1 | Takers & Users | Lyrics/Info | 2:21 |
2 | Guinness Boys | Lyrics/Info | 3:12 |
3 | Steal This Record | Lyrics/Info | 2:14 |
4 | Code Red | Lyrics/Info | 2:26 |
5 | Hate N.D. | Lyrics/Info | 2:02 |
6 | Belmarsh | Lyrics/Info | 2:29 |
7 | Boys Are Out Tonight | Lyrics/Info | 2:06 |
8 | Class Compromise (...History's Glory) | Lyrics/Info | 2:24 |
9 | No Mercy For You | Lyrics/Info | 2:48 |
10 | Gangland | Lyrics/Info | 3:11 |
11 | Of The Poet | Lyrics/Info | 0:38 |
12 | Ghetto Youth | Lyrics/Info | 2:31 |
13 | Always | Lyrics/Info | 2:37 |
14 | Anarchy In The Streets | Lyrics/Info | 2:02 |
15 | U Won't Change Me | Lyrics/Info | 2:42 |
16 | Hell 2 Pay | Lyrics/Info | 2:21 |
All ripping, riffing hardcore, fist in the air, boots to the bum, and lungs shouting out the anthemic choruses. The rise of the new school has merely buffed their edges, the melodies are now a bit stronger, the hooks more barbed, but the basic attitude remains unchanged. The group still have the capacity to be outraged by events happening around them, and, although many of their themes are provincial, "Guinness Boys" and "Gangland" both dissect working class and, more specifically, East End life, they definitely have a universal appeal.
-Jo-Anne Greene
The year was 1980 and Great Britain was then weathering a social and political maelstrom, that bridged the mid-seventies and eighties entire. It was a …