Foo Fighters - There Is Nothing Left to Lose

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Album Details

Title: There Is Nothing Left to Lose
Artist: Foo Fighters
Release Date: 11/2/1999
Re-Released On: 10/2/2007
Label: Sony Music Distribution, RCA Records, BMG
Duration: 46:24
Album Type(s): Enhanced CD-ROM
UPCs: 078636789224, 4988017652084, 743217169923, 498801765208
Genre: Rock
Styles: Alternative Pop/Rock, Post-Grunge, Alternative/Indie Rock
Moods: Aggressive, Earnest, Energetic, Passionate, Rousing, Rowdy, Rambunctious, Cathartic, Fun, Intense, Playful, Rollicking, Brash, Raucous, Confrontational, Freewheeling, Quirky, Searching, Theatrical
Total Copies: 12
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Stacked Actors
  2. Breakout
  3. Learn to Fly
  4. Gimme Stitches
  5. Generator
  6. Aurora
  7. Live-In Skin
  8. Next Year
  9. Headwires
  10. Ain't It the Life
  11. M.I.A.

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2007CDSony Music Distribution35131
2003CDBMG74321716992
1999CDRCA Records67892

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Album Review

Foo Fighters were the most unexpectedly mercurial band in '90s rock, boasting a different lineup for each of their three albums. The ever-shifting membership didn't help erase the image that the group was merely a vehicle for Dave Grohl, and made it seem like Grohl was something of a dictator, at least to some biased outside observers. That's why their third record, There Is Nothing Left to Lose, comes as somewhat of a surprise. It is the first Foo Fighters album that sounds like the work of a unified, muscular band, and the first one that rocks really hard. A lot of credit should go to Adam Kasper, who produced the record with the band. There Is Nothing Left to Lose has a stripped-down sound and an immediate attack that makes even the poppier numbers rock hard. The organic, natural sound is welcome, but the album also benefits from the strongest set of songs Grohl and Foo Fighters have yet written. There are the typical strong singles, but there's no fat or filler; each track has a memorable hook or melody, and they seem all the more catchy because they're delivered with conviction and confidence. And that's why the album sounds like the first true band album Foo Fighters have made -- the group sounds assured and confident, where they previously seemed like they had something to prove. It's as if they know they have few peers in straight-ahead post-grunge hard rock, so they're willing just to lie back and turn out a solid set of 11 songs. They make it sound easy and fun, and that's what really sets them apart from their contemporaries. That and the fact that they're getting better as they're losing members and growing older, which is certainly a rarity in rock & roll. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Adam KasperProducer, Engineer, Mixing
Allen Sides?
Andy WallaceMixing
Anton Brookes?
Basich Family?
Bethann Buddenbaum?
Black Cat?
Black Sabbath?
Bob LudwigMastering
C.Ore Hard?
Cathryn Suko?
Chickdaddy?
Craig Overbay?
Danny ClinchPhotography
Dou Dou?
Earnie Baily?
Foo FightersProducer, Art Direction
Gabby Skolnek?
Gary Gersh?
Geoff Turner?
Grohl Family?
Gus Brandt?
Hawkins Family?
Henry Fields?
Henry MarquezArt Direction
Ian Beveridge?
J.J.?
Jim Swanson?
John Cutcliffe?
John Kleemola?
John NelsonMixing
John Silva?
Krist Novoselic?
Lee Johnson?
Lisa Grohl?
Michael Meisel?
Michelle Bedrick?
Muill Berrliner?
Nasty Little Man?
Nixon Watches?
P.R. BrownPackage Design
Paul Masterdone?
Preston Gates Construction?
Queen?
Ric Creason?
Richard Gibson?
Stahl Family?
Stewart Copeland?
Ted ReigerMixing Assistant, Mixing
Tenacious D?
Tim Gabor?
Tos Niewehuizen?
Trouble?
Verben?