Change Is a Sound

Change Is a Sound is the debut album by the punk rock band Strike Anywhere, released in 2001. The album's lyrics explore such themes as women's rights ("Chalkline"), and police brutality ("Sunset on 32nd Street"). The song "Refusal" was also featured on the soundtrack to the skateboarding video game Tony Hawk's Underground.

Change Is a Sound
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 14, 2001
RecordedApril 2001 at Salad Days Studios, Baltimore, MD
GenrePunk rock, melodic hardcore, post-hardcore
Length29:29
LabelJade Tree
ProducerBrian McTernan
Strike Anywhere chronology
Chorus of One
(2001)
Change Is a Sound
(2001)
Exit English
(2003)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Track listing

All tracks are written by Strike Anywhere.

No.TitleLength
1."You're Fired"2:04
2."Timebomb Generation"2:18
3."Refusal"2:41
4."Laughter in a Police State"2:07
5."Sunset on 32nd Street"4:19
6."Detonation"3:01
7."Riot of Words"2:29
8."S.S.T."2:32
9."Chalkline"2:39
10."Three on a Match"1:48
11."My Design"3:07
Total length:29:29

Personnel

  • Jeremy Dean – Layout Design
  • Alan Douches – Mastering
  • Brian McTernan – Producer, Engineer, Mixing
  • Tim Owen – Photography, Portrait Photography
  • Garth Petrie – Band
  • Matt Sherwood – Band
  • Matthew Jordan Smith – Photography, Cover Art Concept
  • Strike Anywhere – Producer

Additional information

The picture for the cover of this album was taken on their first European Tour. The head seen in the side of the image is that of Tony Pence, lead singer of the punk band Deep Sleep and former Reptillian Records employee.

The title of track 8, "S.S.T.", is an abbreviation of the Latin phrase Sic semper tyrannis.

gollark: Wait, no, that would be fine actually, I can make that do things.
gollark: Doesn't make sense. Imagine if someone made a contract thing for your fractional krist somehow; you paid it 1KST and got 100cKST out. How do the fees work?
gollark: I'm not sure how to usefully implement a fee without breaking all things ever horribly.
gollark: I can impose memory/CPU limits per-"contract" but NOT easily stop people making 189621782638 evil contracts.
gollark: That is a problem I suppose, yes.

References

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