Slip It In " is the fourth studio album by the American hardcore punk band Black Flag , released in December 1984 SST Records
Sound & Production:
To understand the value of an EAC-FLAC rip, one must understand the original release’s limitations. Slip It In was released at the tail end of the vinyl era, with initial pressings on black vinyl (and rare colored variants) and a cassette version that hissed and degraded. The compact disc (CD) format existed in 1984 but was expensive and rare for indie labels; SST wouldn't issue their back catalog on CD until the late 1980s. Black Flag - Slip It In -1984- -EAC-FLAC-
Progressive Structure: Breaking the two-minute-song mold of 1980s punk, tracks like the seven-minute "You're Not Evil" proved that hardcore could be expansive and musically complex.
If the log shows "Read mode : Burst" or missing offset correction, it’s not a proper EAC rip. Slip It In " is the fourth studio
Black Flag - Slip It In (1984) - EAC - FLAC
The Sonic Shift Where Damaged was a sprint, Slip It In was a heavy, lurching trudge. The album is characterized by Greg Ginn’s distinctively dissonant guitar solos and a rhythm section that embraced a slow, heavy, almost Black Sabbath-esque swing. The title track, "Slip It In," stretches over six minutes—a heresy to the "play fast or die" purists of the early 80s scene. The production is dense and muddy, a stark contrast to the dry, aggressive mix of their earlier records. Progressive Structure : Breaking the two-minute-song mold of
Lineup: This was the first "regular" studio album to feature Kira Roessler on bass, whose technical proficiency allowed Ginn to explore more avant-garde and jazz-influenced guitar work.