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Into the Future
Into the Future
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Into the Future
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 20, 2012 (2012-11-20)
RecordedMarch 2011 – September 2012
Genre
Length36:54
LabelMegaforce
ProducerDarryl Jenifer
Bad Brains chronology
Build a Nation
(2007)
Into the Future
(2012)

Into the Future is the ninth studio album by the American rock band Bad Brains, released on November 20, 2012 through Megaforce Records.[1] The album is dedicated to Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys, a longtime friend of the band who died of cancer six months before its release, and produced their previous album Build a Nation.[2] "Popcorn" first appeared on the Bad Brains tribute album Tribute To Bad Brains, where the band appeared under the name Soul Brains.[3]

Reception

[edit]
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic74/100[4]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllmusicStarStarStarHalf star[5]
Consequence of SoundStarStarStar[6]
Los Angeles TimesStarStarStar[7]
Revolver MagazineStarStarStarHalf star[8]

Into the Future has received positive reviews. Fred Thomas of AllMusic gave the album a positive review, saying that the album, like Build a Nation, "attempted a return to the ragged glory of the band's early speed-demon hardcore days, and probably came as close as possible given the years and whether they'd seen since ... turning out 13 new jams that volley between dub-styled reggae and the kind of loud-and-fast hardcore with funk and metal undertones that they've been perfecting for ages." However, he adds that "it's not quite as loud and just a little bit less fast than before."[5]

Track listing

[edit]
  1. "Into the Future" - 2:43
  2. "Popcorn" - 3:12
  3. "We Belong Together" - 1:39
  4. "Youth of Today" - 3:25
  5. "Rub a Dub Love" - 2:35
  6. "Yes I" - 1:28
  7. "Suck Sess" - 1:53
  8. "Jah Love" - 3:35
  9. "Earnest Love" - 3:14
  10. "Come Down" - 1:25
  11. "Fun" - 3:47
  12. "Make a Joyful Noise" - 4:43
  13. "MCA Dub" - 3:47

Personnel

[edit]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Into the Future is the ninth studio album by the American band , released on November 20, 2012, through . The album marks the band's first release in five years since (2007), reuniting the classic lineup of vocalist H.R., guitarist Dr. Know, bassist , and drummer . It was recorded at Applehead Recording Studios in , and Dreamland Recording Studios. Musically, Into the Future fuses Bad Brains' signature styles of hardcore punk, heavy metal riffs, roots reggae, dub, and funk, resulting in a raw and eclectic sound characterized by aggressive energy and H.R.'s idiosyncratic vocals. The 13-track album runs for approximately 37 minutes and includes a dub instrumental tribute to Adam Yauch (MCA) of the Beastie Boys, who produced the band's prior album and to whom the record is dedicated. Notable songs highlight the band's versatility, such as the title track's heavy, riff-driven opener, the punk-metal hybrid "Fun," and reggae-infused cuts like "Rub a Dub Love" and "Jah Love." Critically, Into the Future received mixed reviews for its unpredictable and "unstuck-in-time" quality, with praise for capturing the band's eccentric spirit but criticism for occasional sloppiness and lack of innovation compared to their earlier work. awarded it 5.9 out of 10, calling it the most interesting of the band's reunion efforts, while rated it 3.5 out of 5, noting its appeal to fans of their post-1980s output. The was also issued in limited bootleg vinyl editions prior to its official release, emphasizing the band's punk ethos.

Background

Band history

Bad Brains formed in , in 1977 as an all-Black band, initially emerging from the jazz fusion group Mind Power and quickly pioneering a high-speed, aggressive style influenced by the city's burgeoning punk scene. The band's core lineup—vocalist H.R. (Paul Hudson), drummer , guitarist Dr. Know (Gary Miller), and bassist —drew from diverse musical roots, including and , which set them apart in the predominantly white punk landscape of the era. The group achieved a breakthrough with their self-titled debut album in 1982, released on the independent label, which fused blistering with reggae interludes and became a cornerstone of the genre for its innovative energy and on and unity. Subsequent releases like (1986) expanded their sound, incorporating funk grooves and heavy metal riffs while maintaining their Rastafarian spiritual ethos, influencing countless bands in punk, metal, and hip-hop. Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, faced significant challenges, including frequent lineup changes due to breakups and reformations, venue bans stemming from their intense performances and H.R.'s onstage preaching, and H.R.'s ongoing health struggles with severe chronic headaches that disrupted touring and recording. These issues led to sporadic activity, with occasionally performing under alternate names like the Soul Brains. Their return came with the 2007 album , produced by member , which reunited the original lineup after a decade-long hiatus and revitalized their catalog with a mix of punk fury and devotion.

Album conception

The conception of Into the Future emerged in early 2011, as Bad Brains reunited their classic lineup to channel a renewed sense of purpose following years of intermittent hiatuses and ongoing management of frontman H.R.'s longstanding health challenges, including mental health issues that had periodically disrupted the band's activities. This period marked a deliberate effort to build on the momentum from their 2007 album Build a Nation, while addressing internal dynamics that had led to lineup shifts and breaks since the early 2000s. A pivotal motivation was the band's desire to honor Adam Yauch (MCA of the Beastie Boys), their longtime friend and collaborator who had produced Build a Nation and who passed away from cancer in May 2012, just months before the album's release. Yauch's influence extended beyond production; he championed Bad Brains' pioneering fusion of hardcore punk and reggae, sharing their "positive mental attitude" philosophy and praising their 1982 ROIR cassette as a landmark in the genre. The dedication, including a track titled "MCA Dub," served as a tribute to his role in revitalizing their sound and his personal encouragement during H.R.'s recording sessions. To recapture the raw, unfiltered energy of their formative years, bassist took the helm as self-producer, emphasizing a return to the experimental freedom of their early work without external oversight. Jenifer aimed to infuse the project with themes of unity, spirituality, and , drawing from the band's Rastafarian to explore messages of resilience and collective hope amid personal and global uncertainties. Initial songwriting sessions prioritized concise, high-energy compositions that merged punk's aggressive drive with dub reggae's rhythmic depth, reflecting ' signature blend of intensity and spiritual introspection.

Production

Recording process

The recording of Into the Future took place over approximately two years leading up to its 2012 release, at Applehead Recording Studios and Dreamland Recording Studios in New York. Lyrics were primarily composed in Baltimore locations such as Fiasco's warehouse, while core tracking occurred in New York. To preserve the band's punk authenticity, the sessions emphasized live, minimalistic takes, with the core lineup—H.R., Dr. Know, Darryl Jenifer, and Earl Hudson—performing together in one room, echoing their early days in Washington, D.C. basements. Overdubs were limited, primarily to H.R. adding vocals atop pre-laid rhythm tracks, ensuring a raw sound that prioritized energy over polish; the album's total runtime was finalized at 36:54. Challenges arose during H.R.'s vocal sessions, which were carefully managed around his ongoing health issues, including severe migraines, with support from his wife, herbalist Lori Carns, helping stabilize his participation. Following Adam Yauch's death in May 2012, the band integrated dub effects as a tribute, including the remix "MCA Dub" derived from "Peace Be Unto Thee." Final mixing was completed in the fall of , focusing on amplifying the high-energy tracks while maintaining the unrefined production aesthetic. The album is dedicated to Yauch, who had produced their prior effort .

Key contributors

The core contributors to Into the Future were ' longstanding lineup, consisting of H.R. (lead vocals and percussion), Dr. Know (guitar), (bass), and (drums), who performed all primary instrumentation on the album. Darryl Jenifer took on a as co-producer with the band, guiding the mixing and arrangements to recapture the raw energy of their early era while incorporating elements. External involvement was limited, with no major guest musicians featured, highlighting the band's emphasis on a self-contained production process; recording engineering was managed by Phil Burnett at Applehead Recording Studios, and mixing was completed by Chris Bittner and Michael Birnbaum. The group retained full creative control, including mastering oversight, to ensure fidelity to their vision.

Composition

Musical style

Into the Future represents a return to ' foundational fusion of and dub reggae, incorporating funk-metal and elements that echo the band's output following periods of more experimental and inconsistent work. The album features short, tracks averaging around 2.8 minutes in length, characterized by fast tempos, aggressive punk riffs, and H.R.'s soaring, elastic vocals that shift between yelps and reggae-inflected croons. Dub influences manifest through echoing bass lines and reverb-heavy production, creating a rhythmic depth that complements the punk energy. Compared to earlier releases, Into the Future is less funk-heavy than (1986), dialing back the prominent metal grooves in favor of tighter punk structures, while achieving a more unified punk- blend than the fragmented style of (2007). Instrumentally, Dr. Know's guitar work stands out for its versatility, transitioning from distorted punk aggression to reggae skanks and shredding metal solos, while Darryl Jenifer's bass provides driving, prominent rhythms that anchor the dub and punk fusions.

Themes and influences

The album Into the Future explores central themes of , spiritual awakening, Rastafarian philosophy, and , often interwoven with calls for love and subtle resistance against societal ills. Tracks like "" emphasize communal bonds through repetitive affirmations of togetherness, reflecting a yearning for collective harmony in an uncertain world. This motif of unity extends to broader on , as seen in "," where lyrics portray the younger generation as future leaders who rise above hardship without resorting to despair or dependency. Meanwhile, the title track evokes with intergalactic imagery and invocations of thankfulness, suggesting a forward-looking spiritual earthly constraints. Rastafarian influences are prominent, particularly in "Jah Love," which centers on divine love as the true essence of identity, transcending superficial appearances and guiding believers forward. H.R.'s lyrical style delivers these ideas with poetic urgency, blending urgent social observations—such as empowerment for the marginalized—with introspective reflections on personal and collective redemption, often through his signature yelping and scatting that convey raw emotional intensity. The album's dedication to Adam Yauch underscores hip-hop crossover impacts, honoring his production role on the prior record Build a Nation and his influence in bridging punk and rap scenes, as the closing "MCA Dub" pays tribute with echoing dub rhythms. Notable motifs include dub elements as a for ideas echoing into the future, evident in "Rub a Dub Love," where dancehall-infused repetitions symbolize enduring love amid chaos, drawing from the band's early punk activism roots but shifting toward over overt confrontation. This approach marks a maturation of Rastafarian , prioritizing spiritual awakening and joyful praise—such as in calls to "make a joyful "—while resisting societal ills through rather than explicit political rage.

Release

Commercial details

Into the Future was released on November 20, 2012, by in multiple formats, including CD, digital download, and vinyl LP. The 's cover artwork was designed by street artist , a longtime fan of the band, with limited edition variants featuring packaging and colored vinyl pressings. The achieved no major chart success, failing to enter the , which underscored ' enduring rather than broad commercial appeal. Distribution occurred mainly through channels, alongside digital platforms such as and , aligning with the band's underground . Following its initial release, Into the Future remained in print, with streaming services dominating access by 2025; a vinyl reissue on colored variants with alternate Shepard Fairey artwork was issued in 2021 by Megaforce Records.

Promotion and marketing

The promotion of Bad Brains' ninth studio album, Into the Future, focused on leveraging the band's enduring influence within the punk and hardcore communities, with announcements and teasers building anticipation through music media outlets. In October 2012, Punknews.org revealed the album's full tracklist, generating pre-release buzz among fans by listing tracks such as "Into the Future," "Popcorn," and "We Belong Together," ahead of the November 20 release date. Similarly, Spin magazine covered the band's dedication of the album to the late Beastie Boys member Adam Yauch (MCA), highlighting the tribute's significance given Yauch's prior production work on Bad Brains' 2007 album Build a Nation. Artist played a key role in the visual promotion, designing the album cover and associated materials that aligned with and punk aesthetics. Fairey, known for his Obey Giant campaigns, created a striking graphic featuring the band's iconic logo stylized in bold, stencil-like fonts reminiscent of DIY punk posters, which he described as a homage to ' raw energy and (PMA) ethos. A limited-edition 18x24-inch screen-printed of the , signed by Fairey and all four band members, was produced to further tie the release to underground art culture. Live performances served as a primary promotional vehicle, with the band playing select dates in 2012 and 2013 that incorporated tracks from Into the Future, though these were limited by frontman H.R.'s ongoing health challenges, including the effects of schizoaffective disorder diagnosed in 2013. Post-release shows, such as the December 1, 2012, performance at the Fonda Theatre in Los Angeles where "Into the Future" was debuted live, allowed fans to experience the new material alongside classics. Earlier 2012 gigs at events like Bonnaroo and DeLuna Fest built momentum, but H.R.'s condition led to sporadic scheduling rather than a full tour. Digital promotion emphasized online teasers without extensive , capitalizing on the band's loyal fanbase cultivated over four decades. The title track "Into the Future" was premiered as a on Rolling Stone's in September 2012, offering an early listen to its reggae-infused hardcore sound. No official were produced, underscoring a strategy rooted in the band's legacy.

Reception

Critical reviews

Upon its release, Into the Future garnered generally favorable reviews from critics, though the response was tempered by the band's long hiatus and high expectations from their influential past work. The album holds a score of 68 out of 100, based on 14 reviews, reflecting a consensus of positive but not exceptional reception. awarded the album 3.5 out of 5 stars, commending its return to the band's hardcore roots infused with dub elements, while observing that the overall intensity falls short of their explosive 1980s output. Consequence of Sound rated it 3 out of 5 stars, praising the versatility of guitarist Dr. Know's playing across punk, , and metal styles, but criticizing the uneven pacing and the strain evident in H.R.'s vocals. Other publications echoed this mixed sentiment with a focus on the album's stylistic balance. The Los Angeles Times gave it 3 out of 5 stars, appreciating how the record maintains Bad Brains' signature reggae-punk equilibrium through tracks that shift from aggressive riffs to dubby interludes. Revolver magazine scored it 3.5 out of 5, highlighting the energetic tributes to punk heritage that recapture the band's raw vitality. Across these critiques, common themes emerged of admiration for the album's authenticity in preserving ' genre-blending ethos, coupled with mild disappointment over its lack of bold innovation since the 2007 release of . Critics generally viewed it as a solid effort from aging pioneers, true to their Rastafarian-punk spirit but unlikely to redefine their legacy.

Commercial performance

Upon its release on November 20, 2012, Into the Future sold 2,550 copies in its first week in the United States, according to sales tracking data. The album failed to enter the , in contrast to the band's prior studio effort (2007), which debuted at number 100—marking ' only charting album on that ranking. Sales remained modest overall, with the record finding greater traction within niche punk and markets rather than achieving broader commercial breakthrough. By 2025, Into the Future continues to be available on major streaming services including and , sustaining steady plays driven by the band's dedicated cult following, though it has not experienced any viral resurgence. The garnered no awards or certifications, highlighting Bad Brains' persistent but constrained commercial presence in the years after 2012. In comparative terms, Into the Future outperformed some of the band's earlier indie releases from the in initial sales momentum but fell short of the stronger market performance seen with their peak s, such as the self-titled debut and I Against I.

Track listing and credits

Track listing

The Into the Future by comprises 13 tracks with a total runtime of 37:25. All tracks were written by the band .
No.TitleDurationWriter(s)
1."Into the Future"2:43Bad Brains
2."Popcorn"3:12Bad Brains
3."We Belong Together"1:39Bad Brains
4."Youth of Today"3:25Bad Brains
5."Rub a Dub Love"2:35Bad Brains
6."Yes I"1:28Bad Brains
7."Suck Sess"1:53Bad Brains
8."Jah Love"3:35Bad Brains
9."Earnest Love"3:14Bad Brains
10."Come Down"1:25Bad Brains
11."Fun"3:47Bad Brains
12."Make a Joyful Noise"4:43Bad Brains
13."MCA Dub" 3:47Bad Brains
Instrumental track serving as a tribute to Beastie Boys member Adam "MCA" Yauch.

Personnel

  • H.R. – lead vocals
  • Dr. Know – guitar
  • Darryl Jenifer – bass, producer
  • Earl Hudson – drums
  • Bad Brains – producers
  • Chris Bittner – mixing
  • Michael Birnbaum – mixing
  • Phil Burnett – engineering
  • Shepard Fairey – artwork, design
  • Cleon Peterson – artwork, design

References

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