Three Chords and a Half Truth
Three Chords and a Half Truth is the eighth studio album by American punk rock band Face to Face, released on April 9, 2013, through Trevor Keith's Antagonist Records, under exclusive license to Rise Records, their first album for Rise. This is the last Face to Face album to feature guitarist Chad Yaro.[2]
Three Chords and a Half Truth | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | April 9, 2013 | |||
Recorded | December 2012–January 2013 | |||
Genre | Punk rock | |||
Length | 39:44 | |||
Label | Antagonist Records, Rise | |||
Producer | Trever Keith, Scott Shiflett | |||
Face to Face chronology | ||||
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The album's first single, "Right as Rain", was released on March 5, 2013. The single marked a change in style for Face to Face, a departure from their fast punk rock sound, into a more mid-tempo, layered classic punk sound. The album has been compared to those of Social Distortion, The Clash, and John Mellencamp.[3]
Track listing
All songs written and composed by Trever Keith and Scott Shiflett, except "Right As Rain" written by Keith.
- "123 Drop" – 3:12
- "Welcome Back To Nothing" – 2:52
- "Smokestacks and Skyscrapers" – 3:08
- "Right As Rain" – 3:26
- "First Step, Misstep" – 3:45
- "Bright Lights Go Down" – 3:08
- "Paper Tigers with Teeth" – 3:46
- "Flat Black" – 3:00
- "Jinxproof" – 3:03
- "Marked Men" – 3:24
- "Three Chords and a Half Truth" – 2:24
- "Across State Lines" - 4:37
- "Hardcase" (Amazon MP3 bonus track) – 2:47[4]
Personnel
- Trever Keith – vocals, guitar
- Chad Yaro – guitar, background vocals
- Scott Shiflett – bass, background vocals
- Danny Thompson – drums, background vocals
Additional musicians
- Dennis Hill – guitar, background vocals
- Jason Freese – Hammond B3, tenor saxophone
- Charles Keith – piano
gollark: ... *can* you run IDE over PCIe or SATA?Oddly, with different M.2 keys, you can get I²C, USB, DisplayPort, audio, SIM card connectors, SMBus, SDIO, UART and PCM on a M.2 card. I don't know why they added support for this.
gollark: What do you want me to say, AHCI vs NVMe? PCIe vs SATA?
gollark: Er. What?
gollark: M.2 is just a different form factor. There are NVMe M.2 SSDs (PCIe-based, faster - though for most usage it's not distinguishable) and SATA-based M.2 (like a 2.5" SATA drive on a convenient "stick").
gollark: But not really.
References
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