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On The Brink of Malice Intentions - New Green Day album?


Omnia Black

Is the a new Green Day album?  

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Posted

Green Day - 29th LP Record

ON THE BRINK OF MALICE INTENTIONS (non-final)

SONG NAMES (non-final)

1. Brink of Disaster

2. Liquid Water

3. Malice Intentions

4. Restarting

5. Valedictorian Speech

6. Riots in the Streets

7. 20 Second Song

8. New Sound

9. Drowning in Syrup

10. Edited to Die

11. It's All Fake News

12. You Think I Care?

13.Address the Nation

 

I'm so confused on what the fuck this is?? NEED HELP!!! DOES THIS MEAN ANYTHING???

Found this browsing Twitter - I'm sure this is just bullshit sorry if i'm being stupid about this lol.

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Posted

On the Brink of Malice Intentions doesn't even make grammatical sense. On the Brink of Malicious Intentions. or On the Brink/Malicious Intentions, it still sounds really weird. Also I don't know everything in this world but I know if there was even a scent of a new Green Day album, this forum would have exploded. 

Posted

Where did you find this?

Posted

We need you to give us more precise information - what's the source?

To me, it looks definitely fake, especially if we're speaking of a new album - that doesn't seem realistic at all - but they have been working on something recently, so I guess it's relatively safe to assume new demos might exist.

So, I call bullshit until proven otherwise :P 

Googling the phrase is 100% negative FYI, looks fake as a two-dollar bill.

Posted

I really doubt they have 13 songs together after releasing an album late last year and having like 3 minutes at home after touring the world 

also these titles are a little too obvious and literal for Billie 

Posted
7 minutes ago, Billie Hoe said:

I really doubt they have 13 songs together after releasing an album late last year and having like 3 minutes at home after touring the world 

also these titles are a little too obvious and literal for Billie 


I agree. This is band with songs named after urinals, a corporate sponsored parade, religious icons residing in the urban sprawl, and a cute but deadly Australian mammal. There is nuance and art to their titling. 

Posted

"29th LP record" 

Posted
1 hour ago, Billie Hoe said:

I really doubt they have 13 songs together after releasing an album late last year and having like 3 minutes at home after touring the world 

also these titles are a little too obvious and literal for Billie 

Lol 3 minutes at home. Love it. :lol:

53 minutes ago, Trotsky said:


I agree. This is band with songs named after urinals, a corporate sponsored parade, religious icons residing in the urban sprawl, and a cute but deadly Australian mammal. There is nuance and art to their titling. 

Yeah but that song wasn't actually about peeing was it? Ahhaaaa... mindfuck. 

2 minutes ago, Jenn. said:

"29th LP record" 

Yeah I spotted that bit first... but figured if you added every record release they've ever had (I know they're not all LPs)... maybe it comes 29 (tbf it's probably more than that!)? Idk, cba to count. 

Posted

As fake Green Day albums go I preferred "Hillside Dance"

9 hours ago, Jenn. said:

"29th LP record" 

:lol: 

Posted

Hey where is the mystery guy who posted about the Bang Bang release last year? Maybe he can say something about this:P

Posted

The title is giving me a headache. "Malice intentions" :tired: to whoever started this rumour - this is insulting. 

Posted
50 minutes ago, Jenn. said:

The title is giving me a headache. "Malice intentions" :tired: to whoever started this rumour - this is insulting. 

Yes, real Green Day would come up with something better but not that they don't have a catalog of misspelled titles. :happy:

Posted

I really want green day or maybe foxborow hottubes to make a kinda joke album with the song names from fake albums 

Posted
On 8/4/2017 at 2:10 AM, MMwhatsername said:

Hey where is the mystery guy who posted about the Bang Bang release last year? Maybe he can say something about this:P

where's joe weasel or whatever-his-name-was and his endless mindfuck speculations? ;)

Posted

When I saw this my first reaction was disappointment because I thought Billie had made real progress on his grammar and this was going to set him back 40 years.

Posted
6 hours ago, Heather. said:

When I saw this my first reaction was disappointment because I thought Billie had made real progress on his grammar and this was going to set him back 40 years.

lol. 5 year old Billie coming up with names. 

Posted

Drowning in Syrup is the best made up song title although Liquid Water is also a contender :lol:

Posted
On 8/3/2017 at 11:47 AM, Trotsky said:

On the Brink of Malice Intentions doesn't even make grammatical sense. On the Brink of Malicious Intentions. or On the Brink/Malicious Intentions, it still sounds really weird. Also I don't know everything in this world but I know if there was even a scent of a new Green Day album, this forum would have exploded. 

I am not making a comment on any new album.  I can tell you for sure Billie has been writing during the tour but that's like saying you drank water yesterday.


As for the "On the Brink of Malice" I believe is grammatically correct. Don't quote me on that (of course I don't mean literally don't) but Malice is a noun which is a legal term to define if someone had bad intent "Kill Donald Trump" is a malicious comment for example.  You used the word malicious in place of it which you used correctly but the other wasn't wrong.  Malice is a noun and it would be like saying "Brink of Heaven" or "Brink of Hell" which I agree doesn't sound great but is proper grammar.

 

For example, with only minor exception such as gross negligence INTENT is very important in law.  If you did not have an intention on causing harm, you are not guilty of a crime.  Having malice is what makes something malicious if that makes sense so "Brink of Malice" could work as a goofy title but it isn't for the record.

To have a list of songs is so ridiculous and in order too.  LOL.  Literally those things are created after the albums are done and then they change literally up until the last hour before printing.

 

Posted
1 hour ago, LaughingClock said:

As for the "On the Brink of Malice" I believe is grammatically correct. Don't quote me on that (of course I don't mean literally don't) but Malice is a noun which is a legal term to define if someone had bad intent "Kill Donald Trump" is a malicious comment for example.  You used the word malicious in place of it which you used correctly but the other wasn't wrong.  Malice is a noun and it would be like saying "Brink of Heaven" or "Brink of Hell" which I agree doesn't sound great but is proper grammar.

 

For example, with only minor exception such as gross negligence INTENT is very important in law.  If you did not have an intention on causing harm, you are not guilty of a crime.  Having malice is what makes something malicious if that makes sense so "Brink of Malice" could work as a goofy title but it isn't for the record.

On the Brink of Malice is grammatically correct. "On the Brink of Malice Intentions" is not. I don't think anyone was saying the first part of the title isn't grammatically correct on its own!

Posted
27 minutes ago, Jenn. said:

On the Brink of Malice is grammatically correct. "On the Brink of Malice Intentions" is not. I don't think anyone was saying the first part of the title isn't grammatically correct on its own!

With all due respect Jenn and I love ya but (and this conversation has veered into just goofy semantics) as dumb as it sounds there is nothing that is grammatically incorrect of "on the brink of malice intentions".

Its not a sentence that makes much sense but from a pure grammatical perspective, there is nothing incorrect about it.

I could say "on the brink of ugly dolls" and while that sentence makes almost zero sense, it's actually even a worse sentence than the above one with zero grammatical errors. It's just dumb. :P 

I have a habit of saying things because I think they are right even when there is absolutely no reason for this post. :)

Posted
Just now, LaughingClock said:

With all due respect Jenn and I love ya but (and this conversation has veered into just goofy semantics) as dumb as it sounds there is nothing that is grammatically incorrect of "on the brink of malice intentions".

Its not a sentence that makes much sense but from a pure grammatical perspective, there is nothing incorrect about it.

I could say "on the brink of ugly dolls" and while that sentence makes almost zero sense, it's actually even a worse sentence than the above one with zero grammatical errors. It's just dumb. :P 

I have a habit of saying things because I think they are right even when there is absolutely no reason for this post. :)

I love you too but I stand by my post :P On the brink of ugly dolls DOES make grammatical sense. But, malice intentions still doesn't. Malice and Intentions are both nouns, as you said. It's just two random words. Malicious intentions would make grammatical sense, as John said, or simply 'On the brink of malice'. I'm not arguing about how dumb it is without the grammatical error (because we all know it is), it's just purely that it's not proper grammar! :D 

(As for there being no reason for your post - this entire thread has no reason for existing and yet it's still here.)

Posted
2 minutes ago, LaughingClock said:

With all due respect Jenn and I love ya but (and this conversation has veered into just goofy semantics) as dumb as it sounds there is nothing that is grammatically incorrect of "on the brink of malice intentions".

Its not a sentence that makes much sense but from a pure grammatical perspective, there is nothing incorrect about it.

I could say "on the brink of ugly dolls" and while that sentence makes almost zero sense, it's actually even a worse sentence than the above one with zero grammatical errors. It's just dumb. :P 

I have a habit of saying things because I think they are right even when there is absolutely no reason for this post. :)

I might be missing something but I just don't understand how it can be grammatically correct. I mean malice is a noun and malicious is an adjective. They aren't interchangeable. 

On the brink of malice is correct, but On the brink of malice intentions isn't. You need an adjective there. I believe it's only possible to use nouns in place of adjectives when it's meant to work like an appropriation, as in "a Spielberg movie".

Posted

Nope, I agree with Jenn on this. Malice Intentions makes no grammatical sense - it would be "malicious intentions". You are giving "intentions" an attribute, and as far as I know those cannot be nouns. E.g. there cannot be "kindness intentions" either, they are "kind intentions".

And as others have said, "brink of malice" would have been correct but not with intentions behind it.

Posted

this is definitely BS. 

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