| The Gang's All Here | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by Dropkick Murphys | |||||
| Released | March 9, 1999 | ||||
| Recorded | 1998 | ||||
| Genre | Punk | ||||
| Length | 42:51 | ||||
| Label | Hellcat Records | ||||
| Producer | Lars Frederiksen | ||||
| Professional reviews | |||||
| Dropkick Murphys chronology | |||||
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The Gang's All Here was the second album released by American Celtic punk band the Dropkick Murphys. It is the first album that the band did with Al Barr, ex-vocalist for The Bruisers. The songs and the album as a whole has a strong, military theme resonating throughout. It was released in 1999 on Hellcat Records. The title track has a secret ending which caught many people by surprise. It's the answering machine of then guitarist, Rick Barton. The band released a music video for the single "10 Years Of Service".
Track listing
All songs by Dropkick Murphys unless otherwise noted
- "Roll Call" – 0:32
- "Blood and Whiskey" – 1:47
- "Pipebomb on Lansdowne" – 1:50
- "Perfect Stranger" – 1:58
- "10 Years of Service" – 2:45
- "Upstarts and Broken Hearts" – 2:56
- "Devil's Brigade" – 1:27
- "Curse of a Fallen Soul" – 3:00
- "Homeward Bound" – 2:00
- "Going Strong" – 3:06
- "The Fighting 69th" (Traditional) – 3:13
- "Boston Asphalt" – 1:39
- "Wheel of Misfortune" – 3:50
- "The Only Road" – 2:11
- "Amazing Grace" (John Newton)– 2:38
- "The Gang's All Here" – 7:59
- Contains a hidden track of guitarist Rick Barton's answering machine
Personnel
- Al Barr – vocals
- Rick Barton – guitar
- Ken Casey – bass
- Matt Kelly – drums
- Joe Delaney – bagpipes on "Amazing Grace"
- Johnny Cunningham – fiddle on "Wheel of Misfortune" and "The Gang's All Here"
- Tularch Ard Pipe and Drum Corps – drums on "Roll Call"
- Jim Seigal - engineer
- Thomas "T.J." Johnson – engineer on "Roll Call"
- Marco Almera - cover


