Living Targets

Living Targets is the third album from German punk rock band, Beatsteaks. It was released in August, 2002 on Epitaph Records as was previous album, Launched, in 2000. There was one line-up change from the previous album Torsten Scholz took over bass duties from Alexander Roßwaag. The album featured more hard rock tracks than previous efforts, including songs which were far slower and more melodic and structured. It aided the band's breakthrough into the mainstream which was completed on 2004's Smack Smash released on Epitaph Records and WEA.

Living Targets
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 13, 2002
RecordedMinirock Studio,
Cologne, Germany
Tritonus,
Berlin, Germany
GenrePunk rock
Alternative rock
Length38:52
LabelEpitaph Records
ProducerUwe Sabirowsky
Billy Gould
Beatsteaks chronology
'Launched'
(2000)
Living Targets
(2002)
'Smack Smash'
(2004)
Singles from Living Targets
  1. "Summer"
    Released: 21 January 2002
  2. "Let Me In"
    Released: 3 June 2002
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link

Track listing

  1. "Not Ready to Rock" (Teutoburg, Götz, Kurtzke) 1:27
  2. "God Knows" (Teutoburg, Baumann) 2:32
  3. "Let Me In" (Teutoburg, Baumann) 3:32
  4. "Soothe Me" (Götz) 2:30
  5. "Above Us" (Teutoburg, Kurtzke, Baumann, Götz) 3:03
  6. "This One" (Teutoburg, Baumann) 2:47
  7. "Disconnected" (Teutoburg, Kurtzke, Baumann) 3:05
  8. "A-Way" (Götz, Scholz) 3:40
  9. "Mirrored" (Kurtzke, Scholz) 3:48
  10. "Run Run" (Teutoburg, Baumann) 2:55
  11. "To Be Strong" (Teutoburg) 2:49
  12. "Summer" (Teutoburg, Baumann, Götz, Kurtzke) 6:40
  • Track 12 is only actually 3:25, the remainder is a hidden track, "Yeah!"

Credits

  • Arnim Teutoburg-Weiß vocals, guitar
  • Peter Baumann guitar
  • Bernd Kurtzke guitar
  • Torsten Scholz bass
  • Thomas Götz drums
  • Alexander Freund cello on "Mirrored"
  • Pamela Falcone backing vocals on "Yeah!"
  • Engineered by Gerd Krueger
  • Assistant engineered by Torsten Otto

Tracks 1, 3, 4, 6, 9, 12

  • Recorded and mixed at Minirock Studio, Cologne, Germany
  • Produced by Uwe Sabirowsky

Tracks 2, 5, 7, 8, 10

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gollark: Look at the i5-7200U vs i5-8250U. They have the same 15W TDP (not that Intel make that very meaningful) but the 7200U has half the cores and higher base clocks.
gollark: Yes. They used to have 2 cores.
gollark: If you look at the mobile lineup for 7th gen vs 8th gen, you see that 8th gen has a lot more cores and also worse clocks.
gollark: Er, not their laptops, their mobile CPUs.
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