Pummel (album)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Pummel (Album))
|
|
This article uses bare URLs for citations. Please consider adding full citations so that the article remains verifiable. Several templates and the Reflinks tool are available to assist in formatting. (Reflinks documentation) (August 2011) |
| Pummel | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by All | ||||
| Released | April 11, 1995 | |||
| Recorded | October – November 1994 | |||
| Genre | Pop punk, punk rock, alternative rock | |||
| Label | Interscope | |||
| Producer | Bill Stevenson, Stephen Egerton | |||
| All chronology | ||||
|
||||
| Professional ratings | |
|---|---|
| Review scores | |
| Source | Rating |
| Allmusic | |
Pummel is the sixth album by California pop punk band All.
Pummel was All's major label debut on Interscope Records, their first venture away from Cruz Records. However, disputes over the marketing and promotion of the album caused the band to leave the label shortly after its release.
New York melodic hardcore punk band After the Fall mentioned Pummel in their song "1994"[2] (from their 2009 album Fort Orange[3]).
[edit] Track listing
- "Self-Righteous" (Alvarez) – 1:38
- "Million Bucks" (Alvarez, Stevenson) – 2:07
- "Uncle Critic" (Egerton, Stevenson) – 0:54
- "Miranda" (Price) – 2:33
- "Not Easy" (Price) – 2:55
- "Long Distance" (Stevenson) – 3:05
- "Stalker" (Price) – 3:47
- "Button It" (Price) – :50
- "This World" (Alvarez) – 2:17
- "Gettin' There" (Alvarez) – 1:17
- "Breakin' Up" (Stevenson) – 2:45
- "On Foot" (Egerton) – 2:23
- "Broken" (Alvarez) – 3:12
- "Hetero" (Egerton, Stevenson) – 1:32
- "Black Sky" (Stevenson) – 3:24
[edit] Credits
- Chad Price – Vocals
- Bill Stevenson – Drums
- Karl Alvarez – Bass, vocals
- Stephen Egerton – Guitar
- bert Daley - Backing vocals
[edit] References
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||