The Stories Are True

The Stories Are True is a debut full-length album by the American street punk band Time Again. It was released on April 25, 2006 via Hellcat Records.[2] Tim Armstrong is featured on the title track "The Stories Are True" and appeared on its music video.

The Stories Are True
Studio album by
Released
  • April 24, 2006 (2006-04-24) (EU)

  • April 25, 2006 (2006-04-25) (US)
StudioWest Beach Studios (Hollywood, CA)
GenrePunk rock
Length27:58
LabelHellcat Records
Producer
Time Again chronology
Time Again EP
(2005)
The Stories Are True
(2006)
Darker Days
(2008)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

Track listing

No.TitleLength
1."Junkies"1:27
2."Say Again"1:44
3."Broken Bodies"2:00
4."The Stories Are True" (featuring Tim Armstrong)3:18
5."Cold Concrete"2:14
6."Lost In Hollywood"1:37
7."Fallen Nation"2:17
8."Kenny"2:47
9."Criminals"1:00
10."Life On the Run"2:00
11."Fountain and Formosa"2:10
12."Deadly Nights"2:08
13."Streetwalker"3:09

Personnel

  • Daniel Dart - vocals
  • Elijah Reyes - guitar
  • Brian Burnham - bass
  • Ryan Purucker - drums
  • Tim Armstrong - vocals (track 4)
  • John Morrical - mixing (track 4)
  • Ben Meyer - mixing
  • Gene Grimaldi - mastering
  • Rachel Tejada - photography

Release history

Region Date Format(s) Label(s)
Europe April 24, 2006
Hellcat Records[3]
United States April 25, 2006
gollark: I mean things like semantic search and text generation in my eternally-WIP personal wiki software.(Which isn't researchy, has to work for more than a month, and should not have data be sent to random Google servers)
gollark: I'm interested in deploying MLish things for various "production" things which don't really come under research, and so that doesn't really work.
gollark: You can only rent them, and they're hilariously expensive.
gollark: Oh, and the next Intel CPUs should actually be very good, as they're adding 8 smaller low-power cores which are nevertheless apparently around Skylake performance to basically everything.
gollark: They are also making datacenter cards, which were delayed because lol no working 7nm.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.