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The Outcasts: The Punk Singles Collection

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Download links and information about The Outcasts: The Punk Singles Collection by The Outcasts. This album was released in 1995 and it belongs to Rock, Punk, Alternative genres. It contains 25 tracks with total duration of 01:16:52 minutes.

Artist: The Outcasts
Release date: 1995
Genre: Rock, Punk, Alternative
Tracks: 25
Duration: 01:16:52
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. You're a Disease 2:30
2. Don't Want to Be No Adult 2:28
3. Frustration 2:21
4. Justa Nother Teenage Rebel 3:15
5. Love Is for Sops 3:28
6. The Cops Are Comin' 3:01
7. Self Consciousover You 3:08
8. Love You for Never 3:00
9. Cyborg 3:12
10. Magnum Force 2:35
11. Gangland Warfare 2:57
12. Programme Love 3:15
13. Beating and Screaming, Pt. 1 3:04
14. Beating and Screaming, Pt. 2 2:53
15. Mania 3:10
16. Angel Face 2:44
17. Gangland Warfare (Version 2) 2:58
18. Nowhere Left to Run 3:13
19. The Running's Over, Time to Pray 3:07
20. Ruby 2:37
21. Seven Deadly Sins 2:45
22. Swamp Fever (7" Version) 3:40
23. 1969 (7" Version) 4:13
24. Psychotic Shakedown 3:35
25. Blue Murder 3:43

Details

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Belfast's Outcasts are most frequently invoked as one of the bands that flourished around the slipstream of Good Vibrations labelmates the Undertones. In fact, single for single, song for song, the Outcasts far outrank their better-known peers, as this 25-track collection swiftly proves. Opening with the three tracks that made up the Outcasts' "Frustration" debut single (on their own It label) in March 1978, the collection then races on through that peerless run of three Good Vibrations 45s — "Just Another Teenage Rebel," "The Cops Are Comin'," and "Self Conscious Over You" (the title track, of course, to the band's peerless debut album, in December 1979). From there, the collection slips into the dog days of the band, label-hopping between GBH ("Magnum Force") and another vanity project, Outcasts Only ("Programme Love" and "Angel Face"), Abstract ("Nowhere Left to Run"), and, finally, New Rose. Two last 45s ("Seven Deadly Sins" and "1969") marked just how far the band had traveled over the past seven years, but they still pack all the hallmarks of the classic Outcasts sound, to remind listeners once again of the Outcasts' greatest claim to fame. They really were better than the 'Tones.