Lozin' Must

"Lozin' Must" is a song by the Swedish punk rock band Millencolin from the album For Monkeys. It was released as a single on April 6, 1997 by Burning Heart Records and Epitaph Records, including two b-sides from the album's recording sessions, "Israelites" and "Vixen". These two tracks were re-released in 1999 on the compilation album The Melancholy Collection. The U.S. version of "Lozin' Must" released by Epitaph also includes a remix of "The Story of My Life", a song from the album Life on a Plate which had previously been released as a single. An accompanying music video for "Lozin' Must" was also filmed and released.

"Lozin' Must"
Single by Millencolin
from the album For Monkeys
B-side
  • "Israelites"
  • "The Story of My Life" (remix)
  • "Vixen"
ReleasedApril 6, 1997
RecordedUnisound in Örebro and Studio Punk Palace
GenrePop punk[1]
LabelBurning Heart (Sweden), Epitaph (USA)
Songwriter(s)Mathias Färm, Fredrik Larzon, Erik Ohlsson, Nikola Sarcevic
Millencolin singles chronology
"Move Your Car"
(1996)
"Lozin' Must"
(1997)
"Twenty Two"
(1997)

In Australia the song "Twenty Two" was released in place of "Lozin' Must" at the insistence of Shock Records, over concerns that "Lozin' Must" contained profanity.[2]

Track listing

CD single (Europe)

  1. "Lozin' Must"
  2. "Israelites" (originally performed by Desmond Dekker)
  3. "Vixen"


CD single (USA)

  1. "Lozin' Must"
  2. "Israelites"
  3. "The Story of My Life" (remix)
  4. "Vixen"


7" vinyl

  • Side A:
  1. "Lozin' Must"
  2. "Israelites"
  • Side A:
  1. "The Story of My Life" (remix)
  2. "Vixen"

Personnel

Millencolin

gollark: * Markdown
gollark: * around a word means "italicize it" in Markdwon.
gollark: It's *.
gollark: This is not very accurate, though.
gollark: In a market, if people don't want kale that much, the kale company will probably not have much money and will not be able to buy all the available fertilizer.

References

  1. Tee, Mark (June 26, 2013). "22 classic cottage pop-punk songs". Aux.tv. Archived from the original on May 8, 2016. Retrieved June 12, 2016.
  2. Millencolin. "Twenty Two". Archived from the original on 2008-02-11. Retrieved 2008-03-12.
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