Steal This Record
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 25, 2001
Recorded2001
StudioHensen Recording Studio in Hollywood, California
GenrePunk rock, rock, alternative rock
Length39:52
LabelHollywood
ProducerJulian Raymond
The Suicide Machines chronology
The Suicide Machines
(2000)
Steal This Record
(2001)
The Least Worst of the Suicide Machines
(2002)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link

Steal This Record is the fourth studio album by the Detroit, Michigan punk rock band the Suicide Machines, released in 2001 by Hollywood Records. It was the band's last album for the Hollywood label, as they moved to Side One Dummy Records the following year. It was also their last album with longtime bassist Royce Nunley, who left the group in 2002.

Background

The song “Brass Ring” was originally meant for this album but got cut. It later appeared on The Least Worst of the Suicide Machines as one of the unreleased tracks and on the Japanese version of the album.[1]

Track listing

All songs written by the Suicide Machines except where noted.

No.TitleLength
1."The Killing Blow"3:04
2."Steal This Record"4:08
3."Honor Among Thieves"2:46
4."It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine) (William Berry/Peter Buck/Michael Mills/Michael Stipe; originally performed by R.E.M.)"3:18
5."Bleeding Heart"3:41
6."Air We Breathe"2:53
7."Stand Up"3:29
8."Off the Cuff"1:36
9."Middle Way"3:00
10."Scars"2:26
11."All My People"1:41
12."Unbreakable"2:27
13."Stay"2:31
14."Leap of Faith"2:52
Total length:39:52

Personnel

Technical

  • Julian Raymond – producer
  • Greg Goldman – engineer
  • John Aguto – engineer
  • Mark Valentine – assistant engineer
  • Brian Humphrey – assistant engineer
  • Chris Lord-Alge – mixing
  • Brian Gardener – mastering
  • Shannon Crawford – cover painting
  • Enny Joo – design
  • Terri Phillips – photography

References

  1. Online, Hip (2001-09-25). "The Suicide Machines - Interview with Jason Navarro [2001]". Hip Online - music biographies, reviews & interviews. Retrieved 2022-05-13.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.