"The Dirty Glass" was originally featured on the 2002 split
Face to Face vs. Dropkick Murphys and re-recorded for the album with the band's then merchandise seller, Stephanie Dougherty (
Kay Hanley appeared on the original version), who shared vocals with Ken Casey and also appeared on the album's final track, "Kiss Me, I'm Shitfaced". The track "Time to Go", a homage to the
Boston Bruins, was released as a promotional CD for the Bruins and also featured in ''
Tony Hawk's Underground and NHL 2005. The track "This Is Your Life" was featured in the 2003 video game Backyard Wrestling: Don't Try This at Home''. The song "Gonna Be a Blackout Tonight", with lyrics written by
Woody Guthrie, was composed when
Nora Guthrie's son, a fan of the Dropkick Murphys, approached his mother about letting the band use some of Woody's lyrics. Bass guitarist Ken Casey was familiar with the
Mermaid Avenue albums by
Billy Bragg and
Wilco that had also used lyrics written by Woody Guthrie, and had enjoyed those works. The band decided to make the Woody Guthrie track the "hardest song on the record" in order to make it as different as possible from the folk music that Woody Guthrie sang. In 2005, the band released a two-song CD single for the family of Andrew K. Farrar, Jr., a
sergeant in the
U.S. Marine Corps who was killed on January 28, 2005 in
Al Anbar, Iraq during
Operation Iraqi Freedom. Farrar, who was a big fan of the Murphys, made a request to his family that if he did not survive his
tour of duty, he wanted their version of "
The Fields of Athenry" to be played at his funeral. The single features a slower version of "The Fields of Athenry" that was originally recorded and placed in Farrar's casket, although the band decided to release the alternate version. The disc also features the track "Last Letter Home," which was written about Farrar and was featured on the Murphys' 2005 album ''
The Warrior's Code''. All of the proceeds for the $10 single go to the Sgt. Andrew Farrar Memorial Fund and can be purchased through the band's website or at one of their shows. The song "Buried Alive" deals with the
Quecreek Mine Rescue which occurred in July 2002, describing the plight nine Pennsylvania coal miners faced while trapped underground for four days. The album was the last to feature the band's touring and recording
bagpipe player Joe Delaney. Delaney was with the band from 1998-1999 however left and was replaced by
Spicy McHaggis in 2000. Following the departure of McHaggis in 2003, Delaney would return to record
Blackout and was replaced for the tour in 2003 by
Scruffy Wallace who remained with the band until 2015. ==Reception==