Chron Gen - Chronic Generation (1982)

  • 05 Feb, 15:43
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Artist:
Title: Chronic Generation
Year Of Release: 1982
Label: Strike Force Entertainment
Genre: Punk Rock
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:03:56
Total Size: 149 mb | 400 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Chron Gen - Lies
02. Chron Gen - Jet Boy Jet Girl
03. Chron Gen - Hounds Of The Night
04. Chron Gen - L.S.D.
05. Chron Gen - You Make Me Spew
06. Chron Gen - Chronic Generation
07. Chron Gen - Mindless Few
08. Chron Gen - You'll Never Change Me
09. Chron Gen - Rock A Bill
10. Chron Gen - Friends Tell Me Lies
11. Chron Gen - Reality
12. Chron Gen - Living Next Door To Alice
13. Chron Gen - Puppets of War
14. Chron Gen - Mindless Few (Single Version)
15. Chron Gen - Lies (Single Version)
16. Chron Gen - Chronic Generation (Single Version)
17. Chron Gen - Reality (Single Version)
18. Chron Gen - Subway Sadist
19. Chron Gen - Outlaw
20. Chron Gen - Behind Closed Doors
21. Chron Gen - Disco Tech
22. Chron Gen - Clouded Eyes
23. Chron Gen - Puppets Of War (Live)
24. Chron Gen - Subway Sadist (Live)

A bonus-stacked reissue of the Hertfordshire punks' 1982 debut album, itself one of the most brilliantly brittle concoctions in the entire Oi! canon. Chron Gen had already been around for two years by the time they cut the LP, a legacy that is encapsulated among the dozen-bonus tracks here. Only a smattering of live cuts are omitted from the roundup (including, somewhat disappointingly, "Abortions" and "Ripper"), but the compilation-only "Clouded Eyes" is here, together with the late 1982 Outlaw EP. The album is a little clumsy in places songs like "You Make Me Spew" and even "Chronic Generation" itself have not aged well. But, then again, were they meant to? More than any other of punk's offspring, Oi! was music-for-the-moment, blind rage kicking out at the things that enraged it at the time. There was no thought for history, no attempt to stash something away for the future -- hell, most bands weren't even sure there would be a future, let alone one that would still be listening to 20-year-old punk rock. So accept Chronic Generation for what it was meant to be the long-awaited debut by one of the movement's mightiest noise-makers, and it won't disappoint. But if it does, the two covers will certainly raise a smile "Jet Boy Jet Girl" amped to rocket-propulsion proportions, and "Living Next Door to Alice," performed in such a way that you'll have no problem understanding why Alice had to move house!