Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
The New Normal (album)
2005 studio album by Cog From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The New Normal is the first studio album by Australian rock band Cog, released on April 12, 2005 by Difrnt Music. The album was produced in Weed, California by Sylvia Massy (Tool, System of a Down, Spiderbait). The New Normal was made the album of the week on Triple J and at the J Award of 2005, the album was nominated for Australian Album of the Year.[1]
The album peaked at number 19 on the Australian Recording Industry Association album chart.
Remove ads
Background
Summarize
Perspective
The album name was formulated in the wake of the September 11 attacks, front man Flynn Gower explained that the name was derived from a social commentator in the United States that was describing "what people once considered ‘normal’ in terms of lifestyle. Things had changed quite drastically in a short period of time. They were calling the kind of social and political environment in which we now lived, ‘the new normal’”.
In September 2004 Cog met with Sylvia Massy in Weed, California to begin recording for the album.[2] The album was recorded between September, 2004 and October, 2004 at Radiostar Studios, a retired 1930s art deco theater that, according to the band, helped them get into a "different head space" for recording.[3]
"Real Life", "My Enemy", "Run" and "Resonate" were released as radio singles in February, March and August 2005 as well as March 2006, respectively.[4] "Real Life" was first released as a demo in late 2003, as part of Big Day Out's 2004 compilation. It was also the first song from the album to debut on the radio. The single itself was distributed to radio stations, street team members, as well as directly to some attendees of the Big Day Out '04 launch ceremony in Sydney, Australia at Utopia Records on April 9, 2005.[5] "My Enemy" was included in the Triple J Hottest 100: Volume 13 compilation album released in March, 2006[6] while "Run" was later featured in Triple J Hottest 100 Australian Albums Of All Time released in July, 2011.[7]
Remove ads
Lyrics and themes
Lyrically the album focuses heavily to articulate themes of new world globalization in conjunction with government corruption and control. Flynn Gower described the lyrics as " recurring ideas of anger, alienation, isolation, dissension, disillusionment and disempowerment" as well as the feeling of exclusion from "the decision-making process" on both the local and national level. He went on to state that the album conveys "universal themes" that would express the feelings of Australians and people across the world who feel they need to "take the power back".[8]
Remove ads
Recording
Drummer Borich said, "It took about two months. We recorded it in an old art décor 1930s theatre. There was the stage, and like two hundred seats and then at the back of the room, the recording gear. So it was a totally different environment from a typical studio. You know it didn’t have that sterile vibe, something really different, which I think helped the music." He also praised producer Sylyia Massy who "spent years acquiring all of this great technology and sophisticated gear. So it was really good to be able to utilise that."[9]
Artwork
Various items of "modern protest" were featured within the panels of the digipack release including: a brick, lit torch, gas mask, cell phone, laptop and Molotov cocktail. The gas mask and Molotov cocktail included specific descriptions of the peripherals followed by notes on how they could be used as "identity concealment devices" and for "guerilla warfare", respectively. Commenting on the protest theme, art director Daniel Parkinson stated "we decided on a clean stark look, using Times New Roman Font like a newspaper" in addition to "some strange 'anomaly' objects" portrayed as black balls floating above the desert floor.[10] Furthermore, the front cover features an electric megaphone in accordance to the "modern protest" theme as well as "cog the new normal" in Braille.[11] Flynn Gower stated the "starkness of the message" was "very clear and easy to decipher."[8]
Remove ads
Reception
The New Normal was mostly well received and gained generally positive reviews, but was not without its criticisms. Jody Macgregor of AllMusic said "Flynn Gower...sings with enough genuineness and passion to deliver political songs...without sounding trite." She described some of the rhymes as "a touch too obvious" while "[pushing] a simplistic melody...longer than it deserves", but assures "enough unexpected turns and blistering riffs" to conclude that "Cog are at their best concocting these apocalyptic epics".[12]
The album entered the ARIA Charts on April 24, 2005, peaked at #19 and remained on the chart for three weeks.[16] Moreover, the album was described by Triple J radio as "Australian heavy music fans have been holding out for" as well as "a massive sound, almost unbelievable for that of a three piece band." In 2005 the album was nominated for the J Award by Triple J.[3]
Remove ads
Track listing
All songs written, composed and performed by Cog.
Charts
Personnel
- Cog
- Flynn Gower – lead vocals, guitar
- Lucius Borich – drums, backing vocals, samples
- Luke Gower – bass guitar, backing vocals
- Production
- Cog – producer, album design
- Sylvia Massy – producer, mixing
- Rich Veltrop – co-producer, engineer, mixing
- Kale Holmes – mixing
- Cecil Gregory – studio assistant
- Seabrian Arata – Pro Tools editor
- Tom Baker – mastering
- Sean Boucher – recording & engineering (pre-production)
- Daniel Parkinson – art direction, graphic design, photography
- Andrzej Liguz – group photography
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads