Product Details
Knuckles Up

Knuckles Up
Flatfoot 56

Price: $12.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

36 new or used available from $6.82

Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. This Town
  2. Brotherhood
  3. Knuckles Up
  4. Hold Fast
  5. Breakin� The Law
  6. Blood and Sweat
  7. The Rotten Hand
  8. Battle of the Bones
  9. Chi-town Beat Down
  10. Fight To Live
  11. The Long Road
  12. Amazing Grace
  13. Arran Boat

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #36580 in Music
  • Released on: 2006-06-27
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Enhanced
  • Dimensions: .21 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
Flatfoot 56 has been playing brazen Celtic punk rock in the Chicago area since 2000. Now the band of three brothers (and a friend) are ready to whip the masses into a frenzy with their debut release Knuckles Up from Flicker Records. Guitars, drums, bagpipes and a mandolin fuel the band’s up front energy that reaches out and grabs even the sleepiest of cynics. With Flatfoot 56, standing in the back is not an option.

About the Artist
It started decades ago, in back alley pubs and abandoned flats—a restless energy among those without anything besides their voices and the streets. They were kids with a dream to be heard, to make change, together on the avenues of London. It was the late 1970’s. Punk Rock. Its tremors would be felt for decades to come. Its culture was deemed a cancer by those in power, and yet it was nothing short of life’s blood to those who lived it. True punk’s roots have always been beneath the radar, below the surface, underground, word-of-mouth. And though many say its true nature has been dead for a long time, its heart, its remnant, can be found if you listen. Put your ear to the curb and you will be led, not to the bricks of London, England, but to the pavement of Chicago, Illinois. There you will find Flatfoot 56. "My brothers and I started going to shows in bars, where skinheads and punk-rockers alike would gather week after week," lead vocalist and frontman Tobin Bawinkel explains. "We made friends there because it was our home, it’s where we belonged. And the same scene we were a part of birthed our own band." You wouldn’t, at first, think that these three preacher’s kids would fit in the street-punk scene of urban Chicago. But standing next to them, you might think again. The smallest brother stands 6’4". Tobin himself is 6’ 9", and each of them could easily be mistaken for an Oi! henchman. However, it wasn’t stature that won them respect among their peers; they are as gracious in speech as they are intimidating in presence. They also genuinely love the music, having grown up listening to The Pogues, The Real Mckenzies, and Headnoise, and subculture that’s been the backdrop of their lives. These unique qualities made it impossible for them to just blend in, and it was inevitable that they would eventually take the stage. After years of attending shows, the three Bawinkels felt it was time to put their thoughts and beliefs into action. They began jamming as a three-piece in 2000 but were searching for one more player to complete their sound. Josh Robieson, doubling on bagpipe and guitar, was the man who brought it all together. It was then they came up with the name "Flatfoot 56," inspired by their youngest brother Kyle, who wore number 56 on his baseball jersey and was teased for having flat feet. In the winter of 2001, they played their first show at a downtown bar. "We really didn’t know how the crowd would react to our lyrics. The words are straight-forward and very much about our faith. I could imagine bottles flying at my head as we played our first notes for the punk-rock kids. After all, a true punk-rocker’s number one enemy is the church. But we went up there armed with nothing but our hearts and our songs. Nobody threw a single thing. It was a dream come true to be up there, and it would not have been possible without God," says Tobin. Their story built from there—Flatfoot 56 released three independent records in less than five years, selling 7,000 copies along the way, playing bars, colleges, church shows, and everything in-between. And though the local scene embraced them, they found themselves looking at something much larger. At Cornerstone 2003 they were among the festival’s biggest buzz bands, and it wasn’t long before record labels took notice. In late 2005, Flatfoot 56 inked a deal with Flicker Records, who will release the group’s third LP, Knuckles Up.


Customer Reviews

I got their new album in Florida,but this is magnificent nonetheless....5
Excellent punk rock (or speed rock in this case) album. Have you ever wanted a fast-paced,rollercoster like CD? Flatfoot 56's albums are for you. The beats are truly excellent in songs like 'This Town' and 'Knuckles Up'. Highly original styles of music are in this album. Bagpipes? Relentless,raspy voice? Single-note for the drums? Sounds like a recipe for great party music and excercise music. They sound like those indie punk rock bands from the Tony Hawk games. Just MUCH better. A message is in each of the songs. A good, Christian message of course.'Chi-town Beatdown' is the only song that is hard to understand without the lyrics. Buy their album or you'll be missing out on a lot.

Excellent for those that don't think they like punk5
I was in Lexington, KY for job-related business in 2006 (was actually working for Amazon at the time) and decided to park in a bar with some live punk music for the night. The opening band was drunk and just plain awful - never even made it through their first song. Flatfoot 56 came in after and just floored me. I am by no means a punk rock fan. I didn't own a single MP3 that could remotely by classified as punk. However, immediately following their set (which ended with their rendition of Amazing Grace) I bought this CD on the spot and haven't regretted it. I still play it frequently as it just plain rocks. Good hard rock mixed with bagpipes and mandolin. Awesome on CD, damn near spiritual when watching it live.
I have since also become a Dropkick Murphys fan. Check them out if you like Flatfoot.

Is this Really Christian Rock?5
If you do a search on Flatfoot 56 you may see some stuff on Christian influence (Wikipedia has them listed as a Christen punk rock bank). I read that after I purchased this album and before I heard the album (I took a shot at a recommendation). But rest assured, this does not seem like Christian rock. There are some references to God, but overall they rock like the Drop Kick Murphys