Lost at Seventeen

Lost at Seventeen is the second studio album by American rock band Emily's Army, released on June 11, 2013, through Rise Records and Adeline Records.[5] The album was produced by drummer Joey Armstrong's father, Billie Joe Armstrong.[6] It is the band's last studio under their former name "Emily's Army" after changing their name to "Swimmers" in late 2014, and later "Swmrs" in late 2015[7][8][9] It is also the last record to feature lead guitarist Travis Neumann and last to feature Max Becker on bass before switching to lead guitar.[10] It is also their last studio album to be released through Adeline Records and Rise Records.

Lost at Seventeen
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 11, 2013
Recorded2012-2013
GenrePop rock,[1] pop punk,[2] garage rock[3][4]
Length45:27
LabelAdeline, Rise
ProducerBillie Joe Armstrong
Emily's Army chronology
Don't Be a Dick
(2011)
Lost at Seventeen
(2013)
Swim
(2014)

Background

After touring on Warped Tours 2011 and 2012, the band returned to the studio to record their second album in late 2012. The sound of the album changes little from their debut album Don't Be A Dick, but does have a lighter sound. The album had more of a pop punk to pop rock sound, instead of a punk rock sound like the first album.[3] Drummer Joey Armstrong's father, Billie Joe Armstrong, had an impact on the album's sound.[11]

Track listing

No.TitleLength
1."Part Time Bum"2:17
2."Jamie"2:04
3."Gübermensch"3:18
4."Avenue"2:52
5."I Am The President"3:03
6."The Kids Just Wanna Dance"2:50
7."Pathetic and in Love"2:39
8."On The Roof"3:37
9."The Rescuers"4:04
10."War"2:28
11."Rain"3:17
12."If Our Music Plays Again"3:27
13."18 Years"2:17
14."Elephant"2:15
15."Digital Drugs"3:28
16."Lost at 17"3:14
Total length:45:27

Personnel

Credits for Lost at Seventeen adapted from liner notes.[12]

Emily's Army
  • Cole Becker – Lead vocals, rhythm guitar
  • Max Becker – Lead vocals, bass
  • Joey Armstrong – Drums, percussion, backing vocals
  • Travis Neumann – Lead guitar, backing vocals
Additional personnel

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.