No Worse for the Wear

No Worse for the Wear is the third studio album by Orange County pop punk band Big Drill Car. It is the only album without their classic original line-up, featuring new members Keith Fallis and Darrin Norris. The band reached a little success through the album, if only for a short time before their 13-year break-up, from 1995 to 2008. The release of No Worse for the Wear would also gain Big Drill Car supporting slots on national and world tours with bands such as The Offspring (who had just released Smash to unexpected success and acclaim) and Guttermouth.

No Worse for the Wear
Studio album by
ReleasedMay 20, 1994
RecordedSeptember 1993
GenrePop punk
Length31:51
LabelCargo/Headhunter Records
ProducerStephen Egerton
Bill Stevenson
Big Drill Car chronology
Toured (A Live Album)
(1993)
No Worse for the Wear
(1994)
A Never Ending Endeavor
(2009)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic(not rated)[1]

The songs "The Shake", "Nogaina", and "What You Believe" were featured, amongst other Cargo/Headhunter Records artists, in the 1997 Sega Saturn/Sony PlayStation game Courier Crisis.

Like many Big Drill Car albums, No Worse for the Wear is currently out of print.

Track listing

Track listing
Track number Song name Duration
1 The Shake 2:27
2 Friend of Mine 3:14
3 Duck and Cover 1:22
4 Nagain 3:10
5 In Disguise 2:58
6 Crystal's Ball 2:35
7 Wondering 3:27
8 What You Believe 2:26
9 Thin White Line 2:41
10 Step Right Up 2:47
11 Yer Holdin 2:13
12 Hye 2:31

Personnel

  • Frank Daly - Vocals
  • Mark Arnold - Guitar
  • Darrin Norris - Bass
  • Keith Fallis - Drums

Additional personnel

  • Bill Stevenson - Producer
  • Stephen Egerton - Producer
  • Jeff Powell - Engineer
  • Jeffrey Reed - Engineer
  • John Hampton - Mixing
gollark: Remember: never invent time machines or all of earth will go insane.
gollark: You should just add time travel to all your stories, really.
gollark: Or time machines, which is useful, I guess.
gollark: Presumably in some other kinds, too.
gollark: If we use some sort of time travel device, it should be possible to, as it were, pull finished writing from the future.

References

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