as is the ska-based “Ma and Pa,” and a cover of Curtis Mayfield’s early-’70s hit “Freddie’s Dead.” Also featured are several musically varied tracks that deal with the same topic: racism, past and present (“Deep Inside,” “One Day,” “Subliminal Fascism,” “Slow Bus Movin’,” “Ghetto Soundwave”). Truth and Soul remains Fishbone’s most consistent album. – Greg Prato

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