The Politics of Time explained

The Politics of Time
Type:compilation
Artist:The Minutemen
Cover:PoliticsOfTime.jpg
Released:1984
Recorded:January 1979 to September 24, 1983
Genre:Hardcore punk
Length:33:47
Label:New Alliance
Producer:various producers
Prev Title:Buzz or Howl Under the Influence of Heat
Prev Year:1983
Next Title:Double Nickels on the Dime
Next Year:1984

The Politics of Time is the seventh overall release, third album-length release, and first compilation by American hardcore punk group Minutemen.[1]

Released in between their Buzz or Howl Under the Influence of Heat 12-inch EP and Double Nickels on the Dime double album on their own New Alliance Records label, the album compiles seven tracks meant for a non-SST Minutemen studio album that never materialized, a variety of live tracks of varying recording quality (most done with ordinary cassette machines), and a recording by their predecessor group The Reactionaries.

Part of the sleeve note on the back cover facetiously asks listeners to "note the quality of the recording" on the live version of "Fanatics" (from The Punch Line). While the recording is an almost undiscernible mess, the cut is apparently included for its historical importance as according to Henry Rollins in his book Get In The Van, on this night at the end of the song, D. Boon had jumped into the audience with his guitar on, hollering the title word of the song while "knock[ing] those skinheads [in the audience] over like bowling pins".

Also of note is a live recording of "Futurism Restated", which had earlier appeared on the 7-inch EP Bean-Spill. The version that appears on this album contains a full extra verse of lyrics not found in the other version (although the lyrics are almost completely undiscernable and the album lacks a lyric sheet).

The Politics of Time would later end up as a song title on Double Nickels on the Dime.

SST Records, after buying New Alliance from Mike Watt and Martin Tamburovich in 1987, reissued The Politics of Time on SST in 1987 on vinyl and cassette, as part of the Post-Mersh Vol. 3 CD in 1989, and as its own CD in 1991.

Track listing

Side one
  1. "Base King" (Boon, Watt) - 1:12
  2. "Working Men are Pissed" (Watt) - 1:17
  3. "I Shook Hands" (Watt) - 0:58
  4. "Below the Belt" (Hurley, Watt) - 0:56
  5. "Shit You Hear at Parties" (Boon, Watt) - 1:06
  6. "The Big Lounge Scene" (Watt) - 1:23
  7. "Maternal Rite" (Boon) - 1:13
  8. "Tune for Wind God" (Baiza, Boon, Hurley, Watt) - 3:05
  9. "Party With Me Punker" (Watt) - 0:54
    • Recorded July 12, 1983, at Minutemen's practice place in Long Beach, California, by Richard Derrick and James Ellis
  10. "The Process" (Boon, Watt) - 1:17
  11. "Joy Jam" (Spot, Boon, Hurley, Watt) - 4:46
Side two
  1. "Tony Gets Wasted in Pedro" (Lazaroff, Watt) - 2:10
  2. "Swing to the Right" (Watt) - 0:41
  3. "¡Raza Si!" (Watt) - 0:58
    • Recorded September 1980 in George Hurley's shed.
  4. "Times" (Watt) - 0:45
  5. "Badges" (Watt) - 0:35
    • Demo recordings done by Mike Watt in his living room without D. Boon or George Hurley.
  6. "Fodder" (Boon, Watt) - 0:42
  7. "Futurism Restated" (Joe Boon, Watt) - 1:30
  8. "Hollering" (Watt) - 0:58
  9. "Suburban Dialectic" (Watt) - 0:42
  10. "Contained" (Hurley, Watt) - 0:57
  11. "On Trial" – 0:39 (Watt)
  12. "Spraycan Wars" (Watt) - 0:55
    • These seven songs recorded live December 26, 1980, at the Bla Bla Cafe in Studio City, California, by Joe Baiza.
  13. "My Part" (Boon) - 1:35
  14. "Fanatics" (Watt) - 0:32
    • Recorded live March 4, 1983, in Brixton, England
  15. "Ack Ack Ack" (Talley-Jones, Johansen) - 0:41
    • Recorded live March 1, 1983, in Arhus, Denmark by Johnny Concrete. A cover of The Urinals song.
  16. "The Big Blast for Youth" (Tamburovich, Vandenberg, Boon, Hurley, Watt) - 1:20

Personnel

Minutemen

with:

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Politics of Time - Minutemen | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic. AllMusic.