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- Artist: Sublime
- Rating:




- Release Date: 1994
- Type: Contains explicit content
- Genre: Rock
| Album Review: Robbin' the Hood |
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| Wikipedia: Robbin' the Hood |
| Robbin' the Hood | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by Sublime | ||||
| Released | August 1994 | |||
| Recorded | 1993-1994 in various living rooms Long Beach, California & Westbeach Recorders in Hollywood, California | |||
| Genre | Ska punk | |||
| Length | 60:52 | |||
| Label | Originally released on Skunk Records, Rereleased on Gasoline Alley/MCA | |||
| Producer | Sublime | |||
| Professional reviews | ||||
| Sublime chronology | ||||
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Robbin' the Hood is the second album by the Southern California ska-punk band Sublime, which was released in 1994.
Robbin' the Hood is a Sublime album with noted low production values (the album sleeve boasts of its "13 self produced 4-track home recordings"). Although there is no reason behind the low budget recording techniques, it has been speculated that it was Brad Nowell's answer to the people who were beginning to feel he was in the music business for the money. The album is full of fillers, instrumentals and 'Raleigh Soliloquies,' the rants of a mentally disturbed man named Raleigh Theodore Sakers. Raleigh Soliloquy Pt. III has Raleigh singing his interpretation of "You Don't Know What Love Is" by George Benson. This was done as it was originally only going to have 6 tracks. According to late lead singer Bradley Nowell's wife, Troy Dendekker, the majority of the album was recorded in a Long Beach, California crack house. She also stated that the album was written and recorded at the height of Nowell's heroin addiction, with many references to this reflected in the albums lyrics.
Some of the songs on the album contain bits that were later reused by the band on other albums. For example, "Lincoln Highway Dub" contains several elements that also appeared on the band's hit "Santeria", and elements of "Work That We Do" would later appear in "Under My Voodoo". Furthermore, during the period of recording Robbin' the Hood, the band recorded demos of "What I Got" and "Garden Grove".
Contents |
All songs written by Sublime unless otherwise noted
* Track 22 includes several hidden tracks including an alternate version of "Don't Push" and an untitled dub song that includes snippets of "Boss D.J." The original Skunk Records release also contains a cover of Mudhoney's "The Farther I Go," which was removed from the Gasoline Alley/MCA re-release for legal reasons.
No singles were released from Robbin' the Hood, although the songs "Pool Shark", "STP", "Saw Red", and "Greatest-Hits" became some of Sublime's best-known songs. Two versions of "Pool Shark", about frontman Bradley Nowell's addiction to heroin, appear on the album: An uptempo punk-rock version and a more emotional acoustic version. The uptempo version later appeared on Sublime's Greatest Hits album, while an acoustic version is featured on 1998's Sublime Acoustic: Bradley Nowell & Friends. "Saw Red" was included on Second Hand Smoke, Greatest Hits as well as the 20th Century Masters: The Millennium Collection: The Best of Sublime compilation.
"Steppin' Razor" is a cover of a song by Joe Higgs. It is also played by Peter Tosh.
Sublime
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