Some Boys Got It, Most Men Don't is the fourth album released by the North Vancouver punk band d.b.s.
recording to feature new bassist Ryan Angus, who replaced Dhani Borges.
The album marks a turning point in the band's development, and had some post-hardcore influence.
[4][5][6] The album also received comparisons to some emo hardcore bands on Jade Tree Records, such as Lifetime and Kid Dynamite,[5] as well as Converge.
[6] For the final five minutes of "A Foundation for Positive Change", there is heavy feedback, a piano playing a repeated theme, and fuzzy sampled voice clips—resulting in a more experimental sound than the band's earlier recordings, and presaging the sampled music that band member Andy Dixon would later compose.