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Bad Religion > Albums & Lyrics

Bad Religion Photo


80-85 Album
  1. Along The Way
  2. American Dream
  3. Bad Religion
  4. Damned To Be Free
  5. Doing Time
  6. Drastic Actions
  7. Eat Your Dog
  8. Faith In God
  9. Frogger
  10. Fuck Armageddon... This Is Hell
  11. In The Night
  12. Latch Key Kids
  13. New Leaf
  14. Oligarchy
  15. Part III
  16. Pity
  17. Politics
  18. Sensory Overload
  19. Slaves
  20. Voice Of God Is Government
  21. White Trash (2nd Generation)
  22. World War III
  23. Yesterday
Against The Grain Album
  1. Modern Man
  2. Turn On The Light
  3. Get Off
  4. Blenderhead
  5. Positive Aspect Of Negative Thinking
  6. Anesthesia
  7. Flat Earth Society
  8. Faith Alone
  9. Entropy
  10. Against The Grain
  11. Operation Rescue
  12. God Song
  13. 21st Century (Digital Boy)
  14. Misery And Famine
  15. Unacceptable
  16. Quality Or Quantity
  17. Walk Away
All Ages Album
  1. 21st Century (Digital Boy)
  2. Against The Grain
  3. Anesthesia
  4. Atomic Garden
  5. Automatic Man
  6. Best For You
  7. Change Of Ideas
  8. Do What You Want
  9. Flat Earth Society
  10. Fuck Armageddon... This Is Hell
  11. Generator
  12. I Want To Conquer The World
  13. Modern Man
  14. No Control
  15. No Direction
  16. Sanity
  17. Suffer
  18. The Answer
  19. Walk Away
  20. You Are (The Government)
Back To The Known Album
  1. Yesterday
  2. Frogger
  3. Bad Religion (Theme Song)
  4. Along The Way
  5. New Leaf
Bad Religion Album
  1. Bad Religion (Theme Song)
  2. Politics
  3. Sensory Overload
  4. Slaves
  5. Drastic Actions
  6. World War III
Generator Album
  1. Generator
  2. Too Much To Ask
  3. No Direction
  4. Tomorrow
  5. Two Babies In The Dark
  6. Heaven Is Falling
  7. Atomic Garden
  8. The Answer
  9. Fertile Crescent
  10. Chimaera
  11. Only Entertainment
How Could Hell Be Any Worse Album
  1. Latch Key Kids
  2. Part III
  3. Faith In God
  4. Fuck Armageddon... This Is Hell
  5. Pity
  6. In The Night
  7. Damned To Be Free
  8. White Trash (2nd Generation)
  9. American Dream
  10. Eat Your Dog
  11. Voice Of God Is Government
  12. Oligarchy
  13. Doing Time
Into The Unknown Album
  1. Chasing The Wild Goose
  2. Billy Gnosis
  3. Time And Disregard
  4. The Dichotomy
  5. Million Days
  6. Losing Generation
  7. ...You Give Up
New America Album
  1. A World Without Melody
  2. New America
  3. 1000 Memories
  4. A Streetkid Named Desire
  5. Whisper In Time
  6. Believe It
  7. I Love My Computer
  8. The Hopeless Housewife
  9. There Will Be A Way
  10. Let It Burn
No Control Album
  1. Change Of Ideas
  2. Big Bang
  3. No Control
  4. Sometimes I Feel Like
  5. Automatic Man
  6. I Want To Conquer The World
  7. Sanity
  8. Henchman
  9. It Must Look Pretty Appealing
  10. You
  11. Progress
  12. I Want Something More
  13. Anxiety
  14. Billy
No Substance Album
  1. Hear It
  2. Shades of Truth
  3. All Fantastic Images
  4. The Biggest Killer in American History
  5. No Substance
  6. Raise Your Voice
  7. Sowing the Seeds of Utopia
  8. The Hippy Killers
  9. The State of the End of the Millennium Address
  10. The Voracious March of Godliness
  11. Mediocre Minds
  12. Victims of the Revolution
  13. Strange Denial
  14. At the Mercy of Imbeciles
  15. The Same Person
  16. In So Many Ways
No Substance (B-Sides) Album
  1. Universal Cynic
  2. Markovian Process
  3. News From the Front
  4. Leaders and Followers
  5. Dream of Unity
  6. Tested
  7. The Answer
  8. The Dodo
  9. Follow The Leader
Process of Belief Album
  1. Supersonic
  2. Prove It
  3. Broken
  4. Destined For Nothing
  5. Materialist
  6. Kyoto Now!
  7. Sorrow
  8. Epiphany
  9. Evangeline
  10. The Defense
  11. The Lie
  12. Bored and Extremely Dangerous
  13. Shattered Faith
Recipe For Hate Album
  1. Recipe For Hate
  2. Kerosene
  3. American Jesus
  4. Man With A Mission
  5. All Good Soldiers
  6. Watch It Die
  7. Struck A Nerve
  8. My Poor Friend Me
  9. Modern Day Catastrophists
  10. Skyscraper
  11. Stealth
Stranger Than Fiction Album
  1. Incomplete
  2. Leave Mine To Me
  3. Stranger Than Fiction
  4. Tiny Voices
  5. The Handshake
  6. Better Off Dead
  7. Infected
  8. Television
  9. Individual
  10. Hooray For Me...
  11. Slumber
  12. Marked
  13. Inner Logic
  14. What It Is
Suffer Album
  1. You Are (The Government)
  2. 1000 More Fools
  3. How Much Is Enough?
  4. When?
  5. Give You Nothing (Tom Clement)
  6. Land Of Competition
  7. Forbidden Beat
  8. Best For You
  9. Suffer
  10. Delirium Of Disorder
  11. Part II (The Numbers Game)
  12. What Can You Do?
  13. Do What You Want
  14. Part IV (The Index Fossil)
  15. Pessimistic Lines
The Empire Strikes First Album
  1. Overture
  2. Sinister Rouge
  3. Social Suicide
  4. Atheist Peace
  5. All There Is
  6. Los Angeles Is Burning
  7. Let Them Eat War
  8. God’s Love
  9. To Another Abyss
  10. The Quickening
  11. The Empire Strikes First
  12. Beyond Electric Dreams
  13. Boot Stamping On A Human Face Forever
  14. Live Again - The Fall Of Man
The Gray Race Album
  1. The Gray Race
  2. Them And Us
  3. A Walk
  4. Parallel
  5. Punk Rock Song
  6. Empty Causes
  7. Nobody Listens
  8. Pity The Dead
  9. Spirit Shine
  10. The Streets of America
  11. Ten in 2010
  12. Victory
  13. Drunk Sincerity
  14. Come Join Us
  15. Cease
Greg Graffin - vocals
Greg Hetson - guitar
Brett Gurewitz - guitar
Brian Baker - guitar
Jay Bentley - bass
Brooks Wackerman - drums

The music has the furious beat and driving buzz saw guitars of classic punk rock, but when a vocal chorus cuts in, it is surprisingly harmonious and emotionally evocative, reminiscent of The Beatles or The Everly Brothers.

This is a sonic contradiction that works to stunning effect. It is also a sound that has come to define one of the world’s most original rock bands, BAD RELIGION. To call BAD RELIGION simply a punk band is akin to labeling the Who, a mod band, or Pet Sounds era Beach Boys, surf music. True, these bands were each defined by a time and a place – and you can definitely hear echoes of the Los Angeles punk scene in BAD RELIGION’s melodic and energetic music. But like the other bands, BAD RELIGION has both honored and yet completely transcended their roots. Their newest effort THE PROCESS OF BELIEF is no mere hardcore revivalism; it is, in fact, the complete evolution of punk music, a record that successfully redefines a genre the band helped to popularize. If you love punk rock, this disc will surely quench your thirst like no other, and if you’re simply looking for an incredibly vital and inspiring rock record, the same holds true.

The band’s songwriters, singer Greg Graffin and guitarist Brett Gurewitz are back working together after years apart. This renewed collaboration seems to have brought the band to the peak of their game. Unlike many veteran artists who seem to lose their way over the years, BAD RELIGION has instead deftly harnessed their mutual life experiences into an incredibly focused and inspired work. This is never more apparent than on the intensely intimate song “Broken,� with its compassionate portrait of deeply flawed souls. The chorus sings out plaintively against a backdrop of crashing guitars, “While I’m not the kind to insist, you couldn’t have missed, we must co-exist. So please listen to me, there is no such thing, as human debris. Broken? I said I’m not broken. A little cracked but still I’m not broken.� seeming an almost personal plea for forgiveness and acceptance. When the band kicks into overdrive on the hyper-fast new song “Materialist� one hears punk rock at its very zenith, with intelligent and thoughtful lyrics like, “THE PROCESS OF BELIEF is an elixir when you’re weak. I must confess at times, I indulge it on the sneak� set against frantic staccato drumming and bristling high-speed guitars. This juxtaposition of energetic music and insightful lyrics is a quality that, from their very inception, has set BAD RELIGION apart from the pack.

Set in relief against the faster songs on THE PROCESS OF BELIEF, is the stunning mid-tempo anthem, “Epiphany.� It builds from a lone contemplative bass line to an emotional and symphonic crescendo of thundering guitar chords and interweaving choruses singing the refrain, “Only to discover, that our values ran us aground, on the shoal in the sea, of what we could be. What’s right is wrong, what’s come has gone, what’s clear and pure is not so sure.� It truly sounds like nothing else on the current musical landscape -- both heartfelt and refreshingly original. BAD RELIGION began, like so many creative forces, as a reaction to an inhospitable environment. In this case, the heat baked Los Angeles suburbs of the San Fernando Valley, a sprawling smog infested dystopia of mini-malls and suffocating boredom. It was in this climate that three disaffected teenagers, Greg Graffin, Brett Gurewitz and Jay Bentley, met and formed BAD RELIGION, practicing in a small garage and playing live amidst the volatile LA punk scene.

When the major record companies refused to sign anything resembling punk, Gurewitz decided they would simply start their own label to release the band’s incendiary music. BAD RELIGION soon issued a crudely recorded self titled EP on a newly formed Epitaph label and quickly followed up with a much better produced full-length album titled “How Could Hell Be Any Worse?� a record considered by many to be a milestone of Southern California punk music. Gurewitz eventually left the band and was replaced by Greg Hetson from speed punk pioneers, the Circle Jerks. In 1986, Gurewitz decided to take another shot at the record business and opened a small recording studio in Hollywood called Westbeach.

When Hetson couldn’t make a show one night, the band asked Gurewitz to fill in and he was soon back in the line up, playing alongside Hetson. In 1987, the band entered Westbeach and recorded a batch of energetic new songs for an album called “Suffer,� a stunning combination of high-octane punk songs and solid production values, which was a success with both fans and critics. Many would say it was also responsible for reinvigorating the entire punk rock genre. Punk was soon back with a vengeance and it was no coincidence that much of it sounded like BAD RELIGION with driving beats and melodic harmonies. The following years saw the revitalized band releasing almost an album per year, gaining international popularity and even landing a hit radio single with the song “Infected.� In 1993, the band moved to Atlantic records. A year later, Epitaph found itself experiencing a sudden growth as punk music finally exploded into mass popularity. This resulted in Gurewitz again departing the band to dedicate himself full time to his quickly expanding label.

BAD RELIGION recruited lead guitarist Brian Baker, previously of underground legends, Minor Threat, and forged ahead, continuing to release records and tour. Gurewitz on the other hand, found himself waging an agonizing battle with drug addiction that saw him eventually in jail, and most assuming he would be yet one more punk rock drug casualty. When all seemed hopeless, he managed to rally and slowly work his way back. Gurewitz and Graffin had always kept in touch, but as attractive as collaborating again seemed, there were serious obstacles in place. The band still owed their label another record, and a revitalized Gurewitz was occupied with his work at Epitaph. A year and a half ago, the path finally cleared and BAD RELIGION invited Gurewitz to rejoin the band he had helped to start. He agreed and, in turn, asked BAD RELIGION back to a label initially created to release their music.

The “Process of Belief� had begun. The band returned to Gurewitz’s Westbeach studios with the addition of a young drum prodigy named Brooks Wackerman, whose gifted playing has added a complexity and crispness to the new songs. The result is arguably BAD RELIGION’s best record to date. “There’s this tangible excitement amongst the band right now.� Guitarist, Baker says, “Brett is in heaven doing this. This is the only band that he’s been in. This is the only band Greg Graffin has been in. It’s like this is what they were put on fucking earth to do.� One of the songs on the new record is an urgent hook-filled romp called “Supersonic� that addresses the increasingly disposable nature of pop culture with the lines, “How does it feel to be outstripped by the pace of cultural change? My deeds are senseless and rendered meaningless, when measured in that vein.� An appropriate topic for one of the few enduring bands out there. Perhaps the key to their sustained relevance is their steadfast refusal to measure themselves by passing standards. BAD RELIGION, true to their punk roots, is a band completely guided by their own vision. The rest of us are just damn lucky that vision sounds so good. THE PROCESS OF BELIEF? Absolutely.
Greg Graffin
vocals Greg Hetson
guitar
Brett Gurewitz guitar Brian Baker
guitar
Jay Bentley
bass Brooks Wackerman drums

The music has the furious beat and driving buzz saw guitars of classic punk rock, but when a vocal chorus cuts in, it is surprisingly harmonious and emotionally evocative, reminiscent of The Beatles or The Everly Brothers.

This is a sonic contradiction that works to stunning effect. It is also a sound that has come to define one of the world’s most original rock bands, BAD RELIGION. To call BAD RELIGION simply a punk band is akin to labeling the Who, a mod band, or Pet Sounds era Beach Boys, surf music. True, these bands were each defined by a time and a place – and you can definitely hear echoes of the Los Angeles punk scene in BAD RELIGION’s melodic and energetic music. But like the other bands, BAD RELIGION has both honored and yet completely transcended their roots. Their newest effort THE PROCESS OF BELIEF is no mere hardcore revivalism; it is, in fact, the complete evolution of punk music, a record that successfully redefines a genre the band helped to popularize. If you love punk rock, this disc will surely quench your thirst like no other, and if you’re simply looking for an incredibly vital and inspiring rock record, the same holds true.

The band’s songwriters, singer Greg Graffin and guitarist Brett Gurewitz are back working together after years apart. This renewed collaboration seems to have brought the band to the peak of their game. Unlike many veteran artists who seem to lose their way over the years, BAD RELIGION has instead deftly harnessed their mutual life experiences into an incredibly focused and inspired work. This is never more apparent than on the intensely intimate song “Broken,� with its compassionate portrait of deeply flawed souls. The chorus sings out plaintively against a backdrop of crashing guitars, “While I’m not the kind to insist, you couldn’t have missed, we must co-exist. So please listen to me, there is no such thing, as human debris. Broken? I said I’m not broken. A little cracked but still I’m not broken.� seeming an almost personal plea for forgiveness and acceptance. When the band kicks into overdrive on the hyper-fast new song “Materialist� one hears punk rock at its very zenith, with intelligent and thoughtful lyrics like, “THE PROCESS OF BELIEF is an elixir when you’re weak. I must confess at times, I indulge it on the sneak� set against frantic staccato drumming and bristling high-speed guitars. This juxtaposition of energetic music and insightful lyrics is a quality that, from their very inception, has set BAD RELIGION apart from the pack.

Set in relief against the faster songs on THE PROCESS OF BELIEF, is the stunning mid-tempo anthem, “Epiphany.� It builds from a lone contemplative bass line to an emotional and symphonic crescendo of thundering guitar chords and interweaving choruses singing the refrain, “Only to discover, that our values ran us aground, on the shoal in the sea, of what we could be. What’s right is wrong, what’s come has gone, what’s clear and pure is not so sure.� It truly sounds like nothing else on the current musical landscape -- both heartfelt and refreshingly original. BAD RELIGION began, like so many creative forces, as a reaction to an inhospitable environment. In this case, the heat baked Los Angeles suburbs of the San Fernando Valley, a sprawling smog infested dystopia of mini-malls and suffocating boredom. It was in this climate that three disaffected teenagers, Greg Graffin, Brett Gurewitz and Jay Bentley, met and formed BAD RELIGION, practicing in a small garage and playing live amidst the volatile LA punk scene.

When the major record companies refused to sign anything resembling punk, Gurewitz decided they would simply start their own label to release the band’s incendiary music. BAD RELIGION soon issued a crudely recorded self titled EP on a newly formed Epitaph label and quickly followed up with a much better produced full-length album titled “How Could Hell Be Any Worse?� a record considered by many to be a milestone of Southern California punk music. Gurewitz eventually left the band and was replaced by Greg Hetson from speed punk pioneers, the Circle Jerks. In 1986, Gurewitz decided to take another shot at the record business and opened a small recording studio in Hollywood called Westbeach.

When Hetson couldn’t make a show one night, the band asked Gurewitz to fill in and he was soon back in the line up, playing alongside Hetson. In 1987, the band entered Westbeach and recorded a batch of energetic new songs for an album called “Suffer,� a stunning combination of high-octane punk songs and solid production values, which was a success with both fans and critics. Many would say it was also responsible for reinvigorating the entire punk rock genre. Punk was soon back with a vengeance and it was no coincidence that much of it sounded like BAD RELIGION with driving beats and melodic harmonies. The following years saw the revitalized band releasing almost an album per year, gaining international popularity and even landing a hit radio single with the song “Infected.� In 1993, the band moved to Atlantic records. A year later, Epitaph found itself experiencing a sudden growth as punk music finally exploded into mass popularity. This resulted in Gurewitz again departing the band to dedicate himself full time to his quickly expanding label.

BAD RELIGION recruited lead guitarist Brian Baker, previously of underground legends, Minor Threat, and forged ahead, continuing to release records and tour. Gurewitz on the other hand, found himself waging an agonizing battle with drug addiction that saw him eventually in jail, and most assuming he would be yet one more punk rock drug casualty. When all seemed hopeless, he managed to rally and slowly work his way back. Gurewitz and Graffin had always kept in touch, but as attractive as collaborating again seemed, there were serious obstacles in place. The band still owed their label another record, and a revitalized Gurewitz was occupied with his work at Epitaph. A year and a half ago, the path finally cleared and BAD RELIGION invited Gurewitz to rejoin the band he had helped to start. He agreed and, in turn, asked BAD RELIGION back to a label initially created to release their music.

The “Process of Belief� had begun. The band returned to Gurewitz’s Westbeach studios with the addition of a young drum prodigy named Brooks Wackerman, whose gifted playing has added a complexity and crispness to the new songs. The result is arguably BAD RELIGION’s best record to date. “There’s this tangible excitement amongst the band right now.� Guitarist, Baker says, “Brett is in heaven doing this. This is the only band that he’s been in. This is the only band Greg Graffin has been in. It’s like this is what they were put on fucking earth to do.� One of the songs on the new record is an urgent hook-filled romp called “Supersonic� that addresses the increasingly disposable nature of pop culture with the lines, “How does it feel to be outstripped by the pace of cultural change? My deeds are senseless and rendered meaningless, when measured in that vein.� An appropriate topic for one of the few enduring bands out there. Perhaps the key to their sustained relevance is their steadfast refusal to measure themselves by passing standards. BAD RELIGION, true to their punk roots, is a band completely guided by their own vision. The rest of us are just damn lucky that vision sounds so good. THE PROCESS OF BELIEF? Absolutely.

Thanks to daw26 for submitting the biography.



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