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  1. Subterranean Jungle is the seventh studio album by the American punk rock band Ramones, released by Sire Records on February 23, 1983. Overall, the album featured a return to a somewhat more hard punk rock style compared to the band's previous two albums End of the Century in 1980, and Pleasant Dreams in 1981, which were the most pop-focused of the band's career.

  2. Feb 23, 2022 · Released on 23 February 1983, Subterranean Jungle peaked at a relatively modest No.83 on the Billboard 200, and has remained a cult-level favourite ever since. But it’s far stronger than that performance suggests – and the positives Ramones took from recording the album allowed them to make a vintage return to form with 1984’s Too Tough ...

    • Alan York
  3. Feb 23, 2023 · The Ramones’ Subterranean Jungle (released 2/23/83) begs the question of whether this is the album that signals the punk icons’ awareness of the passage of time and, more specifically, the fact they are aging. It’s certainly dangerous to (over) intellectualize the work of the seminal punk band.

  4. Feb 23, 2022 · It didn't work. Not for the Ramones." It was February 23, 1983, when Ramones dropped Subterranean Jungle in US record stores. Kicking off with a pair of covers--The Music Explosions' 1967 single, "Little Bit O' Soul," and Bobby D Waxman's "I Need Your Love," (with a take on the Chamber Brothers' "Time Has Come Today" tucked onto Side 2), the ...

  5. Jun 19, 2012 · The Ramones had a tough early '80s. During punk rocks superseding into new wave, they tried to keep up while totally changing their original hard and fast sound. But after witnessing their voluptuous experiment with 1980's End of the Century go a-rye, the Ramones had trouble trying to finding their place. Subterranean Jungle, thankfully, is great.

  6. Apr 27, 2017 · The Ramones need no introduction, but what their seventh album, Subterranean Jungle, might well need is a healthy dose of college-radio-DJ-splaining. Unlike some other albums I could have chosen (and might choose in the future), Subterranean Jungle was seen by many as a return to form and didn't elicit too many nasty complaints about selling ...

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  8. All in all, despite the horribly hollow mixing, it seems like Jungle will not be as bad as its predecessor, and may just set the Ramones back on the right path. Unfortunately, this impression is not to last. Almost immediately after the last cymbal crash of Outsider, the album descends into a murk of mediocrity from where it very rarely rears ...

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