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Scream - Live at the Black Cat: 12/26/1996, Washington, DC (CD)

Live at the Black Cat: 12/26/1996, Washington, DC
$12.08
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Album Details: Live at the Black Cat: 12/26/1996, Washington, DC

Release Date:02/10/1998
UPC:635127001120

Track List: Live at the Black Cat: 12/26/1996, Washington, DC

  1. Came Without A Warning
  2. Cry Wolf
  3. This Side Up.
  4. New Song
  5. Solidarity
  6. Total Mash
  7. Show & Tell Me
  8. Ultra Violence
  9. Still Screaming
  10. No More Censorship
  1. Fight/American Justice
  2. Zoo Closes
  3. Bet You Never Thought
  4. Hygiene
  5. Bedlam
  6. Influenced To Ignorance
  7. U Suck A
  8. We're Fed Up
  9. Human Behavior
  10. Feel Like That

Pro Reviews: Live at the Black Cat: 12/26/1996, Washington, DC

  • All Music Guide

    To most rock fans, Scream is the band Dave Grohl drummed for before Nirvana, and the one he and old pal Franz Stahl were in before the Foo Fighters. Those with longer memories of this scorchingly original Dischord D.C. great know better. Grohl didn't show up on the Scream scene until seven years in, replacing original drummer Kent Stax on the fourth and fifth LPs, before the group disbanded. And those two OK hard rock-with-edge albums were a far cry from the blinding-fast style Scream first exhibited. Guess what? This one-time-only, 1996 X-mas hometown reunion gig heads back to the 1981-1984 heavy thrashers. It's a nice turn that Grohl cameos on the skins on "No More Censorship" and kicks butt like he always does. However, the rest of the night belongs to Stax and the other three originals, augmented by 1984-1990 second guitarist Robert Lee Davidson, and they play at the speed of missiles. Have a listen to "Bedlam," "Bet You Never Thought," and "Human Behavior" and say that you can't f...eel the blasts of heat and sweat dripping from their mighty power. Think of the real anger and energy of youth first awakening to harsh social/political truths, played just as passionately even now when the members are in their mid-thirties. Once in you, it's in you forever, summoned on a few hot rehearsals' notice. In 1983, Scream trailed only Bad Brains and Minor Threat in being the most intense hardcore band in both D.C. and the East, and they were certainly as explosive. The way their sound still leaps off the stage, with the quickness and bursting speed of a pouncing cheetah, makes you recall the raw conviction, guts, and cultural/political commentary punk used to be known for. - Jack Rabid, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Scream

Coming on the tail end of the initial D.C. hardcore explosion, Scream formed in 1982 and signed to Dischord Records. That fall, the original lineup of the Stahl brothers, singer Peter, guitarist Franz and bassist Skeeter Thompson and drummer Kent Stax teamed with Ian MacKaye and Don Zientara to produce the raucous Still Screaming. The original group went on to release T... Read more