eMusic Review 0
Though Green Day and the Offspring more or less defined California punk in the mid-to-late-'90s, it was Rancid who most truly encompassed the heart and soul of gutter kids from coast to coast. The four close-as-brothers members were more musically and politically astute than their contemporaries and their third album, …And Out Come the Wolves, is arguably Rancid's crowning achievement to date. On singles "Time Bomb" and "Ruby Soho," they adhere to the fluttery charm of ska just as much as they pledge allegiance to their punk godfathers in the Clash and Buzzcocks. Track to track, chords bumrush the airwaves, ebullient and resolute, effortlessly embracing infectious melodies. The energy of singers/guitarists Tim Armstrong and Lars Frederiksen bristles, whether they're singing about a crush on a girl in "She's Automatic" or feeling stranded in New York City and pining for home on "Olympia Wa." Rancid remain one of the key forebearers of punk rock for the next generation.