T.S.O.L. discography | |
---|---|
Studio albums | 11 |
Live albums | 4 |
Compilation albums | 3 |
Video albums | 2 |
Music videos | 5 |
EPs | 3 |
Singles | 9 |
Other appearances | 6 |
The discography of T.S.O.L. , an American punk rock band, consists of eleven studio albums, three live albums, three compilation albums, two EPs, two video albums, three singles, and five music videos.
T.S.O.L. (True Sounds of Liberty) formed in Huntington Beach, California in 1978 with an initial lineup of singer Jack Grisham, guitarist Ron Emory, bassist Mike Roche, and drummer Todd Barnes. [1] Their eponymously titled debut EP was released in 1981 through Posh Boy Records and followed later that year by the full-length album Dance with Me through Frontier Records, combining hardcore punk and gothic rock styles. [1] The Weathered Statues EP (1982) and Beneath the Shadows album (1983) followed via Alternative Tentacles, the latter adding keyboardist Greg Kuehn to the lineup. [1] Grisham and Barnes left the band in late 1983 and were respectively replaced by Joe Wood and Mitch Dean, while Keuhn left and was not replaced. [1]
The new lineup signed to Enigma Records and released Change Today? (1984) which began the launch of a ten year run with Wood and Dean (who at times still play under the banner today). [1] 1986's Revenge was another stylistic shift, this time towards hard rock. [1] Hit and Run (1987) found them adopting a straight ahead rock sound and this was their only album to chart, reaching no. 184 on the Billboard 200. [1] [2] [3] It was followed by the compilation album Thoughts of Yesterday: 1981–1982 (1987) and live album Live (1988). [4] [5] Emory then left the band and was eventually replaced by Marshall Rohner; This lineup released 1990's Strange Love . [1] Roche then was quit and sold his rights to the name to Wood and Dean as did Emory later on leaving the band with no remaining original members. [1] The compilation Hell and Back Together: 1984–1990 was released in 1992. [6]
Meanwhile, the original T.S.O.L. lineup of Grisham, Emory, Roche, and Barnes re-formed and released Live '91 . [7] In the wake of the 1990s punk rock revival, Epitaph Records re-released Dance with Me in 1996 and Nitro Records re-released the T.S.O.L. and Weathered Statues EPs as a single compilation. [8] [9] In 1999 the original members regained legal rights to the band's name from Joe Wood, though Barnes died of a brain aneurysm that December and was replaced by Jay O'Brien. [1] T.S.O.L. signed to Nitro, who reissued Beneath the Shadows. [1] A new studio album, Disappear , was released in 2001 and found the band returning to their hardcore punk roots. [1] Live from O.C., a video album recorded in 1991, was released in 2002. O'Brien was replaced by Billy Blaze for 2003's Divided We Stand , which also featured the return of keyboardist Greg Kuehn. [1] In 2005, with new drummer Anthony "Tiny" Buisu, the band released the video album Live in Hawaii and the retrospective album Who's Screwin' Who? , the latter consisting of songs from T.S.O.L., Dance with Me, Weathered Statues, Beneath the Shadows, Disappear, and Divided We Stand re-recorded by the 2005 lineup (originally released through Anarchy Music, it was later re-released by Cleopatra Records under the titles F#*k You Tough Guy: The Collection and Code Blue). [10] [11] [12] T.S.O.L. went on hiatus in 2006, and Nitro reissued Dance with Me the following year. [1] [8]
The hiatus was short, as T.S.O.L. began performing again in 2007. 2008 brought The Early Years Live video and the live album Live from Long Beach , recorded at their next to last show before the hiatus and released through Cider City Records. [13] [14] The band's tenth studio album, Life, Liberty & the Pursuit of Free Downloads , was released in 2009; It was given away as a free music download through a sponsorship from Hurley International. [15] [16] T.S.O.L.'s most recent studio album, The Trigger Complex, was released in January 2017 through Rise Records, with Buisu replaced by new drummer Chip Hanna. The Current Drummer of T.S.O.L. (2017-present) is Antonio Val Hernandez. [17]
Year | Album details | Peak chart positions |
---|---|---|
US | ||
Billboard 200 [2] [3] | ||
1981 | Dance with Me [8] | — |
1983 | Beneath the Shadows [18]
| — |
1984 | Change Today? [19]
| — |
1986 | Revenge [20]
| — |
1987 | Hit and Run [21]
| 184 |
1990 | Strange Love [22]
| — |
2001 | Disappear [23]
| — |
2003 | Divided We Stand [24]
| — |
2005 | Who's Screwin' Who? [10] [I]
| — |
2009 | Life, Liberty & the Pursuit of Free Downloads [15] [16] | — |
2017 | The Trigger Complex [17] | — |
"—" denotes releases that did not chart. |
^ IWho's Screwin' Who? was re-released by Cleopatra Records in 2008 as F#*k You Tough Guy: The Collection and in 2011 as Code Blue. [11] [12]
Year | Album details |
---|---|
1988 | Live [5] |
1991 | Live '91 [7]
|
2008 | Live from Long Beach [14]
|
2018 | "Live At The Observatory"
|
Year | Album details |
---|---|
1987 | Thoughts of Yesterday: 1981–1982 [4] [25] |
1992 | Hell and Back Together: 1984–1990 [6] |
1997 | T.S.O.L. / Weathered Statues [9] |
Year | EP details |
---|---|
1981 | T.S.O.L. [26] |
1982 | Weathered Statues [27]
|
2013 | "You Don't Have To Die"
|
Year | Album details |
---|---|
2002 | Live from O.C. [28] [29] |
2005 | Live in Hawaii
|
2008 | The Early Years Live [13]
|
Year | Single | Album |
---|---|---|
1990 | "Man and Machine" [25] | Thoughts of Yesterday: 1981–1982 |
2001 | "Anticop" [1] | Disappear |
2007 | "Code Blue" [12] | Who's Screwin' Who? |
2014 | "Songs From Suburbia"
| |
2018 | "Low Low Low"
| |
2019 | "1 Thing"
| |
2019 | "Ghost Train"
| |
2020 | "What A Wonderful World?"
| |
2022 | "Sweet Transvestite"
|
Year | Song | Director | Album |
---|---|---|---|
1986 | "Colors (Take Me Away)" | Tony Kunewalder | Revenge |
1986 | "Nothin' for You" | ||
1986 | "Revenge" | ||
2001 | "Pyro" | Disappear | |
2017 | "I Wanted to See You" [30] | The Trigger Complex |
The following T.S.O.L. songs were released on compilation albums. This is not an exhaustive list; songs that were first released on the band's albums, EPs, or singles are not included.
Year | Release details | Track(s) |
---|---|---|
1983 | Posh Hits Vol. 1 [31] |
|
1984 | Suburbia soundtrack [32] |
|
Flipside Vinyl Fanzine Volume 1
|
| |
Blazing Wheels and Barking Trucks: Skate Rock Vol. 2
|
| |
1985 | The Enigma Variations
|
|
1987 | Scream: The Compilation
| |
The Enigma Variations 2
|
| |
1998 | Deep Thoughts [33] |
|
2001 | Plea for Peace / Take Action [34]
|
|
The Adolescents are an American punk rock band formed in Fullerton, California in 1980. Part of the hardcore punk movement in southern California in the early 1980s, they were one of the main punk acts to emerge from Orange County, along with their peers in Agent Orange and Social Distortion. Founding bassist Steve Soto was the sole constant member of the band since its inception until his 2018 death, with singer Tony Reflex being in the group for all but one album.
Adolescents, also known as The Blue Album due to its cover design, is the debut studio album by American punk rock band the Adolescents, released in April 1981 on Frontier Records. Recorded after guitarist Rikk Agnew and drummer Casey Royer joined the band, it features several songs written for their prior group, the Detours, including "Kids of the Black Hole" and "Amoeba", which became two of the Adolescents' most well-known songs. Adolescents was one of the first hardcore punk albums to be widely distributed throughout the United States, and became one of the best-selling California hardcore albums of its time. The band never toured in support of it, and broke up four months after its release. The Blue Album lineup of Agnew, Royer, guitarist Frank Agnew, bassist Steve Soto and singer Tony Brandenburg reunited several times in subsequent years, but only for brief periods.
T.S.O.L. is an American punk rock band formed in 1978 in Long Beach, California. Although most commonly associated with hardcore punk, T.S.O.L.'s music has varied on each release, including such styles as deathrock, art punk, horror punk and other varieties of punk music.
Jack Grisham is an American rock vocalist, musician, raconteur and political activist from Southern California. He is the vocalist for the punk rock band T.S.O.L., which emerged from the late 1970s Los Angeles hardcore punk rock scene, along with Black Flag, Circle Jerks and Bad Religion. Grisham has also fronted the bands Vicious Circle, the Joykiller, Tender Fury and Cathedral of Tears. He records with T.S.O.L., the Joykiller and the Manic Low.
Ron Emory is an American rock musician and guitarist for the punk rock band T.S.O.L.. An original member of the band, founded in Southern California in 1979, Emory left in 1987 prior to the release of the album Hit and Run. In 1996, he joined the other original members of T.S.O.L. to reform the band, which remains active. Emory worked on a solo project titled Walk That Walk, which was released on April 15, 2010.
Dance with Me is the first full-length album by the American hardcore punk band T.S.O.L., released in 1981 though Frontier Records. While the band's eponymously titled debut EP, released earlier that year, had been filled with radical leftist lyrics, Dance with Me moved away from politics in favor of horror film- and gothic-inspired subject matter. The album includes T.S.O.L.'s most well-known song, the necrophilia-themed "Code Blue". Following the punk rock revival of the 1990s, Dance with Me was re-released by Epitaph Records in 1996 and by Nitro Records in 2007.
Weathered Statues is an EP by the American hardcore punk band T.S.O.L., released in 1982 through Alternative Tentacles. In comparison to the band's previous material, its experimental nature and melodic leanings confused some of their fans and presaged the creative direction they would take on their second studio album, 1983's Beneath the Shadows. The material from Weathered Statues was later re-released on the compilation albums Thoughts of Yesterday: 1981–1982 (1987) and T.S.O.L. / Weathered Statues (1997).
Beneath the Shadows is the second studio album by the American hardcore punk band T.S.O.L., released in 1983 through Alternative Tentacles. With the addition of keyboardist Greg Kuehn to the lineup, the band moved away from punk rock in favor of a gothic rock sound in the vein of later releases by the Damned and Siouxsie and the Banshees songs, alienating much of their hardcore audience in the process. Though the album was critically well received and led to the band being featured in director Penelope Spheeris' film Suburbia, it was largely rejected by their fanbase within the punk scene.
Life, Liberty & the Pursuit of Free Downloads is a studio album by American punk rock band T.S.O.L., released in 2009 to coincide with the band's thirtieth anniversary. The album was released for free as a download through Hurley; Hurley's website hosted video of the band recording the album. The band asked that fans instead consider donating to charity the money that they would have spent on purchasing the album.
Change Today? is the third studio album by the American rock band T.S.O.L., released in 1984 through Enigma Records. It was the band's first album with singer/guitarist Joe Wood and drummer Mitch Dean, replacing founding members Jack Grisham and Todd Barnes who had left the band in late 1983. The album was recorded using money loaned to T.S.O.L. by the Dead Kennedys, and found the new incarnation of the band moving away from the hardcore punk associations of the original lineup in favor of a traditional rock and gothic rock sound. Change Today? was reissued in 1999 through the Enigma subsidiary Restless Records, adding four tracks from the recording sessions that had been left off the original album.
T.S.O.L. is the eponymously titled debut EP by the American hardcore punk band T.S.O.L., released in 1981 through Posh Boy Records. Its fast tempos and politically radical lyrics established the band as a major force in the southern California hardcore scene of the time. T.S.O.L. quickly moved away from leftist political subject matter, however, shifting in a gothic rock direction and changing labels to Frontier Records for their full-length album Dance with Me (1981). This led to a dispute with Posh Boy owner Robbie Fields, who claimed the band owed his label another EP. The two parties eventually reached a settlement in which Posh Boy gained the rights to T.S.O.L.'s 1982 EP Weathered Statues, combining it with the debut EP in the 1987 compilation album Thoughts of Yesterday: 1981–1982. Nitro Records purchased the master recordings from Posh Boy in 1997 and re-released the two EPs as the compilation T.S.O.L. / Weathered Statues.
Thoughts of Yesterday: 1981–1982 is a compilation album of early material by the American hardcore punk band T.S.O.L., released in 1987 by Posh Boy Records. It combines the band's two EPs, 1981's T.S.O.L. and 1982's Weathered Statues, as well as an early version of "Peace Thru' Power", a song that was re-recorded for their first full-length album Dance with Me (1981). The album's release stemmed from a dispute between T.S.O.L. and Posh Boy owner Robbie Fields that began when the band left Posh Boy after releasing T.S.O.L., moving to Frontier Records for Dance with Me. Fields maintained that the band owed his label another EP, and withheld royalties from them as a result. The dispute culminated in singer Jack Grisham punching Fields in the face. Several years later, after Grisham and drummer Todd Barnes had both left T.S.O.L., a settlement was negotiated in which the band members received back royalty payments and Posh Boy acquired the rights to Weathered Statues, originally released through Alternative Tentacles. Posh Boy combined the two EPs to create Thoughts of Yesterday.
Live is a live album by the American rock band T.S.O.L., recorded January 17, 1988 at The Coach House in San Juan Capistrano, California and released later that year through Restless Records. It includes performances of songs from the band's three prior studio albums—Change Today? (1984), Revenge (1986), and Hit and Run (1987)—as well as two cover songs, one of The Doors' "Roadhouse Blues" and one of Bob Dylan's "All Along the Watchtower". Founding guitarist Ron Emory left the band after this album, leaving bassist Mike Roche as the only remaining original member.
Strange Love is the sixth studio album by the American rock band T.S.O.L., released in 1990 through Enigma Records. It was the band's final studio album to include singer/guitarist Joe Wood and drummer Mitch Dean, and the only one to include guitarist Marshall Rohner. Bassist and sole remaining original member Mike Roche left the group after the recording of Strange Love, reuniting with the rest of the original lineup in 1991. Wood and Dean carried on for a few more years with other members, but Strange Love was a commercial disappointment and the band was eventually dropped from Enigma. In 1999 founding members Roche, Jack Grisham, Ron Emory, and Todd Barnes would win back legal rights to the name "T.S.O.L." from Wood and relaunch the band, taking it back to its punk rock roots.
Live '91 is a live album by the American hardcore punk band T.S.O.L., released in 1991 through Triple X Records. It marked a reunion of the band's original lineup of singer Jack Grisham, guitarist Ron Emory, bassist Mike Roche, and drummer Todd Barnes. At the time, the rights to the name "T.S.O.L." were held by Joe Wood and Mitch Dean, who had replaced Grisham and Barnes in 1984 and taken the band in a glam metal direction. Wood legally prevented the original members from using the name for their reunion, so they were billed by their four full names and Live '91 does not carry the name T.S.O.L. on its packaging.
Hell and Back Together: 1984–1990 is a compilation album by the American rock band T.S.O.L., released in 1992 through Restless Records. It includes material from the band's hard rock/glam metal era with singer/guitarist Joe Wood and drummer Mitch Dean, which saw lineup changes resulting in the departure of original members Ron Emory and Mike Roche. It compiles tracks from the albums Revenge (1986), Hit and Run (1987), and Strange Love (1990), two tracks from other compilations, and three songs recorded live for radio station WBCN in Boston. It was the final album released by this incarnation of T.S.O.L.; in 1999 the original lineup of Emory, Roche, Jack Grisham, and Todd Barnes reacquired legal rights to the band's name and relaunched the group with a return to its hardcore punk roots.
Divided We Stand is a studio album by the American hardcore punk band T.S.O.L. It was released in 2003 through Nitro Records.
Disappear is a studio album by the American hardcore punk band T.S.O.L., released in 2001 through Nitro Records.
Live from Long Beach is a live album by the American hardcore punk band T.S.O.L., released in 2008 through Cider City Records.
The discography of the Adolescents, a Southern California-based punk rock band, consists of ten studio albums, three live albums, one compilation album, six EPs, two singles, and one video album.