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Pezcore

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Download links and information about Pezcore by Less Than Jake. This album was released in 1995 and it belongs to Rock, Punk, Reggae, Ska, Alternative genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 47:17 minutes.

Artist: Less Than Jake
Release date: 1995
Genre: Rock, Punk, Reggae, Ska, Alternative
Tracks: 18
Duration: 47:17
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Liquor Store 2:44
2. My Very Own Flag 2:47
3. Johnny Quest Things We're Sellouts 2:55
4. Big 3:04
5. Shotgun 2:56
6. Black Coffee 2:24
7. Throw the Brick 2:10
8. Growing Up On a Couch 2:30
9. Blindsided 2:50
10. Downbeat 2:10
11. Jen Doesn't Like Me Anymore 2:55
12. Out of the Crowd 2:31
13. Robo 1:33
14. Where the Hell Is Mikle Sinkovich? 2:13
15. Process 2:39
16. Three Quarts Drunk 2:05
17. Boomtown 2:34
18. Short On Ideas / One Last Cigarette 4:17

Details

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Hurtling out of Gainesville, FL, Less Than Jake's decidedly generic sound initially raised few eyebrows around the local punk scene. That all changed in 1993, when the year-old quartet heard British skacore heroes Snuff. Inspired, the band enlisted saxophonist Jessica Schaub and reinvented its sound. Now serving up a blistering mix of third-wave ska and melodic punk, the band swiftly excited attention from all quarters, and a multitude of indie labels. Pezcore, their debut album, duly arrived in 1995, and across 19 numbers LTJ illuminated just what all the fuss was about. They weren't the only high-energy band on the scene, nor the only group with a predilection for catchy tunes and anthemic choruses, nor even the only bunch to fold ska into their sound, but they were one of the few to combine all three talents in one exhilarating package. What really made LTJ stand out, however, was the way they combined ska and punk. At the time, most bands had their separate punk and ska numbers, while a few would dramatically shift genres in the center of a song. LTJ, though, oftentimes skittered between punk and ska, so closely were the styles interwoven in the arrangements. The jittery "Blindsided" is a case in point, as the rhythm section and guitarist hiccup from rock to reggae, and the brass sprays out overhead. Equally important, the band didn't save the horns just for its straight ska songs; flooding even seemingly straight-ahead punk rockers like "My Very Own Flag," only a few of the harder speedcore numbers like "Jen Doesn't Like Me Anymore" and "Black Coffee" escape. "Growing Up on a Couch," in contrast, illustrates just how brilliantly the band interjected sax into hardcore. And it was this that truly captured fans' imaginations. Pezcore was filled with many such brilliant moments and soon-to-be fan faves, with standouts including "Jen," "Johnny Quest Thinks We're Sellouts," "Liquor Store," the incredibly tight "Boomtown," and the list goes on and on. The legend started right here. [This reissue pairs the original Pezcore with a DVD, capturing the band running through the entire Pezcore set in 2007 before a feverish Florida crowd. The studio set was a revelation, but live the band brought the same enthusiasm to these songs that it did over a decade previously.]