What Was Done, Vol. 1: A Decade Revisited

What Was Done, Vol. 1: A Decade Revisited is an acoustic album by rock band the Classic Crime released on October 28, 2014 via BadChristian Music. Like their previous effort, Phoenix (2012), the album was funded through the website Kickstarter. Kickstarter backers were able to digitally download the album one week prior to its release date.[5]

What Was Done, Vol. 1: A Decade Revisited
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 28, 2014 (2014-10-28)
RecordedNovember 2013 - July 2014[1][2]
GenreAcoustic rock, indie rock
LabelBadChristian Music
ProducerMatt MacDonald
The Classic Crime chronology
Phoenix
(2012)
What Was Done, Vol. 1: A Decade Revisited
(2014)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[3]
Jesus Freak Hideout[4]

A Kickstarter project entitled "Help The Classic Crime Make 'What Was Done: Volume One'" was created on October 15, 2013, with a funding goal of $15,000. The goal was met within the first two days of the project being posted.[6] Crowdfunding process successfully finished on November 13, 2013, with $50,457 pledged.

Track listing

No.TitleLength
1."All the Memories" (revisited)4:03
2."You and Me Both" (revisited)4:04
3."Salt in the Snow" (revisited)5:28
4."We All Look Elsewhere" (revisited)4:27
5."Vagabonds" (revisited)3:44
6."The Coldest Heart" (revisited)3:34
7."My Name" (revisited)3:45
8."Who Needs Air" (acoustic version)4:05
9."Beautiful Darkside" (revisited)4:42
10."God and Drugs" (revisited)4:26
11."Headlights" (acoustic version)4:59
12."The Fight" (acoustic version)4:18
13."Selfish" (bonus track, live in studio)3:40
14."Where Did You Go" (bonus track)3:50
Total length:59:05

Personnel

  • Matt MacDonald – vocals, guitars
  • Robbie Negrin – guitar, group vocals
  • Alan Clark – bass, group vocals
  • Paul "Skip" Erickson – drums, group vocals
gollark: Maybe a bunch of seriesed high discharge lithium batteries? That CANNOT go wrong.
gollark: But those are low voltage.
gollark: Further evidence of ABR prescience.
gollark: The power of filter bubbles is immensely powerful.
gollark: They're really making assumptions about how many people you know and how diversely distributed they are.

References

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