×
Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.
For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.
0045778684328
$12.64
$12.99
Save 3%
Current price is $12.64, Original price is $12.99. You Save 3%.
View All Available Formats & Editions

CD(Digi-Pak)
Members save with free shipping everyday!
See details
See details
12.64
In Stock
Overview
Rancid's seventh album, 2009's Let the Dominos Fall, was released a full six years after Indestructible. In that time much changed in the world (and the band swapped drummers, with Branden Steineckert stepping in for Brent Reed) but not a whole lot changed with the band's sound. Sure, there were a few cosmetic differences here and there but the fire, spirit, and strength the band exhibited since their debut in the early '90s hasn't faded at all. The first four songs on the album showcase everything that's right about the band. The nostalgic punk fever of the opener "East Bay Night," the angry political burst of "This Place," the ska punk giddiness of "Up to No Good," and the uplifting singalong anthem "Last One to Die" flash past like their whole career in one six-minute medley of greatness. The rest of the album shows off their strengths (like Tim Armstrong's ragged and idiosyncratic vocals) and unveils some surprises (like sweet vocal harmonies on the love song "Lulu," and mandolins and slide guitar on the affecting story of a soldier's homecoming, "Civilian Ways") but ends up sounding uneven with a few surprising missteps along the way. Part of the problem is that the vocals are shared more than usual among the three singers in the band, and while their efforts are OK, there's just no way Matt Freeman and Lars Fredericksen can compete with Armstrong. The way they all trade off vocals on the Specials-influenced "I Ain't Worried" is pretty cool, though. The cleanly scrubbed sound of the record also is problematic, but only if you want the band to sound like they did back in 1993. For anyone else, there is still plenty of power and punch in the band's performance. Songs like "Dominos Fall" and "Locomotive" fly out of the speakers like demons, midtempo tracks like "That's Just the Way It Is Now" boom and swagger, and the whole record will swell the hearts of longtime fans with pride, and might just swipe some new ones too. Rancid's been doing this a long time and while they'll never recapture the exact same power and glory they exuded in the '90s', on Let the Dominos Fall they show they've got more than enough of each to get by in grand style.
Product Details
Release Date: | 06/02/2009 |
---|---|
Label: | Epitaph |
UPC: | 0045778684328 |
catalogNumber: | 86843 |
Rank: | 57060 |
Tracks
Album Credits
Performance Credits
Rancid Primary ArtistTim Armstrong Guitar,Vocals,Group Member
Brett Gurewitz Percussion,Background Vocals
Lars Frederiksen Guitar,Vocals
Matt Freeman Bass,Bass Guitar,Vocals,Group Member
Greg Graffin Vocals
Booker T. Jones Keyboards
Pat Wilson Vocals
Adrienne Woods Cello
Ryan Foltz Mandolin
Branden Steineckert Drums,Group Member
Tom Lea Viola
Michael Bolger Horn
Joel Pargman Violin
Vic Ruggiero Keyboards
Ina Veli Violin
Technical Credits
Rancid ComposerBrett Gurewitz Composer,Producer,Audio Production
Ryan Foltz Producer,Engineer
John Morrical Engineer
Mitch Ikeda Cover Photo
Jay Terrien Arranger,String Arrangements
Customer Reviews
Explore More Items
In the wake of the Offspring's success, Rancid became a hot band, earning a dedicated ...
In the wake of the Offspring's success, Rancid became a hot band, earning a dedicated
cult and sparking a major-label bidding war. After flirting with a handful of major labels, the band decided to stick with Epitaph and returned with ...
California punk quartet Plague Vendor bury the needle on their mighty sophomore LP for Epitaph ...
California punk quartet Plague Vendor bury the needle on their mighty sophomore LP for Epitaph
Records. The group made an auspicious debut in 2014 powering through ten songs in 18 minutes on the brief but entertaining Free to Eat. The ...
In 2017, Tom Waits announced remastered reissues of his entire Warner Bros. catalog as well
as several recordings on Anti. Among the latter are the three individually titled offerings packaged in a 2006 box entitled Orphans. When originally issued, the ...
Since the early 2000s, what's now known as post-hardcore has been consistently codified into something ...
Since the early 2000s, what's now known as post-hardcore has been consistently codified into something
eminently marketable. Screaming bloody murder over churning angular guitars has suddenly salable qualities, as long as the rage is offset by whimpering pianos and heart-flailing ...
This 2004 edition of Generator is part of a bulk of remastered and/or expanded Bad ...
This 2004 edition of Generator is part of a bulk of remastered and/or expanded Bad
Religion material from Epitaph. Like its tweaked brethren, the digitally revitalized Generator is louder overall, and more crisp. The newfound clarity gives the whip crack ...
Following their 2013 album The Life and Times of a Paperclip, identical twin brothers Wyatt
and Fletcher Shears toured the world and released numerous recordings under their respective solo projects, Enjoy and Puzzle. Those projects (particularly Puzzle) are more synth-based ...
This eighth album from the British metallers is the follow-up to 2016's All Our Gods
Have Abandoned Us and is their first without guitarist and founding member Tom Searle, who died that year from cancer. Featuring their new lead guitarist, ...
This eighth album from the American indie punk stalwarts is the follow-up to 2009's Let ...
This eighth album from the American indie punk stalwarts is the follow-up to 2009's Let
the Dominoes Fall. Produced once again by Epitaph owner and Bad Religion guitarist Brett Gurewitz, the album sees Rancid press on, oblivious to trends, with ...