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SoundStage! Update | ||
Sublime Ten Years Later October 1, 2006
To celebrate the tenth anniversary of Sublime's release, Geffen Records and Universal Music Group have brought out a two-disc remastered Deluxe Edition of the album, which includes 15 bonus tracks, eight previously unreleased, along with remixes and videos. It also restores the album's original and intended sequencing, with Nowells opener, a cover of Bob Marley's "Trenchtown Rock," and the original version of "Doin Time" intact. "Doin' Time" was the bands interpretation of George and Ira Gershwins "Summertime," an American classic. At the time of the album's release, the Gershwin estate wouldn't grant permission for use of the song, feeling that the new lyrics represented a fundamental change to the original composition. The band had to remove "Doin Time," at which point they rearranged the album and dropped "Trenchtown Rock." The Deluxe Edition is a graduate seminar on the album. The original sequencing and the abundant extras, especially the acoustic and instrumental versions of some of the songs, impart a greater understanding of the music's influences and intricate structure. Sublime is a loud, beat-heavy swipe at bad people, ugly places, intolerance and urban decay. It is a more direct London Calling set in mid-1990s California. Such blisteringly honest music may not be for everyone, but it is good for us all....Marc Mickelson, editor@soundstage.com |
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