Thanks to our friend Gavin in Australia, we’re checking out 28 Days from Melbourne and their sophomore album Upstyledown from 2000. Though it charted at #1 on the Australian ARIAnet album chart, the band failed to make a dent in the United States, which seems like a missed opportunity considering the band combines the sounds of late 90s/early 00s pop punk and rap rock into a familiar sound. Though the band has an ear for hooks and it sounds good, we revisit the “timeless” vs. “dated” production debate and wonder whether some of the musical and lyrical choices were the right ones. If you’re a fan of bands like Zebrahead, Sum 41, Biohazard, Phunk Junkeez, etc., this might be a lost gem waiting to be discovered.
Songs in this Episode:
Intro - Rip It Up
7:19 - History of the Band
11:53 - Sucker
14:06 - Song for Jasmine
19:02 - Information Overload
Outro - 16 Kill The Fake (Seshoo) (Featuring Uzumaki)
Karate - In Place of Real Insight | Album Review
Chad Fischer of Lazlo Bane and School of Fish | Interview
New Radicals - Maybe You’ve Been Brainwashed Too | Album Review
Defryme - Pure Killer | Album Review
Faith No More - Angel Dust | Album Review
Powderfinger - Double Allergic | Album Review
Christopher Hall of Stabbing Westward | Interview
Pure - Generation Six-Pack | Album Review
Heather Duby | Interview
Deathray - Deathray | Album Review
The Cure In The 90s | Roundtable
Ride - Nowhere | Album Review
Adam Elk of The Mommyheads | Interview
Black Grape - It’s Great When You’re Straight...Yeah | Album Review
The White Stripes - The White Stripes | Album Review
Ben Osmundson and Ali Tabatabaee of Zebrahead | Interview
Suicidal Tendencies - The Art of Rebellion | Album Review
Albums of 1992 | Roundtable
Terry Ilous of XYZ, Great White, and Land of Gypsies | Interview
Meat Puppets - Too High To Die | Album Review
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