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A Minute To Pray, A Second To Die (US ...

531.4K streams

531,372

A Hard Road To Follow

234.1K streams

234,088

No Questions Asked

137.1K streams

137,067

Forever Came Today

125.1K streams

125,097

I Used to Be Pretty

107.7K streams

107,735

Prehistoric Fits, Vol. 2

87.5K streams

87,514

Ashes Of Time

31.8K streams

31,783

Cinderella

24.2K streams

24,227

Black Temptation

18K streams

18,018

Miss Muerte

17.6K streams

17,573

Biography

One of Los Angeles punk rock’s most widely admired yet little-heard bands makes a striking return to records on Jan. 18, as Yep Roc Records issues an all-new collection by The Flesh Eaters, I Used to Be Pretty. On the release, founding vocalist and songwriter Chris Desjardins, better known as Chris D., is backed by the legendary “all-star” edition of the band, originally heard on the 1981 set A Minute to Pray, A Second to Die: Dave Alvin (guitar) and Bill Bateman (drums) of the Blasters; John Doe (bass) and D.J. Bonebrake (marimba and percussion) of X; and Steve Berlin (saxophones) of the Plugz (and later the Blasters and Los Lobos). The album was produced collectively by the band members. Desjardins says he sees I Used to Be Pretty as a new chapter in the evolution of one of L.A. punk’s most powerful bands: “A few weeks after we completed the album, I was saying to the guys that what was so special is that we were no longer just the sum of our parts — we were more than the sum of our parts. We were like a single, symbiotic organism, and we each unconsciously, intuitively knew what the rest of the band was going to play split seconds before we played it. Sometimes I’ll listen to one of the songs now, and it really raises the hair on the back of my neck.”