The Illusion of Safety

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Illusion of Safety
The Illusion of Safety cover
Studio album by Thrice
Released February 5, 2002
Recorded July 2001
Genre Punk rock, melodic hardcore
Length 38:33
Label Sub City
Producer Brian McTernan
Professional reviews
Thrice chronology
Identity Crisis
(2001)
The Illusion of Safety
(2002)
The Artist in the Ambulance
(2003)

The Illusion of Safety is Thrice's second full length album, released in 2002 on Sub City Records. A portion of the proceeds made by this CD was donated to A Place Called Home, a non-profit youth center in South Central Los Angeles.

[edit] Track listing

  1. "Kill Me Quickly" – 2:46
  2. "A Subtle Dagger" – 1:48
  3. "See You in the Shallows" – 2:35
  4. "Betrayal is a Symptom" – 2:49
  5. "Deadbolt" – 3:00
  6. "In Years to Come" – 2:16
  7. "The Red Death" – 2:14
  8. "A Living Dance Upon Dead Minds" – 3:32
  9. "Where Idols Once Stood" – 3:08
  10. "Trust" – 2:54
  11. "To Awake and Avenge the Dead" – 3:06
  12. "So Strange I Remember You" – 3:42
  13. "The Beltsville Crucible" – 4:37

[edit] Links to other media

"The Red Death" is based on Edgar Allan Poe's "The Masque of the Red Death". The lyrics to "A Living Dance Upon Dead Minds" were taken from the E. E. Cummings poem "But if a Living Dance Upon Dead Minds...". The final book of C. S. Lewis's Space Trilogy was titled "That Hideous Strength". Though "Trust" may bear a surface resemblance to the short story "The Birthmark" by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Kensrue has talked about the song's major metaphor being an airbag in a car accident. Kensrue has also said that "A Subtle Dagger" is not at all a reference to Philip Pullman's novel The Subtle Knife, and that he had no awareness of the novel when he wrote the lyrics to the song. An acoustic version of "Trust" appeared on the 2003 Fearless Records compilation album Punk Goes Acoustic.

[edit] Personnel


Languages