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F**k World Trade

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Download links and information about F**k World Trade by Leftöver Crack / Leftover Crack. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Rock, Punk, Metal, Reggae, Ska, Alternative genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 01:12:36 minutes.

Artist: Leftöver Crack / Leftover Crack
Release date: 2004
Genre: Rock, Punk, Metal, Reggae, Ska, Alternative
Tracks: 20
Duration: 01:12:36
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Intro 1:21
2. Clear Channel (F**k Off!) 2:52
3. Life Is Pain 4:37
4. Burn Them Prisons 3:15
5. Gang Control 2:42
6. Super Tuesday 4:00
7. Via Sin Dios 2:14
8. Feed the Children (Books of Lies) 3:21
9. One Dead Cop 3:39
10. Ya Can't Go Home 3:14
11. Rock the 40 Oz. 2:29
12. Soon We'll Be Dead 5:34
13. Gringos Son Puercos Feos 3:08
14. Operation: M.O.V.E. 5:50
15. Outro 4:37
16. Banned In P.C. 1:33
17. The Christ 1:42
18. Apple Pie and Police State 2:38
19. Infested (The Lindane Conspiracy, Pt. I) 2:50
20. F**k World Trade 11:00

Details

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Leftover Crack return their fire-stoked railroad spike to society's eye with the subtlety-banishing F**k World Trade. The spike's iron cooled after 2001's Mediocre Generica, and little was heard from the New York squatter punks. But World Trade makes up for lost time — it's provoking and nonconforming in double and triple amounts. "Clear Channel (F**k Off!)" is a rallying cry even without its East Coast hardcore rumble, while "Life Is Pain" and "Gang Control" return to the scraggly ska-punk sound that's the band's strongest side. As a vocalist, Stza is, well, limited. But to spit vitriol and passion, you don't have to be the Velvet Fog. His pained whine leads the boys through a host of hyper upbeats and amplified hardcore choruses, and the kicker is that this record is more melodic than 99 percent of what the punk-pap army offers. ("Rock the 40 Oz." and the acoustic lead-up to "One Dead Cop"'s main progression are both highlights.) Leftover Crack are street-level revolutionaries from their lyrics, to their cover art, all the way through to their energizing, uncompromising music. While their message can be both visually and sonically bludgeoning, its candor is refreshing in an age of middling media, partisan politics, and social second-guessing. It's real revolution rock.