Back from Samoa | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1982 | |||
Genre | Hardcore punk | |||
Length | 17:38 | |||
Label | Triple X Records | |||
Angry Samoans chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
Christgau's Record Guide | A [2] |
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music | [3] |
Spin Alternative Record Guide | 9/10 [4] |
Back from Samoa is the debut full-length album by the American punk rock band Angry Samoans. [5] It was released in 1982 on Bad Trip Records. [6] [3]
After the release of Inside My Brain, "Metal Mike" Saunders left the group, and was replaced by Jeff Dahl. The impasse they had created locally with the influential Rodney Bingenheimer meant the band had trouble playing in Los Angeles, forcing them to play shows in the suburbs. When they began to play in the emerging suburban hardcore scene, with bands such as Suicidal Tendencies, they sped up their own songs accordingly. The band began recording Back From Samoa and had completed approximately two-thirds of the record, when Mike Saunders returned, forcing the band to re-record all of the vocals. [7] The album contains a cover of The Chambers Brothers' "Time Has Come Today." [8]
Trouser Press wrote that "the brief, well-played songs on Back From Samoa have cool titles ... but the lyrics are rarely as clever." [9] Alternative Press called the album "hilarious," writing that it "rocks like a spastic colon." [10] The Spin Alternative Record Guide wrote that "the extremism of this viciously witty, explosive thrash is compelling, perhaps because it's rooted in self-hatred." [4]
The cover image is an altered still taken from the 1959 sci-fi film The Monster of Piedras Blancas. The back cover features a photo of the band, with vocalist Mike Saunders wearing a "Fried Abortions" t-shirt, which was the name of a musical side-project he was a member of. There is a Holley Performance Products sticker on the body of the guitar slung over Mike's shoulder.
Slip It In is the fourth studio album by the American hardcore punk band Black Flag, released in 1984 on SST Records.
D.O.A. is a Canadian punk rock band from Vancouver. They are often referred to as being among the "founders" of hardcore punk, along with Black Flag, Dead Kennedys, Bad Brains, Angry Samoans, Germs, and Middle Class. Their second album Hardcore '81 was thought by many to have been the first actual reference to the second wave of the American punk sound as hardcore.
Nomeansno was a Canadian punk rock band formed in Victoria, British Columbia and later relocated to Vancouver. They issued 11 albums, including a collaborative album with Jello Biafra, as well as numerous EPs and singles. Critic Martin Popoff described their music as "the mightiest merger between the hateful aggression of punk and the discipline of heavy metal." Nomeansno's distinct hardcore punk sound, complex instrumentation, and dark, "savagely intelligent" lyrics inspired subsequent musicians. They are often considered foundational in the punk jazz and post-hardcore movements, and have been cited as a formative influence on the math rock and emo genres.
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Die Kreuzen (/ˈdiːˈkɹɔɪtsn̩/) is an American rock band from Milwaukee, Wisconsin formed in 1981. The name, which was taken from a German Bible, is grammatically incorrect German for "the crosses." They began as a hardcore punk group and evolved musically to alternative rock.
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Up on the Sun is the third album by the Meat Puppets, released in 1985 by SST Records. The album features a cleaner and more technical sound with a more psychedelic rock feel, in contrast to the sloppy punk approach of their first album (1982), while continuing with the mystical, poetic lyrics and country-inflected songwriting of Meat Puppets II (1984).
Inside My Brain is the debut extended play by the American punk rock band Angry Samoans, released in 1980 by Bad Trip Records. The most infamous song on the EP, "Get Off the Air", was directed at influential KROQ-FM DJ Rodney Bingenheimer.
Eternally Yours is the second album by Australian punk rock band The Saints, released in 1978. Produced by band members Chris Bailey and Ed Kuepper, the album saw the band pursue a bigger, more R&B-driven sound, augmented by a horn section. The album also saw the introduction of bass guitarist Algy Ward, who replaced the band's previous bass player, Kym Bradshaw in mid-1977.
Michael Earl Saunders, also known as Metal Mike, is an American rock critic and the singer of the Californian punk band Angry Samoans. He is credited with coining the music genre label "heavy metal" in a record review for Humble Pie's As Safe as Yesterday Is in the November 12, 1970 issue of Rolling Stone. Six months later in 1971, he used the phrase again while reviewing Sir Lord Baltimore's first album, Kingdom Come, in the pages of Creem magazine.
The '90s Suck and So Do You is an album by punk band Angry Samoans, released in 1999. It was their first studio album since 1988's STP Not LSD, but featured only two original members - vocalist Mike Saunders and drummer Bill Vockeroth.
VOM was conceived in 1976 as a self-described beat combo featuring the renowned writer and critic Richard Meltzer on vocals, with Gregg Turner on second vocals and "Metal" Mike Saunders on drums. The band also featured Dave Guzman on "tuneless rhythm guitar", Lisa Brenneis ("Gurl") on bass guitar, and Phil Koehn on lead guitar. The name VOM was an abbreviation for "vomit", as their early live act was said by Meltzer and Turner to have included throwing various viscera, cow parts and food substances at the audience to provoke a reaction.
Yesterday Started Tomorrow is an EP by the American punk rock band Angry Samoans, released in 1986. The EP featured a major style change, contrasting with their first two albums.
STP Not LSD is the third album by the American punk rock band Angry Samoans, released in 1988 on PVC Records. The album was re-issued in 1990 by Triple X Records.
Live at Rhino Records is a live album by the punk band Angry Samoans, recorded in 1979 and released in 1990. The first two tracks were included on re-releases of their debut album Inside My Brain.
I'm In Love With Your Mom is an EP by Angry Samoans containing all six tracks from their first recording session in September 1978.
Fuck The War is an EP by Angry Samoans.
The Angry Samoans is an American punk rock band from the first wave of American punk, formed in August 1978 in Los Angeles, California, by early 1970s rock writer "Metal" Mike Saunders, his sibling lead guitarist Bonze Blayk and Gregg Turner, along with original recruits Todd Homer (bass) and Bill Vockeroth (drums).