Allroy's Revenge

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Allroy's Revenge
All - Allroy's Revenge cover.jpg
The album's cover depicts the band's Allroy character preparing to smash an anthropomorphic musical note with a mallet.
Studio album by
All
ReleasedSeptember 18, 1989
RecordedDecember 1988–January 1989
StudioThird Wave Recording, Torrance, California
Genre Hardcore punk [1]
Length36:49
Label Cruz (CRZ-006)
Producer Bill Stevenson
All chronology
Allroy for Prez
(1988)
Allroy's Revenge
(1989)
Trailblazer
(1990)
Singles from Allroy Sez
  1. "She's My Ex"
    Released: 1989

Allroy's Revenge is the second studio album by the American punk rock band All, released in 1989 through Cruz Records. It was the band's first release with singer Scott Reynolds, replacing Dave Smalley who had left in late 1988. The album includes two songs written by Tony Lombardo, the original bassist for All's precursor band the Descendents. It also includes a cover version of "Hot Rod Lincoln", a 1955 song by Charlie Ryan that was a hit for Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen in 1971. "She's My Ex" was released as the album's single.

Contents

Background

Allroy's Revenge was All's first release with singer Scott Reynolds, who would stay with the band until 1993. Scott Reynolds at the AntiClub.jpg
Allroy's Revenge was All's first release with singer Scott Reynolds, who would stay with the band until 1993.

All's first singer, Dave Smalley, left the band in late 1988, burned out by their constant touring schedule. [2] To replace him the band recruited Scott Reynolds, who had moved to Los Angeles from Fredonia, New York several years prior: "I got out of college and got in the car and drove out here because I decided that I wanted to be a singer", he said in 1989. "So I'm out here and I live on a shelf in an office." [3] He joined original Descendents bassist Tony Lombardo's post-Descendents bands Boxer Rebellion, Nuclear Bob, and Three Car Pileup, briefly touring with the Descendents when Boxer Rebellion performed as an opening act for them. [3] [4] The Descendents relaunched themselves as All in 1987 following Milo Aukerman's departure from the band. [5] By the time they were looking for a new singer to replace Smalley, Reynolds was practicing with Three Car Pileup next door to All's headquarters in Lomita, California. [3] [6] "I had nothing back then", he later recalled. "I had no money, I was living in my car, I couldn't even get a shower. I was basically a bum, a homeless bum, and to be on tour playing music was the whole reason I left home. Even though I am too disorganized and right-brained and underachieving to ever be the poster boy for the quest for All." [6] The members of All were impressed by Reynold's singing ability, and quickly recruited him into the band. [3] [6] "It was like we had discovered some great gem sleeping in his car outside our practice room", reflected drummer Bill Stevenson. [6]

Writing

As with their prior records, all four band members contributed to the songwriting of Allroy's Revenge. [7] Stevenson's songs "Scary Sad", "She's My Ex", and "Net" describe a tumultuous romance, and were written about an ex-girlfriend who had problems with drugs and was placed on probation. [8]

Reynolds contributed "Box", "Mary", and "No Traffic". [7] "Mary" particularly impressed Stevenson: "When I heard 'Mary', I was just like 'I want that song. That's an All song'", he recalled. [9] "When he brought the song in," said bassist Karl Alvarez, "he had a guitar, and I think it had three strings on it or something. He literally played that bass figure, basically it's the single note in bass bar." [9] Though the song is credited solely to Reynolds, guitarist Stephen Egerton wrote the guitar parts:

We'd been beating it to death in the practice room forever, trying to figure out some way. I was just struggling with it. I think it was the night before we recorded it, and I just canned everything that I had done and started over, literally the night before I recorded it, and came up with that whole part. I didn't get the chance to play it for Scott before we left for the studio in the morning, so we got back from the studio and I'm like "Okay dude, here's your song, man. I kind of went off the deep end. I hope it's cool." I remember watching him and he was just going "What?" [9]

Though not a member of the band, Tony Lombardo contributed two songs to the album: "Man-O-Steel" and the instrumental "Gnutheme". [7] In 1991 he would again collaborate with All to record New Girl, Old Story , an album of songs he had written between 1979 and 1989. [10]

Recording, artwork, and release

Allroy's Revenge was recorded in December 1988 and January 1989 at Third Wave Recording studios in Torrance, California with recording engineer Richard Andrews, who had worked with the band since 1986. [7] Stevenson produced the album, and he and Egerton served as additional engineers. [7] Adrian Cook and James B. Mansfield were also additional engineers, while Bill Cook provided additional assistance in the studio. [7] As with All's prior releases, Stevenson was very particular in how he wanted the songs to sound. [11] "I've never been in a band where phrasing was so fucking important as this band", recalled Reynolds. "Karl would do some of that too. Not as bad as Bill." [11]

Alvarez illustrated the album's artwork; the cover depicts the band's Allroy character preparing to smash an anthropomorphic musical note with a mallet, while the interior art shows the note bandaged, bruised, and dazed following the beating. [7] [12] The conflict between Allroy and the musical note would later be revisited on the covers of the band's albums Mass Nerder (1998), All (1999), and Problematic (2000). [13] [14] [15]

Allroy's Revenge was released through Cruz Records as a 12-song LP and a 14-song cassette and CD, the latter two including "Carnage" and a cover version of "Hot Rod Lincoln", a 1955 song by Charlie Ryan that was a hit for Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen in 1971. [7] [12] "She's My Ex" was released as the album's single, with the B-side "Crazy?" which had been recorded during the Allroy's Revenge sessions but was not included on the album. [16]

Reception

Jason Ankeny of Allmusic gave Allroy's Revenge three and a half stars out of five, calling it "a faster, punkier outing that lacks the focus and attitude of the group's earlier work. Vocalist-of-the-month Scott Reynolds sings with maturity on existential dilemmas like 'Copping Z' and 'Fool', and his earnestness sets the record's tone; Allroy's Revenge is an ambitious record, but given All's prior success as a goofcore band, an ambitious record is probably the last thing that fans want to hear." [17] A review in Flipside called it "the best All record so far...the songs are more powerful at times, more infectiously hooky at times, and the new kid, Scott Reynolds, blows Smalley away." [18] Cary Darling of the Orange County Register remarked that "Though All has the abrasive guitar crunch of hardcore, [the album] is imbued with so much melody and wit (especially on side two) that it transcends any associations with the style. Tracks like 'She's My Ex' and 'Mary' have all the ragged glory of early Replacements. If these guys were from Minneapolis instead of Lomita, they'd probably be huge. [1]

Track listing

LP version
Side A
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Gnutheme" Tony Lombardo 1:39
2."Fool" Karl Alvarez 1:35
3."Check One" Bill Stevenson 0:42
4."Scary Sad"Stevenson2:45
5."Man-O-Steel"Lombardo1:37
6."Box" Scott Reynolds 3:18
7."Copping Z"Alvarez (lyrics), Stephen Egerton (music)2:47
Side B
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
8."She's My Ex"Stevenson3:07
9."Bubblegum"Alvarez2:36
10."Mary"Reynolds3:18
11."Net"Stevenson (music and lyrics), Egerton (music)4:09
12."No Traffic"Reynolds2:51
CD and cassette versions [7]
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Gnutheme" Tony Lombardo 1:39
2."Fool" Karl Alvarez 1:35
3."Check One" Bill Stevenson 0:42
4."Scary Sad"Stevenson2:45
5."Man-O-Steel"Lombardo1:37
6."Box" Scott Reynolds 3:18
7."Copping Z"Alvarez (lyrics), Stephen Egerton (music)2:47
8."Hot Rod Lincoln" (originally performed by Charley Ryan and the Livingston Bros.) Charlie Ryan, Stevenson2:49
9."She's My Ex"Stevenson3:07
10."Bubblegum"Alvarez2:36
11."Mary"Reynolds3:18
12."Net"Stevenson (music and lyrics), Egerton (music)4:09
13."No Traffic"Reynolds2:51
14."Carnage"Stevenson2:31

Personnel

Band [7]
Additional performers [7]
Production [7]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bill Stevenson (musician)</span> American musician

John William Stevenson is an American musician, songwriter, and record producer. He is the drummer, main songwriter, and only constant member of the California punk rock group Descendents since its inception. In late December 1981, he played a few concerts with the hardcore punk band Black Flag because their drummer, Robo was detained in England after a tour there. He went on to record with Black Flag on several of their albums until 1985, including the highly influential My War. After this, he focused his attention on Descendents and played with the band until lead singer Milo Aukerman left in 1987. After Milo's departure, Bill and the other members of Descendents, Karl Alvarez and Stephen Egerton, recruited singer Dave Smalley of Dag Nasty, moved to Fort Collins, Colorado, and formed All. All went on to have two more singers, Scott Reynolds (1989–1993) and Chad Price (1993–present). Aukerman came back for the 1996 album Everything Sucks, the 2004 album Cool to Be You, 2016's Hypercaffium Spazzinate and the newest album 9th and Walnut. All and Descendents continue to tour between Stevenson's and Aukerman's respective careers as a recording engineer and a biochemist. Stevenson was born in Torrance, California and attended Mira Costa High School, with fellow members of the Descendents.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Descendents</span> American punk rock band

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<i>Enjoy!</i> (Descendents album) 1986 studio album by the Descendents

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<i>All</i> (Descendents album) 1987 studio album by the Descendents

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<i>Somery</i> 1991 compilation album by the Descendents

Somery is a compilation album by the American punk rock band the Descendents, released in 1991 through SST Records. It compiles songs from their Fat EP (1981) and the albums Milo Goes to College (1982), I Don't Want to Grow Up (1985), Enjoy! (1986), and All (1987).

Tony Lombardo is an American musician who was the original bassist in the punk rock band the Descendents. He joined the band in 1979 and played on their debut single, the Fat EP (1981), and the albums Milo Goes to College (1982) and I Don't Want to Grow Up (1985). After leaving the band, he performed in other acts and worked for the United States Postal Service until 2005. He collaborated with the Descendents' successor band, All, writing two songs for their album Allroy's Revenge (1989) and teaming up with them for an album of his own songs, New Girl, Old Story (1991), credited to "TonyAll". He also collaborated with the reunited Descendents on their 1996 album Everything Sucks, and the 2021 album 9th and Walnut.

<i>Allroy Sez</i> 1988 studio album by All

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<i>Percolater</i> (album) 1992 studio album by All

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<i>Breaking Things</i> 1993 studio album by All

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<i>Allroy Saves</i> 1990 studio album by All

Allroy Saves is the third studio album by the American punk rock band All, released in 1990 through Cruz Records. It was the first album that the band members recorded, mixed, and produced entirely on their own. A music video, the band's first, was released for the song "Simple Things".

<i>Allroy for Prez</i> 1988 EP by All

Allroy for Prez is an EP by the American punk rock band All, released in 1988 through Cruz Records. Released the same year as the band's debut album, Allroy Sez, the EP was All's final release with their original singer Dave Smalley.

<i>Trailblazer</i> (album) 1990 live album by All

Trailblazer is a live album by the American punk rock band All, released in 1990 through Cruz Records. It was recorded in July 1989 at CBGB in New York City during the band's tour to promote their second studio album, Allroy's Revenge. The album was titled after a brand of portable toilet used by the band while on tour.

<i>Liveage!</i> 1987 live album by the Descendents

Liveage! is a live album by the American punk rock band the Descendents, released in 1987 through SST Records. It is the band's first live album, it was recorded July 13, 1987 at First Avenue in Minneapolis during their summer 1987 "FinALL" tour, so-called because singer Milo Aukerman was leaving the Descendents to pursue a career in biochemistry, after which the band was relaunching itself under the name All. Liveage! was followed by a second live album, Hallraker: Live! (1989), which was partly recorded at the same show but featured a completely different set of songs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">She's My Ex</span> 1989 single by All

"She's My Ex" is a song by the American punk rock band All, released as a single from their 1989 album Allroy's Revenge. Written by drummer Bill Stevenson, the song describes an ex-girlfriend with whom he had a tumultuous romance. The B-side track "Crazy?", written by bassist Karl Alvarez, is from the Allroy's Revenge recording sessions but was not included on the album.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dot (song)</span> 1992 single by All

"Dot" is a song by the American punk rock band All, written by singer Scott Reynolds and released as a single and music video from the band's 1992 album Percolater. The single also includes the song "Can't Say", written by bassist Karl Alvarez and drummer Bill Stevenson, and a cover version of "A Boy Named Sue", a 1969 song written by Shel Silverstein and made famous by Johnny Cash.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Guilty (All song)</span> 1994 single by All

"Guilty" is a song by the American punk rock band All, written by drummer Bill Stevenson and released as the second single from the band's 1993 album Breaking Things. The single also includes two more songs recorded during the Breaking Things session that were left off the album: "All's Fair", written by Stevenson, and "Man's World", written by Stevenson, singer Chad Price, and bassist Karl Alvarez.

<i>New Girl, Old Story</i> 1991 studio album by All with Tony Lombardo

New Girl, Old Story is collaborative album between the American punk rock band All and Tony Lombardo, the original bassist of All's precursor band the Descendents. Credited to "TonyAll", it consists of twelve songs written by Lombardo between 1979 and 1989. Lombardo played bass guitar on the entire album, with the members of All playing the rest of the instrumentation. Vocals were split between Lombardo and All singer Scott Reynolds, with All bassist Karl Alvarez also singing one song. Along with their 1990 album Allroy Saves, recorded at the same time, New Girl, Old Story was the last album recorded by All before their relocation from Los Angeles to Brookfield, Missouri.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Just Perfect</span> 1988 single by All

"Just Perfect" is a song by the American punk rock band All, released as a single from their 1988 debut album Allroy Sez. Written by drummer Bill Stevenson, "Just Perfect" was remixed from the original album version for release as a single. The B-side track "Wishing Well", written by singer Dave Smalley, is from the Allroy Sez recording sessions but was not included on the album. Both tracks were later included on the compact disc release of All's following EP, Allroy for Prez (1988).

References

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