Create account Log in

1000 Years of Trouble

[Edit]

Download links and information about 1000 Years of Trouble by Age Of Chance. This album was released in 1987 and it belongs to Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 52:24 minutes.

Artist: Age Of Chance
Release date: 1987
Genre: Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 14
Duration: 52:24
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. We Got Trouble 3:42
2. Don't Get Mad Get Even 3:44
3. Ready Or Not Here We Come 3:56
4. Shut Up and Listen! 2:55
5. Hold On 2:36
6. Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Noise 2:50
7. Take It! 4:39
8. This Is Crush Collision 5:24
9. Learn To Pray 6:04
10. Be Fast Be Clean Be Cheap 2:49
11. Crash Conscious 2:56
12. Morning After the Sixties 2:37
13. Mob! Hut! 3:06
14. Disco Inferno 5:06

Details

[Edit]

Age of Chance was no more than 18 months ahead of its time — two years, tops — but that short gap was enough to doom the band commercially. If 1987's One Thousand Years of Trouble had been released in 1989, when groups like Pop Will Eat Itself and Carter USM were actively exploring the links between Iggy Pop and Public Enemy, it would have been hailed as groundbreaking. At the time, it merely sounded weird and alien, like Sigue Sigue Sputnik with fewer gimmicks and better musicianship. One of the first rock bands to incorporate a DJ and rapper into its sound, Age of Chance managed one minor hit off this album, the still-impressive rave-up "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Noise." The rest of the album is similar (though admittedly, less immediately striking): pounding rhythms and loud, squalling guitars mixed with fractious samples and loops, topped with hoarse, shouted vocals that recall the group's Leeds forebears the Mekons and the Gang of Four. Abrasive, noisy, yet vibrant and intriguing, One Thousand Years of Trouble deserved more attention than it got.