Youth of America | ||||
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Studio album by Wipers | ||||
Released | 1981 | |||
Recorded | 1981 | |||
Studio | Wave Sound Studios | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 30:40 | |||
Label | Park Avenue | |||
Producer | Greg Sage | |||
Wipers chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Consequence of Sound | very favorable |
Head Heritage | favorable |
MusicHound | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Trouser Press | favorable |
Youth of America is the second studio album by American punk rock band Wipers. It was released in 1981 by record label Park Avenue.
The album marked a distinctive change in the band's sound. Compared to its predecessor, Is This Real?, which was composed mostly of raw, sleek and relatively traditional songs, Youth of America featured much longer and complex compositions; the title track alone clocks in at over 10 minutes. According to frontman Greg Sage, this change of pace was a deliberate counter-reaction against the trend of releasing short songs, which many punk bands did at the time.
The Quietus noted the album's genre as post-punk and further described its style as "a six track set of lowly garage rock which traverses the cosmos irrespective. Secondly, it's a gothic downer but leavened by motion and momentum thanks to its krautrock influences. And lastly it's a grittily real punk record defined by an unerring air of unreality – as unromantic as it is fantastical".
Released in 1981, Youth of America was, according to Sage, not well received in the United States at the time of its release, but fared better in Europe.
In its retrospective review, Consequence of Sound wrote, "From its style of production and songwriting to its driving, angular guitar work coupled with anthemic hooks, Youth of America is as strong and fresh-sounding today as it was 30 years ago".The Quietus wrote "there may be more essential punk albums out there but never again did the genre sound so searching".
Youth of America was later reissued on record labels Backbone and Restless, with different covers for each, and on Sage's own Zeno Records as the second disc of the Wipers Box Set, albeit with a different running order to the original vinyl issue.
Along with other Wipers records, Youth of America has since come to be acknowledged as an important album in the development of American underground and independent rock movements of the early 1980s.Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth cited the album as an inspiration, and covered the track "Pushing the Extreme" with Keith Nealy for Wipers tribute album Fourteen Songs for Greg Sage and The Wipers.