Never Trust A Hippy - Track Listing

Track Listing

  1. "Seeing Double at the Triple Rock" – 2:09
  2. "The Marxist Brothers" – 2:47
  3. "Golden Boys" – 2:47 (Vagina Dentata)
  4. "You're Wrong" – 2:06
  5. "Everything in Moderation (Especially Moderation)" – 1:23
  6. "I'm Going to Hell for This One" – 1:53

The first two tracks also appear on Wolves in Wolves' Clothing.

NOFX
  • Fat Mike
  • El Hefe
  • Eric Melvin
  • Erik Sandin
  • Scott Sellers
  • Scott Aldahl
  • Dave Allen
  • Dave Casillas
  • Steve Kidwiller
Studio albums
  • Liberal Animation
  • S&M Airlines
  • Ribbed
  • White Trash, Two Heebs and a Bean
  • Punk in Drublic
  • Heavy Petting Zoo
  • So Long and Thanks for All the Shoes
  • Pump Up the Valuum
  • BYO Split Series Volume III
  • The War on Errorism
  • Wolves in Wolves' Clothing
  • Coaster
  • Self Entitled
Live albums
  • I Heard They Suck Live!!
  • They've Actually Gotten Worse Live!
Compilation albums
  • Maximum Rocknroll
  • 45 or 46 Songs That Weren't Good Enough to Go on Our Other Records
  • The Greatest Songs Ever Written (By Us)
  • The Longest EP
EPs
  • NOFX (1985)
  • So What If We're on Mystic!
  • The P.M.R.C. Can Suck on This
  • The Longest Line
  • HOFX
  • Fuck the Kids
  • Timmy the Turtle
  • The Decline
  • Surfer
  • Regaining Unconsciousness
  • 7" of the Month Club
  • Never Trust a Hippy
  • The Myspace Transmissions
  • Cokie the Clown
  • NOFX / The Spits
  • NOFX (2011)
Singles
  • "Liza and Louise"
  • "Don't Call Me White"
  • "Leave It Alone"
  • "All of Me"
  • "Louise and Liza"
  • "Bottles to the Ground"
  • "Pods and Gods"
  • Fat Club
  • "13 Stitches"
Related articles
  • Discography
  • Ten Years of Fuckin' Up
  • NOFX: Backstage Passport
  • Me First and the Gimme Gimmes
  • Fat Wreck Chords
  • Rock Against Bush
  • ' Book:NOFX
  • Category:NOFX
  • Portal:Punk rock


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Famous quotes containing the word track:

    To most men, experience is like the stern lights of a ship, which illumine only the track it has passed.
    Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772–1834)