Later Days and Better Lays

Later Days And Better Lays is compilation album of demo versions, alternate versions, and unreleased songs by pop punk band The Queers.

Later Days And Better Lays
Compilation album by
ReleasedMarch 23, 1999[1]
GenrePop punk, punk rock
LabelLookout![2]
LK-216
ProducerJim Tierney
Tracks 18-21, by Mass Giorgini
The Queers chronology
Punk Rock Confidential
(1998)
Later Days And Better Lays
(1999)
Beyond The Valley...
(2000)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[3]
Punknews.org[4]

It was the band's last album for Lookout!.[5] Drummer Hugh O'Neill died of brain cancer about two months before the album was released.[1]

Critical reception

The Washington Post wrote that "the Queers have always kept it simple and stupid, but these demos reveal that they started with all the chops necessary for blitzkrieg boppers like 'I Hate Everything' and 'Nobody Likes Me.'"[6]

Track listing

All tracks written by Joe Queer, except as noted.

  1. "Granola Head"
  2. "I Hate Everything"
  3. "Murder In The Brady House" (Ben Weasel)
  4. "I Won't Be"
  5. "Nobody Likes Me"
  6. "Can't Stop Farting"
  7. "Night Of The Livid Queers"
  8. "Monster Zero"
  9. "Too Many Twinkies"
  10. "Teenage Bonehead"
  11. "Half Shitfaced"
  12. "Hi Mom It's Me"
  13. "I Live This Life"
  14. "Feeling Groovy"
  15. "Born To Do Dishes"
  16. "Junk Freak"
  17. "No Tit"
  18. "Little Honda" (Brian Wilson/Mike Love)
  19. "End It All" (Kim Shattuck)
  20. "I Can't Get Over You" (Queer/Lisa Marr)
  21. "Never Ever" (Queer/JJ Rassler) / "God Only Knows" (hidden track) (Brian Wilson/Tony Asher)

References

  1. MTV News Staff. "Queers' O'Neill Dead From Cancer". MTV News.
  2. "Queers". Trouser Press. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
  3. "Later Days and Better Lays - The Queers | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic" via www.allmusic.com.
  4. "The Queers - Later Days And Better Lays". www.punknews.org.
  5. Prested, Kevin (November 29, 2014). Punk USA: The Rise and Fall of Lookout Records. Microcosm Publishing. ISBN 9781621067221 via Google Books.
  6. Jenkins, Mark (November 26, 1999). "THE QUEERS" via www.washingtonpost.com.
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