Forever and Counting

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Forever and Counting
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 28, 1997
Genre
Length37:54
LabelDoghouse Records, Rise Records
ProducerHot Water Music
Hot Water Music chronology
Fuel for the Hate Game
(1997)
Forever and Counting
(1997)
No Division
(1999)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]

Forever and Counting is the second full-length album by Hot Water Music. It was released by Doghouse Records in 1997, reissued in 2008 by No Idea Records, and later purchased and re-released in 2012 by Rise Records.

For 'Forever And Counting', the band had to have a short lived name change to 'The Hot Water Music Band'. This was due to a rival label, Elektra Records claiming they owned the rights to the name Hot Water Music, due to another band with the same name on the label. The Elektra band broke up after the release of the album and Hot Water Music continued to produce records under their original name.

In a 2015 interview, bassist Jason Black criticized the sound of the album, stating "I think there’s some cool songs on it, that’s definitely one record we’ve thought about re-recording a lot but we haven’t because people like it so much. It just sounds terrible."[4] La Dispute frontman Jordan Dryer cited the album as highly influential on his career.[5] The A.V. Club stated the album (and their previous album released earlier 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.[1]

Track listing[edit]

No.TitleLength
1."Translocation"3:21
2."Better Sense"3:12
3."Just Don't Say You Lost It"3:10
4."Position"3:56
5."Rest Assured"4:07
6."Manual"5:08
7."Minno"3:53
8."Three Summers Strong"4:13
9."Man the Change"2:33
10."Western Grace"4:17

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "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.
  2. ^ a b Forever and Counting at AllMusic
  3. ^ vice2
  4. ^ Vice article
  5. ^ Shteamer, Hank (February 12, 2019). "How La Dispute Turn Real-Life Tragedy Into Post-Hardcore Poetry".