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d.r.i. / albums

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Dealing with It,D.R.I.
    • Dealing with It
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    • Evil Minds
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    • Bail Out
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    • I'd Rather Be Sleeping

songs

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    • Snap
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    • I'd Rather Be Sleeping
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    • Marriage
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    • Yes Ma'am
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    • Soup Kitchen
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    • Mad Man
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    • Stupid, Stupid War
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    • Counter Attack
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    • Couch Slouch
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    • God Is Broke
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    • Karma
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    • Nursing Home Blues
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    • I Don't Need Society
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    • Give My Taxes Back
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    • The Explorer
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    • Reagonomics
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    • How to Act
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    • Shame
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    • Argument Then War
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    • Evil Minds
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    • Slit My Wrist
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    • Busted Again
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    • Equal People
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    • On My Way Home
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    • Bail Out

album review

About two years prior to the groundbreaking release of Dealing With it, D.R.I. was known in their home turf of Texas as a hardcore, left of center, politically driven band. D.R.I. emerged from a Texan music bed often referred to as the "vat" scene (due to the lack of practice space, bands would often rehearse in empty beer vat warehouses). Verbal Abuse, Sick Pleasure, and the Dicks also rose up from the same ranks. Released just two years after Suicidal Tendencies' self-titled debut, another visceral, genre-defining debut of similar ilk, Dealing With it will forever stand as D.R.I.'s most compelling record of their often misguided career. Taking the Suicidal concept one step further, D.R.I.'s hardcore/thrash metal hybrid, Dealing With it reinvented the wheel by combining the humor and politics of Suicidal's debut with the speed and trash of Slayer's early records like Show No Mercy and the Haunting the Chapel EP. Embraced by skaters, punkers, and thrashers alike, ultra-fast songs like "Mad Man" and "Couch Slouch effortlessly alternate with the hilarious, longer, chugga-chugga rants of "Nursing Home Blues" and the monstrous "I Don't Need Society." The latter, featuring the classic rant "Your number's up/you have to go/the system says I told you so/stocked in a plane like a truckload of cattle/thousands of us sent off to die/never really knowing why" culminating with the ever reliable rant, "f**k this system, it can't have me, I don't need society." Worth having. ~ John Franck , All Music Guide

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