Suicidal Tendencies (album)

Suicidal Tendencies
Studio album by Suicidal Tendencies
Released July 5, 1983 (1983-July-05)
Recorded February 1983 at Golden Age Recording in Hollywood
Genre Hardcore punk[1][2]
Length 28:17
Label Frontier (FLP 011)
Producer Glen E. Friedman
Suicidal Tendencies chronology
Suicidal Tendencies
(1983)
Join the Army
(1987)
Singles from Suicidal Tendencies
  1. "Institutionalized"
    Released: 1983

Suicidal Tendencies is the eponymously titled debut studio album by American crossover thrash band Suicidal Tendencies. The album was released on July 5, 1983, through Frontier Records with the catalog number FLP 011. It became one of the best-selling punk albums at the time and launched the band into its future success. Suicidal Tendencies has received positive reviews from music critics, and by 1986, the album had sold at least 150,000 copies.[3] "Institutionalized" was released as a radio hit to promote the album.

Album information

The cover of Suicidal Tendencies features an image of the band members hanging upside down, taken by Glen E. Friedman, who produced the album.[4] The background on both the front and back cover depict various homemade Suicidal Tendencies T-shirts.

"I Shot the Devil" was originally entitled "I Shot Reagan". The band is rumored to have been approached by the FBI to change the name of the song. The group eventually used the original title of the song on the lyrics sheet.[5]

In 1993, Muir and the later incarnation of the band re-recorded the entire album and released it as Still Cyco After All These Years, with (mostly) faithful recreations of the originals, plus two songs from Join the Army and one previously-unreleased song "Don't Give Me Your Nothin'".

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Q[6]

Critical reception to Suicidal Tendencies has been met with positive reviews and ratings. Steve Huey of Allmusic called the album "fast, furious, and funny" and claimed that it "owed much more to hardcore punk than to the later hardcore/heavy metal hybrid they would become known for, but it's still quite possibly their best album." Huey added that "Mike Muir proves himself articulate lyricist and commentator, delving into subjects like alienation, depression, and nonconformist politics with intelligence and humor."[1] Pushead of Maximumrocknroll described Suicidal Tendencies as "blistering rough-arsed metal thrash" and called the band "a screaming cyclone of sheer power and determination". Pushead also claimed that "this LP shows why they have such a strong following."[7]

Critic Ira Robbins writes that "Half-sung, half-recited and built on repeated sudden tempo changes, 'Institutionalized' is a unique, devastating centerpiece. One of the era's quintessential expressions of teen dislocation, it converts generation gap misunderstandings into a complete communications breakdown, encapsulating all the punk sociology of such films as Repo Man and Suburbia in four minutes."[8]

Influence and legacy

Suicidal Tendencies has been regarded by critics as one of the most influential rock albums of all time, and has inspired a number of musicians. Anthrax guitarist Scott Ian listed Suicidal Tendencies in his "Top 10 Thrash Albums" list, stating "I just think it's a perfect album. Every song on it is great. It's a perfect crossover between hardcore punk and metal, and I guess that's what makes thrash metal -- all those genre combined, and Suicidal were the first ones to do it because that record came out in '83."[9]

"Institutionalized" has been referenced in many songs, mostly its quote "all I wanted was a Pepsi". It is referenced in the Sage Francis song "Slow Down Gandhi" in the line "It's death penalty vs. suicidal tendencies / All I wanted was a fucking Pepsi / Institution / Making you think you're crazy is a billion dollar industry." Limp Bizkit also referenced it in the song "Stuck" with the lines "All I wanted was a Pepsi, just one Pepsi. So far from suicidal but still I get them tendencies bringing back the memories that I really miss." "All I wanted was a Pepsi" is also quoted near the ending of the Cypress Hill song "How I Could Just Kill a Man".

"Memories of Tomorrow" was covered by Slayer for its album Undisputed Attitude and was featured on the Japanese edition of the record. "Institutionalized" was also covered by Senses Fail for the soundtrack to the video game Tony Hawk's American Wasteland. "Two Sided Politics" was covered by Bones Brigade on its album Older Than Shit, Heavier Than Time.[10] "I Shot the Devil" was also covered by the California hardcore punk band "Chotto Ghetto" on its extended play Shootin' Devils. "I Saw Your Mommy" is featured on the soundtrack to the game Scarface: The World Is Yours for the PlayStation 2, Xbox, and PC. "Institutionalized" is featured in the game Guitar Hero II for the PlayStation 2 and Xbox 360 as a playable song; a member of the most difficult tier, "Face Melters". It was also featured in the film Iron Man (2008) and "Subliminal" was part of the Channel X playlist on Grand Theft Auto V (2013).

Track listing

All tracks written by Mike Muir, except where noted. 

No. Title Length
1. "Suicide's an Alternative / You'll Be Sorry"   2:44
2. "Two Sided Politics" (written by Muir, Louiche Mayorga) 1:03
3. "I Shot the Devil"   1:51
4. "Subliminal"   3:08
5. "Won't Fall in Love Today" (written by Muir, Mayorga) 0:59
6. "Institutionalized" (written by Muir, Mayorga) 3:49
7. "Memories of Tomorrow" (written by Muir, Mayorga) 0:57
8. "Possessed"   2:07
9. "I Saw Your Mommy..." (written by Muir, Mayorga) 4:52
10. "Fascist Pig"   1:17
11. "I Want More" (written by Muir, Mayorga) 2:28
12. "Suicidal Failure"   2:53
Total length:
28:17

All vinyl, cassette and CD versions have the same track listing. Tracks 1–6 appear on Side A and tracks 7–12 appear on Side B on the vinyl and cassette versions.

Personnel

Production

Reissues

Suicidal Tendencies has been reissued a number of times, with formats in different countries (see the table below).

Year Country Format Label Note
1983 United States Cassette Frontier FCX 011
1983 United States Vinyl Frontier FLP 011
1987 Europe Vinyl Virgin V 2495 Reissue; 33RPM
1987 Europe CD Virgin CDV 2495 Reissue
1990 United States CD Frontier FCD 011 Reissue
1997 United States Vinyl Epitaph 80104-1 Reissue; Remastered
1997 United States CD Epitaph 80104-2 Reissue; Remastered
2008 United States Vinyl (140 gr. Limited edition colored vinyl) Frontier 31011-8 Remastered (25th Anniversary Edition)
2008 United States CD Frontier 31011-9 Remastered (25th Anniversary Edition)

Notes

  1. ^* Guitarist Jon Nelson, who joined the band shortly after the album was completed, is credited in place of Grant Estes on pressings of the album circa 1987, when the album was first released in compact disc-format. Though he does not perform on the album.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Allmusic review
  2. "Suicidal Tendencies – Suicidal Tendencies review". Metal Storm. June 13, 2011.,
  3. "Suicidal Tendencies Biography". Sing365.com. Retrieved 2013-02-14.
  4. 1 2 Fox, Killian (29 November 2014). "Beats, punks and stunts: the photography of Glen E Friedman". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  5. "Thirsty : September 2008 : Suicidal Tendencies review". Staythirstymedia.com. Retrieved 2012-03-11.
  6. Q review
  7. Pushead (July–August 1983). "Suicidal Tendencies review". Maximum Rocknroll.
  8. "Suicidal Tendencies". TrouserPress.com. Retrieved 2012-03-11.
  9. "Anthrax Guitarist Scott Ian's Top 10 Thrash Albums". Noisecreep. 2009-11-13. Retrieved 2012-12-23.
  10. https://web.archive.org/web/20160303171329/http://audiolunchbox.com/album?a=46030. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved June 19, 2009. Missing or empty |title= (help)
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