Hard Rock Bottom [Enhanced]

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
No Use for a Name started doing this whole punk-pop thing while the members of Sum 41 and Blink 182 were still shoving crayons up their noses. But it's taken several years and some key lineup changes for the Northern California band to catch up to its brood in ambition and appeal. Hard Rock Bottom pushes things along nicely, as atomic single "Dumb Reminders" has already gatecrashed mainstream radio. The rest of the disc is brimming with more potential hits, like the snotty "Friends of the Enemy," a tune fans of Green Day will cream themselves over, and the overcaffeinated cover of Sinead O'Connor's "This Is a Rebel Song," as jarring as the original was sublime. It's taken them a while to catch on, but the rewards should be rich. --Aidin Vaziri

Album Description
2002 release featuring 13 songs that run the gamut between introspective down trodden minimalism to pure un-harnessed punk rock a la No Use For A Name! They even cover Sinead O'Conner. The CD is enhanced with footage of behind the scenes footage from the studio.

Music Review:

  1. Head Music [Enhanced]
  2. Heart Zones
  3. Hold on Hope [EP] [Limited Edition]
  4. Home Movies: The Best of Everything but the Girl [Import]
  5. How I Learned to Love the... [Import]
  6. I Feel Loved, Pt. 2 [CD-single] [Import]
  7. In The Poppy Fields
  8. In The Pursuit Of Leisure [Enhanced]
  9. Infotainment Scan
  10. Instrument [Soundtrack]

Music Review

music review

Music Review

Time to Turn [Original recording remastered] [Import]

Wilby: Lincoln Windows

Willem Pijper: Chamber Music for Strings and Piano

Music: Rocket Diy [Import]

YMCA [CD-single] [Import]

Worldwide 3: Compiled by Gilles Peterson [Import]

You Were Mine [CD-single] [Import]

Where Do We Go from Here [Enhanced]

Who's Crying

Wild Honey [Import]

Whiskey for the Holy Ghost

Wolfhound Live [Import] [Live]

You Ain't Got No Paper [Explicit Lyrics]

Lebendige Vergangenheit: Richard Tucker II

Sapphire Dreams: A Romantic Interlude