The Fastest Kid Alive | ||||
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Studio album by the Adolescents | ||||
Released | June 3, 2011 | |||
Studio | Exile on Mountain Street, Glendale, California | |||
Genre | Punk rock | |||
Length | 40:11 | |||
Label | Concrete Jungle (0206556) | |||
Adolescents chronology | ||||
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The Fastest Kid Alive is the fifth studio album by the American punk rock band the Adolescents, released in June 2011 on Concrete Jungle Records. It was the band's first album not to include at least one of the Agnew brothers (Rikk, Frank, and Alfie), and began a string of albums with singer Tony Reflex and bassist Steve Soto as the only constant members. The Fastest Kid Alive was the band's only album with guitarist Joe Harrison, and the first of two with guitarist Mike McKnight and drummer Armando Del Rio.
Following touring in support of their 2005 album OC Confidential , the Adolescents began working on material for their next album. In March 2007, bassist Steve Soto stated that he, singer Tony Reflex, guitarist Frank Agnew, and drummer Derek O'Brien were working on new songs and hoped to have an album out by the end of the year. [1] [2] That September the band released a cover version of the unrecorded Germs song "Beyond Hurt, Beyond Help" for the Japanese re-release of the 1996 Germs tribute album A Small Circle of Friends . [3] The band toured internationally in December 2008, performing in Mexico, Spain, Germany, the Czech Republic, Italy, Germany, and Belgium, followed by a string of dates in California in January 2009. [4] [5] By that March they were rehearsing their new material and Reflex was writing lyrics, with plans to record in early April and have the album finished by May. [6] The band traveled to Europe again in December 2009, touring France, Switzerland, and Spain. [7] To coincide with this tour they released a split EP with French band Burning Heads, featuring the new songs "Serf City" and "One Nation, Under Siege".
The Fastest Kid Alive was recorded at Exile on Mountain Street in Glendale, California with recording engineer Chris Heckman. [8] The band re-recorded "Serf City" and "One Nation, Under Siege" for the album. [9] Recording was completed in May 2010. [9] [10] The album's title was taken from a scene in the 2007 film Superbad , in which the character Evan (played by Michael Cera) is chased by police officer Michaels (played by Seth Rogen); failing to catch Evan, Michaels exclaims "He's a freak! He's the fastest kid alive!" [10] According to Reflex, the album's lyrics dealt with "what has been going on in the war atmosphere of the last few years." [11]
Having completed recording, the Adolescents performed at the Punk Rock Bowling festival in Las Vegas and the City Underground Festival in San Francisco, both in May 2010. [12] [13] To promote the album, they released three new songs through streaming media that July—"Tokyo au Go-Go", "Peace Don't Cost a Thing", and "The Jefferson Memorial Dance Revolution"—and another three the following month: "Learning to Swim", "Inspiration", and "Serf City". [14] [15] [16] After performing on the 2010 Warped Tour, the band embarked on a tour from November 2010 to January 2011 that began in California and took them to Brazil, Texas, and Florida. [17]
The Fastest Kid Alive was released June 3, 2011 on German label Concrete Jungle Records. [18] The Adolescents supported it with a tour from June through August that took them to Germany, France, Spain, the United Kingdom, Luxembourg, the Czech Republic, Belgium, Switzerland, Italy, Australia, and Japan. [18]
All tracks are written by Tony Reflex and Steve Soto [8]
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Operation FTW" | 2:09 |
2. | "Inspiration" | 2:57 |
3. | "Wars Aren't Won, Wars Are Fought" | 3:29 |
4. | "One Nation, Under Siege" | 2:36 |
5. | "Babylon by Bomb" | 2:31 |
6. | "Too Fast, Too Loud" | 2:00 |
7. | "Learning to Swim" | 3:01 |
8. | "Can't Change the World with a Song" | 3:53 |
9. | "Orange Crush" | 1:57 |
10. | "Serf City" | 3:12 |
11. | "The Jefferson Memorial Dance Revolution" | 2:12 |
12. | "Tokyo au Go-Go" | 1:28 |
13. | "No Child Left Behind" | 2:43 |
14. | "Branded" | 1:48 |
15. | "Peace Don't Cost a Thing" | 4:15 |
Total length: | 40:11 |
Credits adapted from the album's liner notes. [8]
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NOFX was an American punk rock band formed in Los Angeles in 1983. Bassist/lead vocalist Fat Mike, rhythm guitarist Eric Melvin and drummer Erik Sandin were original founding and longest-serving members of the band, who have appeared on every release by the band, although Sandin departed briefly in 1985, only to rejoin the following year. El Hefe joined the band in 1991 to play lead guitar and trumpet, rounding out the best-known iteration of the lineup.
The Adolescents are an American punk rock band formed in Fullerton, California in 1979. 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.
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Anthony Brandenburg is an American musician best known as the lead singer for the punk rock band the Adolescents. He has used the pseudonyms Tony Cadena, Tony Montana, and Tony Adolescent, and since 1992 has most consistently credited himself as Tony Reflex. Active in music since 1980, he has fronted several bands in addition to the Adolescents—including the Abandoned, the Flower Leperds, ADZ, and Sister Goddamn—and has performed on over 20 studio albums.
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The discography of the Adolescents, a Southern California-based punk rock band, consists of eleven studio albums, three live albums, one compilation album, six EPs, two singles, and one video album.
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Live 1981 & 1986 is a live album by the American punk rock band the Adolescents, released in 1989 on Triple X Records. It consists of live performances recorded during the band's original 1980–81 run and during their 1986 reunion.
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