Fuel for the Hate Game

Fuel for the Hate Game is the first full-length album by Hot Water Music. Fuel... was released by Toybox Records and No Idea Records in 1997, later repressings only listed No Idea. The album features artwork by Scott Sinclair (not to be confused with Scott Sinclair) and was designed by Sean Bonner.

Fuel for the Hate Game
Studio album by
ReleasedFebruary 28, 1997
RecordedRecorded at Morrisound and Nordic Helmet Studios. Spring of '96.
GenrePost-hardcore,[1] emo,[2] punk rock[3]
Length41:02
LabelToybox/No Idea
ProducerHot Water Music
Hot Water Music chronology
Finding the Rhythms
(1995)
Fuel for the Hate Game
(1997)
Forever and Counting
(1997)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Punknews.org[4]

The track "Freightliner" was featured on the soundtrack to the skateboarding video game Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 4.[5] Paste included the song on a list of "20 Best Drinking Songs".[6]

Reception

edit

Allmusic reviewed the album as "raw and unrelenting, but it is also a refreshing release of energy, and an infectious one at that. This is the record that saw the band rise to the top of the hardcore/punk scene, and, years after its release, it is still as deserving of credit as it ever was."[1] The A.V. Club stated the album (and their next album released later that year) "stand as two of ’90s’ punk’s proudest monuments—records that cut through all the squabbling, all the second-guessing, and all the politics of the punk scene and straight into its aching heart.[7]

Track listing

edit
No.TitleLength
1."220 Years"4:47
2."Turnstile"3:28
3."Blackjaw"3:13
4."Trademark"3:16
5."Freightliner"3:18
6."The Sleeping Fan"4:29
7."Facing and Backing"4:02
8."Rock Singer"3:53
9."North and About"3:26
10."Difference Engine"3:19
11."Drunken Third"3:59
Expanded Edition bonus tracks
No.TitleLength
12."You Can Take the Boy Out of Bradenton"2:59
13."Hate Mail Comes in August"3:59
14."Elektra"3:25
15."Things on a Dashboard"5:09
16."Difference Engine" (demo)3:32
17."The Sleeping Fan" (demo)4:44

Personnel

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c Fuel for the Hate Game at AllMusic
  2. ^ "Hot Water Music Bookended 1997 with Two Seminal Albums". www.vice.com.
  3. ^ Brooklyn Vegan
  4. ^ "Hot Water Music - Fuel For The Hate Game". www.punknews.org.
  5. ^ "Tony Hawk 4 Soundtrack - IGN" – via www.ign.com.
  6. ^ Pastemag
  7. ^ "In 1997, Blink-182 broke away from the pop-punk pack". The A.V. Club. 2014-04-15. Archived from the original on 2023-05-30.