Walk Among Us

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Walk Among Us album cover
Album Information
EXPLICIT // EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 24:46

eMusic Review 0

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Jason Pettigrew

eMusic Contributor

Jason Pettigrew is the Editor-in-Chief of Alternative Press. His favorite noises in life are the first minute of "Cables (Live)" by Big Black, the Arp 2600 synt...more »

03.03.10
Making sure you have a killer tune to hum while you punch someone out
2006 | Label: Rhino/Slash

Whatever your taste in American punk, it cannot be denied that one of the genre's most enduring documents remains Walk Among Us, the 1983 full-length by the Misfits — Lodi, New Jersey's entry in the hardcore sweepstakes.

After a series of independently released singles and a shelved attempt at a first album (1978's Static Age), the endearingly camp horror-punks aligned themselves with Ruby (an imprint of mighty U.S. punk label Slash) for their proper debut. While the album has far higher production values than their previous output, the songs — the vision of frontman/chief writer Glenn Danzig — remain raw-sounding while sporting tuneful vocal melodies and lyrical obsessions with B-grade horror movies. The Gun Club's Jeffrey Lee Pierce may have conjured the phrase "Elvis from Hell," but on tracks like "Skulls" and "Astro Zombies," Danzig embodied that very description with a sly '50s croon and a roar that made girls swoon and guys want to beat the crap out of one another in circle pits. "Mommy Can I Go Out And Kill Tonight" remains timeless in its proto-thrash execution, and "Vampira" sets the bar for concise metal-punk crossovers. The Misfits' sonic legacy continues to crop up in unusual places, whether… read more »

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Remixed by Chris D.

memaier

In case you missed the credits, this album was remixed by Chris D. of the Flesh Eaters. And if you don't know who the Flesh Eaters are, then you don't know shit about punk rock.

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Misfits!!!!

MacD

What can be said except.... Awesome!

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better than an energy drink

cog71

This album has been inspiration and anthem to generations of misfits and musicians, and my own soundtrack from adolescent days at the half-pipe across the years of all-night study then work binges. It echoes rockabilly, 50's pop, and the Ramones; it parallels and presages metal's preoccupation with sci-fi (but with an ample dose of camp), informs slacker culture, pop-punk icons like Green Day, and celebrates a joyful dread of the apocalypse. Tracks 1, 3, 6-9 will haunt you like a poltergeist!

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Hell Yeah!

dmeckenrode

I love this album! No questions asked. I still have the record from when I was a kid.

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Terrific

FreshFish

The Misfits are the best band of all time. This is the only Danzig-era Misfits album on eMusic, and it's a great one to have.

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Mandatory Music

KAggie97

Anything by the Misfits is essential if you even have the slightest interest in punk music. Their music never gets old. For some reason, Misfits (and Samhain and Danzig as well) resonate with me better in the fall. Perhaps it's the horror-tinged lyrics; whatever it is, Misfits are good whatever season it is.

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I even have the T-shirt

BelaVrana

I have the album, and an old T-shirt of the album cover. And I've never bought a lot of T-shirts, so that means something.

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Pioneers of the 2nd wave

jjpm74

If you like punk or post punk, this is an essential album.

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You Need This

leosdad06

If you don't have this album, you don't know sh!t.

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Perfection

JackTar

Honestly if you need a review to know to download this album I feel sorry for you.

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They Say All Music Guide

The Misfits’ 1982 debut full-length, Walk Among Us, rapidly became a legendary effort of U.S. punk, the more so because it so willfully violated many rules which were already ironically straitjacketing the scene. Utterly devoid of political confrontation or social uplift, embracing a costume sense that might have given Kiss pause and generally coming across like the horror-movie nightmares they looked like on the cover, the Misfits just wanted to entertain and do their own thing — and that they did, brilliantly. Nearly every song on the album — 13 total, delivered in a light-speed 25 minutes — is a twisted classic, with the band’s trademark ’50s/’60s melodies run through a punk/metal meatgrinder on full display. The higher-budget (in very relative terms) recording meant a slightly cleaner and brighter sound all around, but nothing about Walk Among Us is slick, especially in commercial 1982 terms. One song title says it all: “All Hell Breaks Loose.” Danzig’s gift for creepy, strong, and attractively dark singing was long since established and he uses it brilliantly, making the over-the-top lyrics all the more enjoyable, while Doyle, Jerry Only, and Arthur Googy kick out the jams on Danzig’s songs big time — check out “Hatebreeders,” “Violent World,” and the crazed “Skulls.” Everything ends with the giddily ridiculous “Braineaters,” in which the chanting voices of the band bemoan their constant diet of cerebella and ask for intestines instead, but the real freaked-out highlight comes smack dab in the middle with “Mommy Can I Go Out and Kill Tonight.” Taken from the show that made up the Evilive release, it starts out on the edge and, after Danzig delivers the title sans instruments, turns into an explosion of rhythm and feedback that should have killed everything within 50 feet of the amps. – Ned Raggett

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