We Are...The League

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We Are... The League
Antinowhereleague-wearetheleaguecover.jpg
Studio album by
Released1982[1]
GenreHardcore punk[2]
Length31:31
LabelWXYZ
Producer"An Aurable Production"
Anti-Nowhere League chronology
We Are... The League
(1982)
Live in Yugoslavia
(1983)

We Are...The League is the debut album by English punk rock band, the Anti-Nowhere League.

Reception[]

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic4.5/5 stars [1]
The Philadelphia Inquirer4/5 stars[2]

From contemporary reviews, Ken Tucker of The Philadelphia Inquirer gave the album a four star out of five rating stating that it was "the most viscous mean-spirited, gratuitously violent punk band to come down the pike in a long time." and stated the album was for "mature adults, this is the best hard-core punk record England has yielded since the Sex Pistols era. Every song features a slamming, inescapable beat to match the freely flung obscenities."[2]

Track listing[]

All songs written by Nick Culmer and Chris Exall except where noted. Published By Head Music Publishers, except where noted.

  1. "We Are The League" 2:40
  2. "Animal" 2:39
  3. "Woman" 2:57
  4. "Can't Stand Rock 'N' Roll" 1:57
  5. "(We Will Not) Remember You" 2:00
  6. "Snowman" 3:00
  7. "Streets of London" (Ralph McTell; Essex Music Int'l.) 3:16
  8. "I Hate....People" (Remix) 2:21
  9. "'Reck-A-Nowhere" 2:27
  10. "World War III" 2:41 (P.J., Winston)
  11. "Nowhere Man" 2:27
  12. "Let's Break The Law" (Remix) 3:06
    2001 re-release bonus tracks:
  13. "So What" (Culmer, Exall, Clive Blake)
  14. "I Hate....People" (single version)
  15. "Let's Break The Law" (single version)
  16. "Woman" (single version)
  17. "Rocker" (Culmer, Exall, Blake)
  18. "Animal" (Uncensored Original Version)
  19. "For You"
  20. "Ballad of J.J. Decay"

Personnel[]

  • Animal: Vocals
  • Magoo: Guitars
  • Winston: Bass
  • P.J. Drums

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Raggett, Ned. "We Are... The League". AllMusic. Retrieved May 26, 2020.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c Tucker, Ken (November 7, 1982). "Albums". The Philadelphia Inquirer. p. 12. Retrieved May 26, 2020.


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