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All Ages is a compilation album by the American punk rock band Bad Religion. [6] It was released on July 26, 1995, through Epitaph Records. [7] The compilation contains songs from How Could Hell Be Any Worse? to Generator, and two live tracks recorded during their 1994 European tour, which were the first tracks to feature guitarist Brian Baker.
Drummer Pete Finestone left Bad Religion again in April 1991 to focus on his other band, the Fishermen, which had signed with a major label, and Bobby Schayer joined the band as his replacement. In May 1991, Bad Religion entered the Westbeach Recorders studio to begin recording material for their sixth studio album, Generator , which was not ...
The album was the band's first commercial success, reaching number 87 on the Billboard 200, [3] and receiving gold certifications from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and Music Canada. [4] [5] Three singles from the album reached the Billboard Alternative Songs (then the Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart) top 40. [6]
The music video is shot in cut-out animation and depicts a man in shorts and a track singlet with a Crossbuster (Bad Religion's logo, which features a black cross with a red prohibition sign over it) on it running through a burning, apocalyptic Los Angeles. People with TV news cameras as heads are also shown shooting fire out of their "mouths ...
After Bad Religion signed to Atlantic Records and released Stranger than Fiction in 1994, Gurewitz left the band again. [3] Shortly after the album's release, Brian Baker took Gurewitz's place in the group. [4] After three more albums, Schayer departed the band in 2001 due to a shoulder injury, and was replaced by Brooks Wackerman. [5]
It is Bad Religion's second live album. [citation needed] Instead of using crowd microphones and mobile studios like most live albums, the band tapped the inputs, for a result that portrays Bad Religion's live sound without crowd noise. [5] It also includes three new songs; "Dream of Unity," "It's Reciprocal," and the title track.
Back to the Known is the second EP released by American punk rock band Bad Religion. The name of the EP is a reference to the band abandoning the progressive rock influences of its previous album, 1983's Into the Unknown, and returning to its punk roots. The album features the fan favorite, "Along The Way", which is a staple of their live shows ...
After a long-term hiatus, Bad Religion reformed in 1987 with a new lineup, releasing the studio album Suffer in 1988. Although Suffer was not a commercial success, the band earned a growing fan base in the underground music community and critical acclaim with that album [7] and it managed to sell 4,000 copies. [8]