Discography (Jesuit album)

Discography is a compilation album released by the American rock band Jesuit. Released on April 12, 2011 through Magic Bullet Records, the compilation features every song ever recorded by the hardcore punk group during their brief tenure in the mid 1990s. Jesuit recorded a demo tape, two self-titled EPs and a Black Sabbath cover for a compilation album before disbanding in 1999.

Discography
Compilation album by
ReleasedApril 12, 2011 (2011-04-12)
Recorded1996–1998
GenreHardcore punk
Length46:29
LabelMagic Bullet (MBL–127)
ProducerKurt Ballou
Jesuit chronology
Jesuit
(1999)
Discography
(2011)

The album was generally well received from music critics. Shawn Macomber of Decibel gave the album a nine out of ten rating, describing it as "a beautifully remastered collection documenting the all-too-fleeting existence of one of the seminal bands that made post-post-hardcore's mid-'90s vicious turn so darkly exhilarating."[1]

Track listing

All tracks are written by Jesuit, except where noted[2].

No.TitleOriginal release (Year)Length
1."The Carcrash Lullabye"Jesuit (1999)2:58
2."Your Sharp Teeth"Jesuit (1999)3:44
3."Cop Glasses"Jesuit (1999)6:39
4."Hole in the Sky" (originally by Black Sabbath)In These Black Days (1999)3:48
5."Servitude 101"Jesuit (1996)3:35
6."The Malady"Jesuit (1996)3:28
7."Suicide King"Jesuit (1996)4:37
8."Tranzor Z"Jesuit (1996)3:19
9."The Smooth Talking Son of a Bitch"Jesuit (1996)3:28
10."Trigger"Untitled demo tape2:44
11."Canonize"Untitled demo tape3:13
12."Expatriate"Untitled demo tape4:56

Personnel

Discography personnel as listed in CD liner notes.[2]

References

  1. Macomber, Shawn (May 2011). "Surprise! Assault and battery!". Decibel. Philadelphia: Red Flag Media Inc. (79): 84. ISSN 1557-2137.
  2. Apokalypse, Mike; Browne, Keith Michael; Canavan, Ryan; Chandler, Nicholas; Cook, Brian; Eyestone, Brent; Hall, Rich; Hamacher, Jason; Lovro, Brian; Mowery, Mike; Orlando, Andrew (2011). "Jesuit: An Oral History". Discography (CD booklet). Jesuit. Magic Bullet Records. MBL–127.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.