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Milo Goes to College

 
Album Review: Milo Goes to College

  • Artist: Descendents
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1982
  • Total Time: 22:10
  • Genre: Rock

Review

And indeed, since he was heading off to do just that, the Descendents bowed out the earliest phase of its existence with another collection of blink-and-you'll-miss-it songs about life, love, girls, losers, and, of course, food. Starting with the classic rip-and-riff of "Myage," which started a long-standing trend of Descendents songs ending with "-age," the four-piece pureed everything it loved -- pop hooks, punk and hardcore thrash, and whatever else it enjoyed -- and came up with an unpretentious, catchy winner. The playing of the core band is even better than before, never mistaking increased skill with needing to show off; the Lombardo/Stevenson rhythm section is in perfect sync, while Navetta provides the corrosive power. Add in Aukerman's in-your-face hilarity and f*ck-off stance, and it's punk rock that wears both its adolescence and brains on its sleeve. Aukerman lets his heart slip through more than once amid all the hilarious descriptions and putdowns, like the slow-burn introduction to "Catalina," with Navetta's guitar the perfect snarling counterpoint. There are a couple of moments where the band's young age is all too obvious -- the trendoids slammed in "Loser" deserve the total trashing given, but the casual homophobia is unfortunate no matter where you stand. As for "Kabuki Girl," you've got to wonder. Generally, though, this is smart, sly music and words coming from people interested in creating their own lives and style as opposed to following trends. There's "Tonyage," another rant against punk/new wave wannabes who "were all surfers last year"; the wise-in-advance-of-its-years "I'm Not a Punk," perhaps the band's greatest song; and the power-singalong "Suburban Home," with its spoken-word start and ending, "I want to be stereotyped, I want to be classified!" The music never stops, neither does the energy -- an instant party album of its own kind. ~ Ned Raggett, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Myage Bill Stevenson Descendents (2:00)
I Wanna Be a Bear Frank Navetta, Tommy Lombardo Descendents (:40)
I'm Not a Loser Frank Navetta Descendents (1:28)
Parents Frank Navetta Descendents (1:37)
Tony Age Bill Stevenson, Tommy Lombardo Descendents (:55)
M-16 Milo Aukerman, Tommy Lombardo Descendents (:40)
I'm Not a Punk Tommy Lombardo Descendents (1:01)
Catalina Bill Stevenson, Tommy Lombardo Descendents (1:44)
Suburban Home Tommy Lombardo Descendents (1:40)
Statue of Liberty Frank Navetta Descendents (1:58)
Kabuki Girl Tommy Lombardo Descendents (1:09)
Marriage Bill Stevenson, Frank Navetta Descendents (1:37)
Hope Milo Aukerman Descendents (1:58)
Bikeage Bill Stevenson Descendents (2:12)
Jean Is Dead Bill Stevenson Descendents (1:31)

Credits

Descendents (Main Performer), Milo Aukerman (Vocals), Bill Stevenson (Drums), Frank Navetta (Guitar), Tony Lombardo (Bass)
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Wikipedia: Milo Goes to College
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Milo Goes to College
Studio album by Descendents
Released 1982
Recorded June, 1982
Total Access Studio, Redondo Beach, California, USA
Genre Punk
Length 22:32
Label New Alliance
Producer Spot
Professional reviews
Descendents chronology
Fat
(1981)
Milo Goes to College
(1982)
I Don't Want to Grow Up
(1985)

Milo Goes to College is a 1982 album by the punk band Descendents. It was released on New Alliance Records (and reissued by SST Records in 1987). SPIN magazine rated the album one of the all-time top hardcore albums. Sputnikmusic also ranked this album 1st among highest-rated punk albums of 1982.[1]

"Suburban Home" and "Myage" became locally popular (as well as being college radio hits), while many other songs from the album became fan favorites. The band often used the suffix "-age", as seen on the tracks "Myage," "Tonyage" and "Bikeage" (as well as, coincidentally, "Marriage").

Contents

Track listing

  1. "Myage" – 1:59
  2. "I Wanna Be a Bear" – 0:42
  3. "I'm Not a Loser" – 1:28
  4. "Parents" – 1:38
  5. "Tonyage" – 0:56
  6. "M 16" – 0:43
  7. "I'm Not a Punk" – 1:04
  8. "Catalina" – 1:46
  9. "Suburban Home" – 1:40
  10. "Statue of Liberty" – 1:59
  11. "Kabuki Girl" – 1:10
  12. "Marriage" – 1:39
  13. "Hope" – 2:00
  14. "Bikeage" – 2:14
  15. "Jean Is Dead" – 1:33

Personnel

Cover versions

Trivia

  • The record label Suburban Home derives its name from the song on the album.
  • Along with Bikini Kill and Black Flag, Descendents were named one of Alternative Press' "23 Bands That Shaped Punk". Alternative Press chose 3 Descendents releases that they named "The Crucial Releases": All, Everything Sucks and Milo Goes to College.
  • The popular punk rock band Bad Religion mentions the album subtly by singing the lyric "Milo went to college but you knew about that," in their song "You Don't Belong" on 2002 album The Process of Belief.

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Milo Goes to College" Read more