Good Riddance / Ensign Explained

Good Riddance / Ensign
Type:ep
Artist:Good Riddance and Ensign
Cover:Good Riddance-Ensign cover.jpg
Recorded:1996 at Art of Ears
Genre:Hardcore punk, skate punk, punk rock, pop punk
Label:Orphaned
Chronology:Good Riddance
Prev Title:Good Riddance / Ill Repute
Prev Year:1996
Next Title:Ballads from the Revolution
Next Year:1998

Good Riddance / Ensign is a split EP by the hardcore punk bands Good Riddance and the Ensign, released in 1997 through Orphaned Records.[1] Good Riddance's "What We Have" was one of seven songs that had been demoed for their second album A Comprehensive Guide to Moderne Rebellion but had been left off the record; they were recorded in a separate session from the album, with Andy Ernst at Art of Ears, and used on split EPs with Reliance, Ignite, Ill Repute, and Ensign over the following year.[1] [2] Their second track, "Salt", also appeared on their third album Ballads from the Revolution in 1998.

Reflecting on "What We Have", Good Riddance singer Russ Rankin remarked that "Lyrically it's like if you looked up 'generic hardcore song' in the dictionary it would have this tune next to it. Plenty about friends and music and heart and all the things that made mid to late 1990s hardcore so fun but also so uninteresting."[1]

Personnel

[1]

Good Riddance

Production

Notes and References

  1. . . 2010 . Russ . Rankin . Russ Rankin . CD liner . . 756-2 . San Francisco.
  2. Web site: Jain . Sean . Interviews: Russ Rankin (Good Riddance, Only Crime) . 2010-06-17 . Punknews.org . 2010-08-30.