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No Use for a Name - The Feel Good Record of the Year Audio CD

A fair review of the No Use for a Name "The Feel Good Record of the Year" Audio CD. Please note that the below review is the views of the authors, and authors only. You can get a complete list of all No Use for a Name reviews here, or go back to the No Use for a Name tabs.

No Use for a Name Band: No Use for a Name
Title: The Feel Good Record of the Year
Rating:
Release Date: 2008-04-01
Media: Audio CD

Tracks: 1: Biggest Lie 2: I Want to Be Wrong 3: Yours to Destroy 4: Under the Garden 5: Sleeping Between Trucks 6: Domino 7: Feel Good Song of the Year 8: Trumpet Player 9: Night of the Living Living 10: Ontario 11: Pacific Standard Time 12: Dregs of Sobriety 13: Kill the Rich 14: Take It Home

Great album!
If you are a No Use fan you will like it. You won't be disappointed.


NUFAN continues to rule
I lament the lack of fast, guitar driven melodic punk these days, and its great to have solid new releases from bands you can count on. This is a biased review, but NUFAN totally rocks. Pacific Standard Time will rank among my favorite NUFAN songs. I can only hope that new bands will listen to this an attempt to emulate. Rock on Tony and crew!



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NUFAN still continues to evolve, like it or not. I like it.
I, on the other hand, love those two previously stated albums, and I love this one. If you weren't a fan of "Hard Rock Bottom," or probably more specifically, "Keep Them Confused," then there's a decent chance you won't be a huge fan of this album. Here's what to expect from this cd:
This album contains the most slow songs yet from NUFAN, I think four. If you don't like the acoustic sound, then you may not be into those tracks.
The first song, "Biggest Lie," is their hardest rocking and one of their best songs in a long time, but the album's intensity never reaches that hard and fast again.
So if you like straight-forward rock songs with a mostly solid pace throughout and great melodies, then this is the album for you.
I think a lot of NUFAN fans need to realize that we aren't going to get another album like "Making Friends" or "Leche Con Carne," and to stop expecting that type of album. NUFAN keeps a lot of the punk ethos present in their lyrics, but the music itself has been replaced by more mid-tempo stuff, rather than machine gun drumbeats and minute-and-a-half long punk songs.
But if you can move beyond those expectations and take this album for what it is, a great rock album with their most varied song selection yet, with their ever-increasing talent and ability on display, then you can probably enjoy this album. I love it.


NUFAN is still a great band.
I've been a NUFAN fan for a long time, and seen them live numerous times. Although I can understand why people aren't as fond of this CD, as say, More Betterness, I can't help but disagree. Perhaps watching them perform these songs live has caused me to be biased, but I thoroughly enjoy all of the songs on this CD.

The Biggest Lie and I Wanna Be Wrong are two of my favorite NUFAN songs ever. Granted the slower songs can really throw the pace off on this album, I think that the faster songs really bring back a lot of energy that they had lost with their last record, which I thought was terrible.

I'm glad that this album has picked up some steam from their last, and I believe that this is a really solid release from No Use For A Name.


Starts out promising, but runs out of steam
It's still one of my favorite albums. I came across NUFAN in '99, right after More Betterness came out. Making Friends is also a classic, and Leche is pretty good too. I bought Hard Rock and Confused, and was thoroughly dissapointed by both.

To give you an idea of what I'm looking for in a No Use song, some of my NUFAN favorites are Not Your Savior, Coming Too Close, Life Size Mirror, The Answer Is Still No, Invincible, A Postcard Would Be Nice, and Don't Miss the Train.

I picked up this CD without expecting a whole lot, after seeing several other bands I used to love (Goldfinger, Bad Religion, etc) completely lose their appeal with the garbage they've made lately.

It starts out promising, with a fast, rough tone. It doesn't last long, though. The album sounds like NUFAN can't decide what kind of band they are anymore - do they want to sound like Sum 41, do they want to sound like a folksy version of old-school NUFAN, do they want to sound like Foo Fighters?

Mainly, I guess the lyrics don't connect the way they did on the old albums at that point in my life (at least Tony Sly has figured out we don't want to hear him sing about his kids. . . ). And the hooks aren't as good anymore either. Still, there are a few songs that are worth listening to. Meh.


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