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Age of Unreason is the seventeenth studio album by American punk rock band Bad Religion, released on May 3, 2019. [1] It is the band's first studio album to feature guitarist Mike Dimkich and drummer Jamie Miller, replacing Greg Hetson and Brooks Wackerman respectively, and the first one to be produced by Carlos de la Garza, thus ending their collaboration with Joe Barresi, who had produced ...
Bad Religion is an American punk rock ... have also been with the band for most of their history while guitarist Brian Baker ... new album until around the end of the ...
The New America was released on May 9, 2000, and is the last Bad Religion album distributed via Atlantic Records to date. The release of The New America marked the band's fulfillment of their four-album contract with Atlantic Records , allowing the band to reconvene with former band-mate Brett Gurewitz for their next album, 2002's The Process ...
At the end of that year, we were fortunate enough to travel to Europe and go see the other parts of the world, which was super eye-opening. ... Social Distortion and Bad Religion. When: 7 p.m ...
Recipe for Hate is the seventh studio album by American punk rock band Bad Religion, released on June 4, 1993.It was their last album on Epitaph Records for nine years (until 2002's The Process of Belief) and the band had switched to Atlantic Records, who re-released the album several months after its release.
No Substance is the tenth full-length album by the punk rock band Bad Religion.It was the band's third (or fourth, if the reissue of Recipe for Hate is counted) release on Atlantic Records, and their second studio album since guitarist Brett Gurewitz's departure.
Politically-leaning punk icons Bad Religion released "Emancipation Of The Mind," an outtake from the 2019 album Age Of Unreason in conjunction with the inauguration today of President Joe Biden.
After a long-term hiatus, Bad Religion reformed in 1987 with a new lineup, releasing the studio album Suffer in 1988. Although Suffer was not a commercial success, the band earned a growing fan base in the underground music community and critical acclaim with that album [7] and it managed to sell 4,000 copies. [8]