Bad Religion - Time and Disregard video free download


30,299
Duration: 07:04
Uploaded: 2008/12/01

From Wikipedia:

Into the Unknown is the second album by Bad Religion, which was released in 1983. The album was a major change from their previous style, delving into progressive rock heavy in keyboards, though it wasn't at all popular as fans at the time were confused by the sudden style shift. When the band released the 1991 compilation album 80-85, a collection of recordings before their third album Suffer, Into the Unknown was not part of the compilation, also partly due to the band changing their style.

The album is widely reputed to have been a major factor in their 1984 breakup as the recording sessions were riddled with discord. As a matter of fact, drummer Pete Finestone and bass player Jay Bentley left during the recording of the first song.

Only 10,000 of these albums were produced and distributed, but almost all were quickly returned to Epitaph's warehouse. Guitarist Brett Gurewitz jokingly recalls having "[sent out] ten thousand copies and [getting] eleven thousand back."[1] However, many did in fact end up in the hands of fans, when Brett Gurewitz's girlfriend Suzy Shaw, who worked at the warehouse, surreptitiously sold all but 300 of them. Compact cassettes were also produced, but they are rare.

The album is generally disowned by the band, and there has never been a second pressing. Despite its abandonment however, it has become highly desirable and is now something of a collector's item. The band has commented on the album on their site saying that they are not trying to hide it from fans, and that anyone who listens to it will understand why they have never re-released it.

Track listing

1. "It's Only Over When..." (Graffin) -- 3:36

2. "Chasing the Wild Goose" (Gurewitz) -- 2:50

3. "Billy Gnosis" (Gurewitz) -- 3:31

4. "Time and Disregard" (Graffin) -- 7:03

5. "The Dichotomy" (Gurewitz) -- 4:52

6. "Million Days" (Graffin) -- 3:47

7. "Losing Generation" (Graffin) -- 3:37

8. "...You Give Up" (Graffin) -- 2:55

Personnel * Greg Graffin - vocals, synthesizer, piano, acoustic guitar, production * Brett Gurewitz - electric guitar, acoustic guitar, backing vocals, production * Paul Dedona - bass guitar * Davy Goldman - drums * Jim Mankey - engineering

Edit: I just created a Youtube account for my band (influenced by Bad Religion and others). Feel free to check it out: http://www.youtube.com/user/Mordingjarnir

Comments

10 years ago

papersplease

This is pretty good. My first time hearing it, and I come from the punk BR stuff.

10 years ago

drumkid330

ehh.... different

11 years ago

Edward M

It's funny, four of the songs from this album are in my top 10 Bad Religion songs.

11 years ago

yournotgettingmyname

im so sad this band pigeonholed itself into a narrow vision of punklove this song so much

12 years ago

Laura Schwanbeck

like the third best song on the album

12 years ago

Van Emard

such a great curve ball from the band such a great album n song! thanks for the upload man

12 years ago

Omnitriggerband

Been a bad religion fan for 18 years. In my opinion this is one of their best albums. It's so crazy.

12 years ago

Jorge kn

Dude, this song is great, it's full of energy, i don't understand why they critizice the album, when you're stoned this song is magical, Brett/Greg are two geniuses of our time.

12 years ago

ayedavanita7

Putting aside things as trivial as genre labels and what instruments they use........ the music on this album is just beautiful and the melodies are fantastic.

12 years ago

bluestate69

after this album and the short tour, they took this synthesizer out to a field and stomped on it ala "office space"

13 years ago

Gavin Von Em

Ok, I'll admit this much: The 'Girl from Ipanema'/'Ventura Highway' part at about the four-minute mark sucks a lot less now than it did in 1983.

13 years ago

domuradical

This album is great.

13 years ago

lvl54spacemonkey

This is really pretty damn good. I need this to see a release on CD at some point just for the sake of curiosity.

13 years ago

Guercinator

you know what song kinda reminds me of this (at least the ending part)... She's got issues by the offspring

13 years ago

Michael O'Malley

I actually owned this in 1983. Bad religion was my fav band in 1982. I listened to this once and threw it not the street with a friend. True story. They had this record at roxy music in Seattle.

13 years ago

RetroReactive1038

@Murdurus Its not a flute its a synthesizer, lol.

13 years ago

RetroReactive1038

Ya, this is defiantly my favorite album. I like all the songs on it.

13 years ago

Murdurus

that is one bad ass flute solo

13 years ago

Nicholas Moskov

It like led zeppelin with an electric piano

13 years ago

Nicholas Moskov

It is a decent album. This is why in my eyes bad religion is one of the best bands of all time. why be ashamed of something that is different. It shows that they can write music other than punk. it shows skill that you can play in multiple genres. they show be proud of all there work never ashamed if they put all the effort they could into it.

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