
Descendents â Milo Goes To College
- Description
- Release details
- Tracklist
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Milo Goes to College is the 1982 debut studio album by the Descendents, released through New Alliance Records. It combines the raw energy of Southern California hardcore punk with unexpectedly strong melodies, sharp lyrical themes of suburban life, adolescent alienation, relationships, and longingânot just anger. The albumâs brevity (15 tracks in just over twenty minutes), its breakneck tempos, and earnest delivery are counterbalanced by humor and emotional vulnerability, which give the record a depth beyond many of its peers.
Over time, Milo Goes to College has come to be viewed as a foundational work in melodic hardcore and pop-punk. Its aestheticâfast, concise songs that are nevertheless tuneful and deeply personalâhas influenced generations of punk bands. Collectors and newcomers alike often point to this album as a key moment in punkâs evolution, where youthful frustration was expressed with both force and heart.
Reviews:
âAn unpretentious, catchy winner. The playing of the core band is even better than before, never mistaking increased skill with needing to show off; the Lombardo/Stevenson rhythm section is in perfect sync, while Navetta provides the corrosive power. Add in Aukermanâs in-your-face hilarity and fuck-off stance, and itâs punk rock that wears both its adolescence and brains on its sleeve.â â AllMusic
âAll straight-ahead punk â 15 songs in less than a half hour, each full of metally riffs and lightning-speed plucking by bassist Tony Lombardo, who was always the bandâs secret weapon. Much like The Who, the Descendents often used the bass for melodies and the guitar to bash out a steady rhythm.â â Rolling Stone
âCheeky love songs disguised as hardcore blasts became the most aped formula in rock.â â American Hardcore: A Tribal History
âPerfect for the little guy who was ever called a nerd and never got the girl. The chainsaw pop combined with earthy humor conveys what is often an inarticulate rage.â â Los Angeles Times
âThese fishermen donât kid around about what powers hardcore hyperdrive--not simply an unjust society, but also a battered psyche. When theyâre feeling bad, any kind of powerâmoney, age, ass-man cool, the possession of a vaginaâcan set off their anarchic, patricidal, âhomoâ-baiting, gynephobic rage. But their bad feelings add poignant weight to the doomed vulnerability of the last four songs, which happen to be their hookiest.â â The Village Voice
Genre: Punk & Alternative
Review
AllMusic rating:AllMusic users:Read the AllMusic.com reviewArtist: DescendentsLabel: SST RecordsFormat: LPUnits: 1Country: USGenre: Punk & AlternativeStyle: Hardcore, PunkA1 Myage
A2 I Wanna Be A Bear
A3 I'M Not A Loser
A4 Parents
A5 Tonyage
A6 M 16
A7 I'M Not A Punk
A8 Catalina
B1 Suburban Home
B2 Statue Of Liberty
B3 Kabuki Girl
B4 Marriage
B5 Hope
B6 Bikeage
B7 Jean Is Dead
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Description
- Description
- Release details
- Tracklist
-
Milo Goes to College is the 1982 debut studio album by the Descendents, released through New Alliance Records. It combines the raw energy of Southern California hardcore punk with unexpectedly strong melodies, sharp lyrical themes of suburban life, adolescent alienation, relationships, and longingânot just anger. The albumâs brevity (15 tracks in just over twenty minutes), its breakneck tempos, and earnest delivery are counterbalanced by humor and emotional vulnerability, which give the record a depth beyond many of its peers.
Over time, Milo Goes to College has come to be viewed as a foundational work in melodic hardcore and pop-punk. Its aestheticâfast, concise songs that are nevertheless tuneful and deeply personalâhas influenced generations of punk bands. Collectors and newcomers alike often point to this album as a key moment in punkâs evolution, where youthful frustration was expressed with both force and heart.
Reviews:
âAn unpretentious, catchy winner. The playing of the core band is even better than before, never mistaking increased skill with needing to show off; the Lombardo/Stevenson rhythm section is in perfect sync, while Navetta provides the corrosive power. Add in Aukermanâs in-your-face hilarity and fuck-off stance, and itâs punk rock that wears both its adolescence and brains on its sleeve.â â AllMusic
âAll straight-ahead punk â 15 songs in less than a half hour, each full of metally riffs and lightning-speed plucking by bassist Tony Lombardo, who was always the bandâs secret weapon. Much like The Who, the Descendents often used the bass for melodies and the guitar to bash out a steady rhythm.â â Rolling Stone
âCheeky love songs disguised as hardcore blasts became the most aped formula in rock.â â American Hardcore: A Tribal History
âPerfect for the little guy who was ever called a nerd and never got the girl. The chainsaw pop combined with earthy humor conveys what is often an inarticulate rage.â â Los Angeles Times
âThese fishermen donât kid around about what powers hardcore hyperdrive--not simply an unjust society, but also a battered psyche. When theyâre feeling bad, any kind of powerâmoney, age, ass-man cool, the possession of a vaginaâcan set off their anarchic, patricidal, âhomoâ-baiting, gynephobic rage. But their bad feelings add poignant weight to the doomed vulnerability of the last four songs, which happen to be their hookiest.â â The Village Voice
Genre: Punk & Alternative
Review
AllMusic rating:AllMusic users:Read the AllMusic.com reviewArtist: DescendentsLabel: SST RecordsFormat: LPUnits: 1Country: USGenre: Punk & AlternativeStyle: Hardcore, PunkA1 Myage
A2 I Wanna Be A Bear
A3 I'M Not A Loser
A4 Parents
A5 Tonyage
A6 M 16
A7 I'M Not A Punk
A8 Catalina
B1 Suburban Home
B2 Statue Of Liberty
B3 Kabuki Girl
B4 Marriage
B5 Hope
B6 Bikeage
B7 Jean Is Dead




















