Revenge

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Revenge album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 32:06

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under rated late 80's rawk...

Dvoodoo

i know everybody claims the early 80's TSOL is the best, with Jack Grisham screaming about World War III and having sex with corpses...well good for them. This was the 1st version of TSOL I saw live, and they were a decent act too, sharing the stage with 45 Grave, playing the Scream club in LA & opening up for Guns n Roses on their 1st tour. They did a fine job bringing up the rear of the decade, as juvenile hardcore went into hiding, these rockers slowed the tempo, used a lil mascara & brought some deep dark gutteral & gothy wailing to the fore that also fit the times. Whether we like it or not, this bluesy bastardized TSOL are as much a part of the group's legacy as the bratty brash version that everyone reveres. Consider Joe Wood the Sammy Hagar of TSOL and just accept him for what he was, a guy who was in the difficult position of fronting a Southern California band that he didn't start...but managed to keep alive commercially as tastes changed.

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Needed A New Name

RobotWar

TSOL made a bad decision by keeping their name after singer Jack Grisham and drummer Todd Barnes left. Why they thought they could carry the Long Beach punk sound into a new sound is a mystery. So call this TSOL2. Forget about the punk stuff. Joe Wood brings a soulful bluesy wail, much like a Jim Morrison reborn. Emory and Roche are still great players but the music is just rock and roll now, sort of precursor to The Cult and Guns N Roses. Get the "Change Today?" record first. This is a good record but has no connection to the original TSOL despite 2 original members.

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They Say All Music Guide

By the time that Revenge was released in 1986, T.S.O.L. was barely hanging on to the last strands of its punk rock past. Led by singer/guitarist Joe Wood, the band’s sound began to resemble the morbid cock rock of groups such as Alice Cooper and Danzig much more than the sarcastic resistance rock of California counterparts such as the Circle Jerks and the Dead Kennedys. While lead guitarist Ron Emory and bassist Mike Roche did their best to maintain their mosh-pit sensibilities on manic rockers such as “No Time,” “Madhouse,” and “Change Today,” at this point in their career T.S.O.L. was much more likely to produce a song such as “Memories,” which is an introspective look at teenage love lost. An acoustic-oriented ode to “Revenge,” as well as a tribute to death itself called “Colors (Take Me Away)” continued the trend toward rock simplicity. While the album does end with paranoia spreading in every direction by way of a song titled “Everybody’s a Cop,” Revenge is really not much more than a record aimed to appease the juvenile mind. – Robert Gabriel

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