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Bad Brains (also known as The Yellow Tape [2] or Attitude: The ROIR Sessions) is the first studio album by American rock band Bad Brains. Recorded in 1981 and released on the cassette-only label ROIR on February 5, 1982, many fans refer to it as " The Yellow Tape " because of its yellow packaging.
This is a comprehensive discography of Bad Brains, a Washington, D.C.–based hardcore punk band that also plays reggae and uses styles of funk and heavy metal into their music. To date, the band has released nine full-length studio albums (including an instrumental dub album), four EPs , four live recordings , one compilation album , one demo ...
A short Bad Brains tour of Australia planned for 2010 was cancelled for health reasons. [39] Bad Brains announced the recording of another new album in 2011. [40] Into the Future was released in late 2012, [41] [42] and included a tribute to the recently deceased MCA. [43] On the ensuing tour, the band added touring keyboardist Jamie Saft. [44]
And even within that context, many bands who were far inferior to the legendary Bad Brains — who cast a long shadow over the careers of every hardcore band and many hard rock ones, as well as ...
It was a three-song EP with some early punk/metal tracks that don't make the live set list much anymore, though they were a good example of their influence by bands such as Bad Brains. Vocalist Neil Fallon stated, after hearing Bad Brains on their debut self-titled album, Bad Brains: [3] "..Upon listening though [to the album], I was totally ...
Build a Nation is the eighth full-length studio album by American rock band Bad Brains.Released on June 26, 2007 on Megaforce Records with distribution by Oscilloscope Laboratories, it was produced by Adam Yauch of Beastie Boys, a longtime friend of the band.
The album captures Bad Brains in concert at the height of their commercial and critical peak, featuring a diverse mix of hardcore punk, mellow reggae, funk, and heavy metal. Two of the reggae tracks are cover songs: Dennis Brown's "Revolution," and a rearranged medley of the Rolling Stones's "She's a Rainbow" and The Beatles's "Day Tripper."
John Legend's aptly titled "A Legendary Christmas" includes eight covers (including his much-debated woke version of "Baby, It's Cold Outside" with Kelly Clarkson) and six jazzy original tracks ...