The Distillers (album)

The Distillers is the debut album by the American punk rock band The Distillers, released in 2000.

The Distillers
Studio album by
ReleasedApril 25, 2000
RecordedCA 1999–2000
StudioWestbeach Recorders, Hollywood,
GenrePunk rock,[1] hardcore punk,[1] street punk[2][3]
Length40:15
LabelHellcat
ProducerThomas Johnson
The Distillers chronology
The Distillers
(2000)
Sing Sing Death House
(2002)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

Track listing

All tracks written by Brody Dalle except where noted.

  1. "Oh Serena" – 2:32
  2. "Idoless" – 2:28
  3. "The World Comes Tumblin'" – 3:08
  4. "L.A. Girl" – 2:59
  5. "Distilla Truant" – 2:24
  6. "Ask the Angels" (Ivan Kral, Patti Smith) – 3:10
  7. "Oldscratch" – 0:43
  8. "Girlfixer" (Dalle, Kim Fuellman) – 1:14
  9. "Open Sky" – 3:07
  10. "Red Carpet and Rebellion" – 3:08
  11. "Colossus U.S.A." – 2:15
  12. "Blackheart" – 1:45
  13. "Gypsy Rose Lee" – 3:54
  14. "The Blackest Years" – 7:28

Notes

Personnel

The Distillers

Additional musician

  • Ronnie King – piano on "Ask the Angels"

Production

  • Producer: Thomas "TJ" Johnson – producer, engineer, mixing
  • Donnell Cameron – assistant engineer
  • Jay Gordon – assistant engineer
  • Gene Grimaldi – mastering
  • Mike "Sak" Fasano – drum technician
  • Jesse Fischer – art direction
  • Brody Dalle – art direction
  • B.J. Papas – photography
gollark: The rough idea of the decent-for-privacy idea is apparently to have each phone have a unique ID (or one which changes periodically or something, presumably it would store all its past ones), and devices which are near each other (determined via Bluetooth signal strength apparently) for some amount of time exchange identifiers, and transmit in some way the IDs of devices of people who get inected.
gollark: I see.
gollark: What's that using, then?
gollark: If you're talking about contact tracing, there was a proposal for how to do it in a decent privacy-preserving way.
gollark: You seemed to be suggesting that open source was somehow worse than closed source software for security, which I disagree with.

References

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