Get Some Go Again (stylized as Get Some -> Go Again) is the sixth studio album by Rollins Band, released in 2000.[3] It is also the first album by lead singer Henry Rollins after dissolving his longtime lineup featuring guitarist Chris Haskett and others. On this album, and its follow-up Nice, Rollins was backed by the band Mother Superior.

Get Some Go Again
Studio album by
ReleasedFebruary 29, 2000
Recorded1999 (Cherokee, Hollywood)
GenreAlternative metal, hardcore punk, hard rock[1]
Length55:13
LabelDreamWorks[2]
ProducerHenry Rollins
Rollins Band chronology
Come In and Burn
(1997)
Get Some Go Again
(2000)
Nice
(2001)

Background and recording edit

After completing touring for their 1997 DreamWorks debut Come in and Burn, Rollins Band went on hiatus and Henry Rollins began working together with Mother Superior. At the beginning of 1998, they asked him to produce songs for their upcoming third studio album Deep, which would end up being recorded in just three days.[4] Rollins had previously seen some of their shows in Los Angeles and was a fan of the first demo tape they had put out.[4] After the collaboration on Deep, Rollins asked Mother Superior to return the favor and write songs with him.[5] They booked rehearsal time in the same studio where Rollins had first practiced with Black Flag. Rollins and Mother Superior wrote three songs that night, with Rollins saying that they were "exactly the kind of music that I had always wanted to make."[5] Initially, Rollins had been planning on making a solo record, which would include collaborations with both Mother Superior and Flea from the Red Hot Chili Peppers. However, this solo project never got off the ground, and Rollins decided to solely focus on working with Mother Superior.[4]

Later in 1998, Rollins and members of Mother Superior played a handful of shows together in the United States. The name "Rollins Band" was retained under the insistence of management, rather than Rollins himself. The last concert Rollins had played with the old lineup was on October 17, 1997, in Osaka, Japan, with guitarist Chris Haskett only finding out he wasn't in the band anymore through the internet in 1998, where he had read that Rollins Band were playing shows again.[6] Haskett had believed that the band was going to reconvene following their hiatus, and that Rollins' work with Mother Superior was simply going to be a side project.[6] Regarding the old lineup, Rollins told CMJ New Music Monthly in 2000 that, "it was really hard to make Come in and Burn. That was the last record I made with the old band [and] writing wasn't easy — me and the guys were diverging in musical paths." He added, "live, some of the mid-tempo songs [from Come in and Burn] were difficult for me. By the time we got to the end of the '97 tour I thought we had realized our thing, we were done. I wasn't getting the excitement that I needed. I didn't want to fire anybody but I didn't think there was anything more to do in that equation."[7] Mother Superior's guitarist Jim Wilson later said that Rollins told him that he didn't like how long his old band had spent writing and recording Come in and Burn, and that he preferred the quicker way in which Mother Superior were able to make music together.[4]

By 1999, recording for the next Rollins Band album commenced. In July 1999, Rollins Band went on a small eight show tour of the United States, where they previewed some of the new songs.[8]

For the album, Rollins booked the band to record at Cherokee Studios in Hollywood. He would leave by himself every night at 6pm. Rollins told the other members that they could record material for Mother Superior after he had left the studio, which they would sometimes do.[4] Jim Wilson remembered that, "I think the studio was getting a little mad, because we were getting too much stuff done, we were working so fast."[4] The idea for the single "Illumination" originated through Rollins, who came to the band members with what would become the main guitar riff for the song. This was also how several other songs on the album originated, such as "On the Day". For others, Wilson would come to Rollins with riff ideas that would eventually evolve into fully fleshed songs.[4] The recording sessions for Get Some Go Again included several outtakes which would later be released on various singles and compilation releases. The songs that made the final cut for the album were all chosen by Rollins.[4]

According to Rollins, DreamWorks "hated" Get Some Go Again due to its different sound when compared to previous releases, but he never told his band-mates this, since they were about to go on tour and he didn't want to demoralize them.[4]

Musical style edit

Henry Rollins said that the album "sounds like Thin Lizzy and Black Sabbath and John Lee Hooker or Lightnin' Hopkins", and claimed that "I'm very happy with Get Some, Go Again. I like the sounds, the playing, the takes, the soul and the passion, and feel that I have given it everything I've got. I'm very proud of the record."[5][9] In a May 2000 interview with the Tampa Bay Times, he also observed that, "I don't feel like a young person anymore. I listen to the lyrics of the fella from Limp Bizkit and I remember that angst. But I no longer have that. That's a young man's angst."[10]

Release edit

The album has been released with extra tracks and/or several slight variations in different territories, and was also released as an Enhanced CD with multimedia tracks, including videos in QuickTime format. Due to a manufacturing error, copies pressed and released for sale in the United States omitted the song "Illuminator", a remix of the first song on the album, "Illumination". In 2000 the album's publisher, DreamWorks Records, issued a statement to fans saying that those who purchased the defective discs could write the company and received a special promotional CD with the missing track, as well as a copy of the bonus enhanced CD.

When Rollins left DreamWorks in 2001, he took possession of the master tapes and reissued both this album's tracks, including the missing "Illuminator" remix, along with the outtake tracks on the companion album Yellow Blues, for the double CD Get Some Go Again Sessions.

Reception and legacy edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [1]
Kerrang!     [11]
Spin7/10[12]

Upon release, critics noted its more basic sound compared to prior albums. In 2000, CMJ New Music Report compared the album to Motörhead, and claimed that it replaces the "arty, jazz-metal of the previous Rollins Band with undiluted, unforgiving, 200-proof rawk".[13] The publication also said that the single 'Love's So Heavy" was "[like] Thin Lizzy's 'Still in Love with You' run through with a Red Hot Chili Peppers thrash and groove."[7] AllMusic's Chris True labelled the album an "infectious blend of acid rock, metal, and punk", claiming that "with 1997's Come In and Burn, everyone (including Henry Rollins himself) knew that the Rollins Band lineup of Sim Cain, Melvin Gibbs, and Chris Haskett had reached an impasse. While the band was entering into new territory, featuring acoustic and jazz work, Rollins was stomping down the same path he had since his days in the Washington, D.C., hardcore scene."[1] He further adds that the new stripped-down sound "seems to have reinvigorated Rollins himself, who sounds like he's actually having fun on this record."[1] In 2022, Louder Sound placed it sixth on their ranking of the seven Rollins Band studio albums, similarly remarking that, "after the deep introspection of Come In and Burn, Get Some is the sound of a rejuvenated Henry Rollins having fun."[14]

In 2021, Alternative Press included it on their list of the "Best Punk albums of 2000", reflecting, "[in the 1990s] Rollins Band became an alt-metal powerhouse, dominating MTV with 'Low Self Opinion' and 'Liar'. Their sixth album found the entire band replaced by Los Angeles hard rockers Mother Superior. Get Some Go Again was perhaps more straightforward than such LPs as Weight, possibly slightly less funky and jazzy, like hearing Rollins sing atop Jimi Hendrix and Black Sabbath outtakes. Not necessarily a bad thing."[15]

Track listing edit

All songs written by Rollins Band (Henry Rollins, Jim Wilson, Marcus Blake and Jason Mackenroth) except as noted.

  1. "Illumination" – 4:11
  2. "Get Some Go Again" – 2:12
  3. "Monster" – 3:03
  4. "Love's So Heavy" – 3:53
  5. "Thinking Cap" – 4:11
  6. "Change It Up" – 3:03
  7. "I Go Day Glo" – 1:45
  8. "Are You Ready?" (Brian Downey, Scott Gorham, Phil Lynott, Brian Robertson) – 2:43
  9. "On the Day" – 3:44
  10. "You Let Yourself Down" – 2:46
  11. "Brother Interior" – 5:39
  12. "Hotter and Hotter" (Rollins, Wilson, Blake, Mackenroth, Wayne Kramer) – 3:50
  13. "L.A. Money Train" – 14:13

Personnel edit

Rollins Band

with:

  • Scott Gorham – second guitar on "Are You Ready?"
  • Wayne Kramer – guitar on "Hotter and Hotter" and "L.A. Money Train"
Technical

Charts edit

Chart performance for Get Some Go Again
Chart (2000) Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[16] 40
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[17] 60
US Billboard 200[18] 180

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Allmusic review
  2. ^ "Rollins Band: Get Some Go Again". Music. February 29, 2000.
  3. ^ "TrouserPress.com :: Rollins Band". www.trouserpress.com.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i 2024 Jim Wilson interview, Everyone Loves Guitar Podcast.
  5. ^ a b c "Henry Rollins Biography".
  6. ^ a b "INTERVIEW. 041 - Chris Haskett (Rollins Band)". This Is Fubar.
  7. ^ a b CMJ New Music Monthly Mar 2000
  8. ^ "Henry Rollins Recasts Rollins Band for New Album, Preview Tour". MTV.
  9. ^ "The Vindicator". The Vindicator – via Google Books.
  10. ^ "Henry Rollins doesn't settle for mediocrity".
  11. ^ Fortnam, Ian (February 26, 2000). "Albums". Kerrang!. No. 790. EMAP. p. 45.
  12. ^ LLC, SPIN Media (April 23, 2000). "SPIN". SPIN Media LLC – via Google Books.
  13. ^ Inc, CMJ Network (February 28, 2000). "CMJ New Music Report". CMJ Network, Inc. – via Google Books. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  14. ^ Simon Young (May 18, 2022). "Every Rollins Band album ranked from worst to best". loudersound.
  15. ^ "These punk records from 2000 led the genre into a brand-new century". Alternative Press Magazine. October 22, 2021.
  16. ^ "Australiancharts.com – Rollins Band – Get Some Go Again". Hung Medien. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  17. ^ "Offiziellecharts.de – Rollins Band – Get Some Go Again" (in German). GfK Entertainment Charts. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  18. ^ "Get Some Go Again charts [albums]". allmusic.com. Retrieved January 17, 2010.

External links edit