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Elva (album)

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Released
  
January 29, 2002

Artist
  
Unwritten Law

Length
  
50:13

Release date
  
29 January 2002

Elva (album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen880Unw

Recorded
  
2001 at Total Access Recording, Redondo Beach, California

Elva (2002)
  
Here's to the Mourning (2005)

Label
  
Insomniac/Interscope Records

Producers
  
John Shanks, Josh Abraham, Michael Happoldt

Genres
  
Pop punk, Alternative rock, Post-grunge, Hard rock

Similar
  
Here's to the Mourning, Blue Room, Oz Factor, Music in High Places, Unwritten Law

Unwritten law elva full album 2002


Elva is the fourth album by the San Diego-based rock band Unwritten Law, released in 2002 by Interscope Records. With it the band moved away from their previously established punk rock formula and towards a more accessible hard rock sound. The band found success with the song "Seein' Red", which reached #1 on US modern rock charts.

Contents

Elva was the band's first album with bassist Pat "PK" Kim. It features guest appearances by Tony Kanal of No Doubt, Josh Freese of The Vandals, and Neville Staple of The Specials. The two "Raleigh Soliloquy" tracks are recordings of the rants of Raleigh Theodore Sakers. Previous recordings of his rants numbered soliloquies I-III had appeared on the Sublime album Robbin' the Hood. After the closing track "Evolution" there is a phone message to singer Scott Russo from Blink-182 singer/guitarist Tom DeLonge, a close friend of the band who had grown up with them in their home town of Poway.

Unwritten law mean girl elva


Track listing

All lyrics written by Scott Russo, except where noted.

Songs

Mean Girl3:04
Up All Night3:01
Sound Siren2:50

References

Elva (album) Wikipedia