Ignite / Good Riddance Explained

Ignite / Good Riddance
Type:ep
Artist:Ignite and Good Riddance
Cover:Ignite-Good Riddance cover (side A).jpg
Caption:Cover of the Ignite side (side A)
Recorded:1996 at Art of Ears
Genre:Hardcore punk, melodic hardcore
Label:Revelation (REV 053)
Chronology:Ignite
Prev Title:Family
Prev Year:1995
Next Title:Past Our Means
Next Year:1996

Ignite / Good Riddance is a split EP by the hardcore punk bands Ignite and Good Riddance, released in 1996 through Revelation Records.[1] Good Riddance's tracks were two of seven 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]

Reflecting on the song "Twenty-One Guns", Good Riddance singer Russ Rankin said it was "a song about the plight of a soldier risking his life in some remote outpost for a cause he isn't privy to. The irony that we flippantly waste so much human life but wait until someone's death to bestow all of this honor and ceremony upon them. Musically a very angry song, very Born Against sounding to me now."[1] "Class War 2000" was influenced musically by T.S.O.L. and lyrically by The Dils' 1977 song "Class War", after which it was titled.[1]

Personnel

[1]

Ignite

Good Riddance

Production

External links

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.