Social Distortion

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Social Distortion album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 41:12

eMusic Review 0

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Jack Rabid

eMusic Contributor

06.30.09
A biting rock 'n' roll pleasure
1990 | Label: Epic

Like the similar "I Just Want To Give You The Creeps" on their debut LP Mommy's Little Monster, Social D's third album opener "So Far Away" announced from the git-go that their shocking, sea-change signing to Epic did not mean the end of the storied Orange County foursome's heavy, twin-guitar, fiery punk sound. (While such lack of concession after signing to a major is common today, it was unusual then.)

In fact, this cleanly, clearly produced, biting album remains a post-Heartbreakers/Generation X/Clash/Stones rock 'n 'roll pleasure, further enlivened by the hardened, suddenly wizened observations of ex-smack addict, pivotal star Mike Ness (showing maturity 12 years into this band's former-teenage-misfits-from-Fullerton career). The music shows similar evolution. Perhaps the mild country strains of 1988's Prison Bound's remained (highlighted by a pumped-up punk cover of Johnny Cash's "Ring of Fire," and the stomping "Ball and Chain"), but these just add more color to the group's trademark rocking-punk mix.

Ness's low, sexy growl punctuates his lyrically refreshing, post-12-Step Program honesty and humility on "Story of My Life," "Drug Train," and "It Could've Been Me," all palpable expressions of regret, fading romance, and formerly dangerous behavior. From the iron-thick quartet of single "Let… read more »

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Nothing like the 90's.

nneed_of_a_name

I've been looking for ball and chain for years. The 90's freakin' rock.

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Check it out

STANDOFF

Good album, decent band. I just don't understand why Bad Religion isn't listed as a, "Similar Artist," & the Dead Kennedys are (?)... Somewhat misleading.

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from Portland, OR

vleeann999

The pop-rock end of the punk spectrum. LOVE this band: beat, dancing, lyrics focussing often on healthy/recovery themes. Good influence and the best, resonant music. Mike Ness is the only orig. member and the rest cycle through.

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Finest album

EMUSIC-01E906F4

This is Social's best album, not a bad song on the whole album. I used to have this on tape and probably listened to it 200 times.

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sick boy.

mysterywhteboy

one of the great albums of my youth - played to death on cassette tape. thank you social d.

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Great!!!!

rickstervc

The jump to the majors and Mike Ness's general cleaning up defined what was there all along-great county/blues based punk songs. Heavy on guitar (sometimes with 5 or more overdubbed, overdriven guitars on chugging away on powerchords while Ness's simple leads come over the top) and Ness's overall growl, the music is authentic in ways that many punk bands aren't. If your thinking of downloading any of this one, just download them all. You won't be sorry.

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They Say All Music Guide

With Prison Bound, Social Distortion began to metamorphasize from a rather ordinary L.A. hardcore band into a roots rock band willing to make with more than their share of the attitude, and this process continued on their self-titled third album (which was also their major-label debut). Musically, Mike Ness and company had learned to split the difference between rockabilly and Ramones-style punk, not unlike fellow L.A. vets X, and if Ness couldn’t sing or write with the skill or the resonance of John Doe, “Story of My Life” and “It Coulda Been Me” sound a lot more personal and deeply felt than anything on Mommy’s Little Monster, and “Ball and Chain” and “So Far Away” prove he could crank out a respectable honky tonk number if he put his mind to it. Thanks to Epic’s sponsorship, the group had more time and money at their disposal for Social Distortion than on their previous albums, and producer Dave Jerden made the most of it; Mike Ness and Dennis Danell’s guitars sound lean, sharp, and powerful; Ness’s vocals are better controlled than ever before; and Christopher Reece’s drums have a tight snap that suits both the thrashier numbers as well as the slower, blusier tunes. Social Distortion isn’t a great roots rock album, but it’s a pretty good one, and it’s better and more affecting than anything this band had cranked out before. – Mark Deming

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