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Viva la Revolution

 
Album Review: Viva la Revolution
 

  • Artist: Dragon Ash
  • Rating: StarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: August 19, 1999
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Progressively harder and angrier than their previous releases, Viva la Revolution established Dragon Ash as a major force in Japanese rock, based upon two monster singles, both here: "Let Yourself Go Let Myself Go," a discordant slice of heavy hip-hop similar to the Beastie Boys' "So What'cha Want," but featuring battling sample layers that shouldn't even work together, but do; and "Grateful Days," a soulful number based around a lyrical riff from Smashing Pumpkins, swirling strings, and the frisson of vicious-sounding rapper Zeebra and soul diva ACO. With DJ Bots now part of the band, Dragon Ash fully embraced a rock/hip-hop identity, with dips into reggae ("Dark Cherries"), a paean to snowboarding, ska ("Just I'll Say"), and a terrific Social Distortion-like statement of purpose, "Freedom of Expression." This album marked their third excellent album in that many years -- quite a record. ~ Ted Mills, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Intro Dragon Ash (:51)
Communication Dragon Ash (3:27)
Rock the Beat Dragon Ash (3:25)
Humanity Dragon Ash (2:58)
Attention Dragon Ash (3:30)
Let Yourself Go, Let Myself Go Dragon Ash (5:04)
Dark Cherries Dragon Ash (4:01)
Drugs Can't Kill Teens Dragon Ash (4:33)
Just I'll Say Dragon Ash (3:17)
Fool Around Dragon Ash (2:02)
Freedom of Expression Kenji Furuya Dragon Ash (4:06)
Nouvelle Vague #2 Dragon Ash (2:33)
Viva la Revolution Dragon Ash (5:00)
Grateful Days Dragon Ash (4:49)
Outro Dragon Ash (1:00)

Credits

Dragon Ash (Main Performer)
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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

 

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