Skip to content
*Free UK Delivery over £75 or Collect from your nearest Assai Records
*Free UK Delivery over £75 or Collect from your nearest Assai Records

Taking Back Sunday Twenty Vinyl LP New 2019

Original price £26.99 - Original price £26.99
Original price
£26.99
£26.99 - £26.99
Current price £26.99
Cat no. CR00152
Track Listing

LP 1 1. Cute Without The "E" (Cut From The Team) 2. You're So Last Summer 3. Timberwolves At New Jersey 4. A Decade Under The Influence 5. Set Phasers To Stun 6. One-Eighty By Summer 7. Liar (It Takes One To Know One) 8. MakeDamnSure 9. What's It Feel Like To Be a Ghost? 10. My Blue Heaven 11. Sink Into Me 12. Everything Must GoLP 2 1. Faith (When I Let You Down) 2. Call Me In The Morning 3. Flicker, Fade 4. Better Homes and Gardens 5. Tidal Wave 6. You Can't Look Back 7. Call Come Running 8. All Ready To Go 9. A Song For Den

'Twenty' is a career-to-date retrospective, celebrating 20 years of Taking Back Sunday. The collection spans each of their studio albums; 'Tell All Your Friends', 'Where You Want To Be', 'Louder Now', 'New Again', 'Taking Back Sunday', 'Happiness Is' and 'Tidal Wave', plus two new songs.Whether your introduction to the band was singing along to "A Decade Under The Influence" in a sweaty club or hearing "MakeDamnSure" on the radio, 'Twenty' is a look back at some of the highlights from the genre-defying band. The set also features two new songs, which hint at the direction that Taking Back Sunday are heading in the coming years.Although the pride of Long Island have had a handful of member changes over the years, the current lineup of the band - vocalist Adam Lazzara, guitarist John Nolan, drummer Mark O'Connell and bassist Shaun Cooper - have all been there since the beginning. From the band's landmark 2002 debut 'Tell All Your Friends' to their most recent full-length, 2016's 'Tidal Wave', Taking Back Sunday have evolved from a key player in the early 2000s emo scene to a genre-defying rock band who have three gold albums without ever ceasing to push the limitations of their sound. This fact is evidenced on 'Twenty'.