The release of this posthumous collection of Sublime demos, old singles and remixes is a good thing for two reasons. One, it will bring Sublime late-comers up to speed with past album treasures, like the lesser-known rushed ska-banger duet with No Doubt's Gwen Stefani and Sublime's late frontman Brad Nowell, "Saw Red" (originally from Robbin' The Hood), a remixed version of "Get Out" (originally omitted from the MCA pressing of the band's debut, 40 Oz. To Freedom due to sample clearance problems), and an untouched placement of "Badfish" (also from the band's debut). Two, the rest of the album (19 tracks in all) confirms Sublime's ability to genre-shift and inject their own special passion into a reggae, pop, dub and ska mix. The less-polished demos, remixes and jams that old fans will flip for (an English version of "Chica Me Tipo," two remixes of "Doin' Time" and "April 29th, 1992," and a twist on "Garden Grove" as "Garbage Grove") showcase Sublime's affinity for diversity, which more often than not veers off into the testing lab of reggae dub that the band was exploring for future projects. Sadly, those will never happen now.