The Dwarves Are Young and Good Looking

The Dwarves Are Young and Good Looking
Studio album by Dwarves
Released March 24, 1997
Genre Punk rock
Length 39:08
Label Epitaph/Theologian
Producer Eric Valentine; Blag Dahlia; Bradley Cook
Dwarves chronology
Sugarfix
(1993)Sugarfix1993
The Dwarves Are Young and Good Looking
(1997)
Free Cocaine
(1999)Free Cocaine1999

The Dwarves Are Young and Good Looking is an album released by punk rock band Dwarves in March 1997 Originally by Recess Records and then reissued by Epitaph Records and Theologian Records.[1] It was the band's first album since 1993's Sugarfix, after which they were dropped by Sub Pop, and the liner notes include a 'modified' copy of the Sub Pop press release announcing the band's departure from the label.[2]

Track listing

  1. "Unrepentant" – 2:15
  2. "We Must Have Blood" – 2:16
  3. "I Will Deny" – 1:40
  4. "Demonica" – 1:57
  5. "Everybodies Girl" – 2:42
  6. "Throw That World Away" – 1:35
  7. "Hits" – 1.13
  8. "The Ballad Of Vadge Moore" – 1:34
  9. "One Time Only" – 1:30
  10. "Pimp" – 1:07
  11. "The Crucifixion Is Now" – 1:11
  12. "You Gotta Burn" – 3:45
  13. "Bonus Track" – 16:23

The Dwarves Are Younger And Even Better Looking

Side A (Alt-Versions and B-sides)

  1. "Let's Take A Ride"
  2. "The Wicked"
  3. "Haunt Me"
  4. "Theme From The Vicelords"
  5. "Star 69 - A Million Miles"
  6. "Ask Me Why"
  7. "Come Gunnin'"
  8. "Lord of the Road"
  9. "One Time Only"
  10. "Throw That Girl Away"


Side B (Live Radio 97 Session)

  1. "Unrepentant Theme Intro"
  2. We Must Have Blood
  3. "Everybodies Girl"
  4. "Demonica"
  5. "Smack City"
  6. "You Gotta Burn"
  7. "Back Seat Of My Car"
  8. "Dairy Queen"
  9. "Drug Store"
  10. "Fuck Em All"
  11. "I Will Deny"

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[3]
Ink19(favorable)[2]

Charles Deppner of Ink19 described the album as "some real repugnant punk rock...some of their best burnt offerings skewered on the shish kebobs of hell".[2] Adam Bregman of Allmusic gave the album a 4-star rating, describing it as "their most satisfying record" and "the beginning of a new Dwarves, no longer a freak show, fistfight-type outfit with shows that last 15 minutes, but one that plays real songs, had a set list, and left the club unbloodied".[3]

References

  1. Strong, Martin C. (2003) The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, ISBN 1-84195-335-0, p. 312
  2. 1 2 3 Deppner, Charles D. J. (1997) "The Dwarves Are Young and Good Looking", Ink19, December 2007, retrieved 2010-02-07
  3. 1 2 Bregman, Adam "The Dwarves Are Young and Good Looking Review", Allmusic, retrieved 2010-02-07


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