A New Morning

A New Morning
Studio album by Suede
Released 30 September 2002
Recorded 2000-2002
Genre Alternative rock
Length 56:48
Label Columbia
Producer Stephen Street, John Leckie, Dave Eringa
Suede chronology
Head Music
(1999)
A New Morning
(2002)
Singles
(2003)
Singles from 'A New Morning'
  1. "Positivity"
    Released: 16 September 2002
  2. "Obsessions"
    Released: 18 November 2002

A New Morning is the fifth studio album by English alternative rock band Suede, released in September 2002. By the time the album was released, public interest in the band had waned, as shown by the poor charting of both the album and singles. Despite this, however, the album received moderate praise from critics and is generally liked by fans due to its warmer, and more simplistic sound (as opposed to Head Music). All the songs were produced by Stephen Street, except "Positivity" which was produced by John Leckie, and "You Belong to Me" which was produced by Dave Eringa.

Contents

Background and recording

The creation of Suede's fifth studio album A New Morning, was long and costly. Following the release of their 1999 album Head Music and subsequent tour, keyboardist Neil Codling announced his departure from the group on 23 March 2001, citing problems with Chronic fatigue syndrome.[1] Singer Brett Anderson was furious at Codling's leaving, but understood the reasons behind his departure: "He couldn't help it, I know, but I did feel aggrieved. I felt let down. But more at the universe than at Neil."[2] Codling was replaced by former Strangelove keyboardist Alex Lee.[1] Anderson also had become sober for this record, overcoming his crack addiction and claiming that A New Morning was "the first ever Suede record that wasn’t influenced in its making by drugs".[3] Anderson wrote lyrics isolated in a country house in Surrey away from the rest of the band, where he immersed himself in music and literature.[4] He read Atomised by Michel Houellebecq and books by Albert Camus, Leonard Cohen and Paul Auster.[5] Anderson says, "I created a deliberate vacuum so all these influences would flood in. I spent a lot of time walking in the countryside, sometimes for hours and hours, fascinated by nature and its battle with concrete and steel. I was living in Concrete Island by J.G. Ballard."[5]

The band began recording demos at Stanbridge Farm Studios in West Sussex in July 2000. In October the band took a break from writing to perform their only gig of the year, which took place in Reykjavík, Iceland, where they premiered nine new songs.[6] The group originally began working with American producer Tony Hoffer in 2001, and anticipated having a single released by Autumn.[7] Hoffer and Anderson had originally met in a toilet at Paisley Park in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where the two hit it off, finding several common musical interests. The meeting led to Anderson asking for Hoffer's input on some of the group's recent work.[8] In February 2001 the band took up residency at Rockfield Studios in Monmouth, Wales for a three-week trial run with Hoffer.[9] The band were unimpressed with the trial run, especially Simon Gilbert and Richard Oakes, who both had strong opinions on the results.[10] Nevertheless, the band decided to record the album with Hoffer and descended on Parkgate Studios, Hastings, in May with their new member Alex Lee, following Codling's departure.[11] Although the group recorded ten songs with Hoffer that Anderson said were the "best we've written,"[12] most of the material recorded with him producing was scrapped.[2][13] In September the group recorded two songs with ex The Stone Roses producer John Leckie. The versions of "Beautiful Loser" and "Positivity" were promising, however, Leckie had other commitments forcing Suede to reconsider their options.[14]

The group ultimately decided to work with Stephen Street for the album, and recorded most of the released material with him in two months.[15] Recording with Street began in January 2002, with the album finally being completed on March 23, 2002.[16] Anderson had high praise for the producer, saying "Stephen has just turned this whole album around, he really has. Every song he's just taken and done something special with... From the millions of other sessions we've done for this album, there's just no comparison."[16] Overall, seven different recording studios and four producers were used during the two year recording span for A New Morning, and costs estimated at around £1 million.[13][15] Street stated that the album was a return to classic song construction,[13] and bassist Mat Osman said that lyrically A New Morning is "Very positive and upbeat".[15]

Release and reception

A New Morning failed to crack the British Top 20, peaking at #24, which was the lowest chart position for the group at that time. The album remains the only studio album from Suede's catalog not to be released in the U.S.[17] The lead single for the album was "Positivity", which received a large amount of criticism from fans and the press.[18] NME writer Julian Marshall wrote that "Positivity" was "[G]reeted with an apathetic shrug by everyone but the most devoted".[19] Although it peaked at #16 on the charts and Anderson initially felt happy about the song,[12] his feelings towards it would change in time. He later said of "Positivity" that "When I first wrote it I thought it was a masterpiece but soon realized that many people were genuinely offended by it."[18] He would also go on to say "...If there was ever just one song that destroyed a band then it was 'Positivity' with Suede."[18] "Obsessions" was the second single released and despite being better received than "Positivity",[19] the song charted at a lower position and was ultimately the final single released from the album.

Despite the poor sales of the album, Suede still managed to deliver on a musical front as the album received moderate praise from critics. Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic felt that the album was a "...solid, succinct collection of tuneful, stylish modern-day glam pop, nearly the equal of Coming Up, whose blueprint this follows to a tee. Song for song, it's better and more consistent than Head Music." He concluded by saying that "A New Morning isn't a new beginning, nor does it take many risks, but it does find Suede in top form with good songs and an appealing record."[20] Jason Fox of NME gave the album a respectable 7 out of 10. He said: "...when Suede are good, they're great. 'Astrogirl' has shades of the almighty 'The Asphalt World'; 'When The Rain Falls' is as mournful as 'The Big Time'." On the album as a whole he said that "A New Morning sees Suede show off their vulnerable side again. It won't attract any new admirers but old fans will love them more for it."[21] Writing for The Guardian, Steve Poole had mixed views on the album and awarded it 3 stars out of 5. He said that "'Beautiful Loser' and 'Astrogirl' gesture at past glories like 'Heroine' or 'The Chemistry Between Us', but lack that assured melodic grandiosity." He did have positive praise for the album saying that "there are moments of beauty, in 'Untitled' and the delicate miniature 'Morning'," Overall, he said that "it's better than the tedious cacophony of Head Music, but it quails in the shadow of Coming Up."[22]

Aftermath

Suede released a compilation album Singles in 2003 which featured two new songs, "Love the Way You Love" and the single "Attitude". Shortly after the release of Singles the group issued a joint statement on November 5 explaining that outside of the remaining dates on their current tour, that Suede would not be working together for the foreseeable future: "Suede would like to announce that from next year (2004) they will be working on their own individual projects."[23] The announcement confirmed rumours of the group splitting up since the release of A New Morning.[23] Anderson later stated that he felt he had to break out of Suede as he was in an artistic dead end and needed to do "Whatever it takes to get my demon back."[24]

Track listing

No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Positivity"   Brett Anderson, Richard Oakes, Simon Gilbert, Mat Osman, Neil Codling 2:56
2. "Obsessions"   Anderson, Oakes 4:11
3. "Lonely Girls"   Anderson, Codling 3:13
4. "Lost in TV"   Anderson, Osman 3:40
5. "Beautiful Loser"   Anderson, Alex Lee, Oakes 3:38
6. "Streetlife"   Anderson, Lee 2:51
7. "Astrogirl"   Anderson, Lee 4:35
8. "Untitled... Morning"   Anderson, Oakes 6:01
9. "One Hit to the Body"   Anderson, Oakes, Codling 3:07
10. "When the Rain Falls"   Anderson 4:48
11. "You Belong to Me" / "Oceans" (hidden track, starts around 13:30) Anderson 17:29

2011 Remastered and Expanded Version [25]

Disc One: Demos

  1. "Obsessions (2KHz Demo)" – 3:52
  2. "Positivity (Hoffer Version)" – 3:01
  3. "Buckley (Simon) (Demo)" – 4:39
  4. "Bony (Untitled) [Stanbridge Demo]" – 3:54
  5. "Beautiful Loser [Parkgate Demo]" – 3:50
  6. "Lost In TV [Stanbridge Demo]" – 4:29
  7. "Lonely Girls [Parkgate Demo]" – 3:22
  8. "Cheap (Demo)" – 4:45
  9. "When The Rain Falls (Stanbridge Demo)" – 4:30

Disc Two: The B-Sides and more

All tracks written by Brett Anderson unless stated

  1. "Simon" – 4:34 (Anderson/Codling)
  2. "Cheap" – 4:42 (Anderson/Oakes)
  3. "One Love" – 4:01 (Anderson/Oakes/Osman/Tony Hoffer)
  4. "Superstar" – 4:11 (Anderson/Oakes/Codling/Osman/Lee/Simon Gilbert)
  5. "Colours" – 3:30
  6. "Campfire Song" – 5:35 (Anderson/Codling)
  7. "Cool Thing" – 3:05 (Anderson/Oakes/Osman)
  8. "Instant Sunshine" – 3:49 (Anderson/Codling)
  9. "UFO" – 3:28
  10. "Rainy Day Girl" – 4:13
  11. "Hard Candy" – 2:46
  12. "ABC Song" – 4:01 (Anderson/Oakes/Gilbert/Osman/Lee)
  13. "You Belong To Me" – 3:24
  14. "Love The Way You Love" – 3:35
  15. "Attitude" – 3:04 (Anderson/Osman)
  16. "Golden Gun" – 3:05 (Anderson/Osman)
  17. "Oxygen" – 4:05 (Anderson/Oakes)

Extra Tracks

  1. "Golden Gun (Z One Demo)" – 2:58
  2. "Love the Way You Love (Brett's original 4 track demo)" – 4:38
  3. "Refugees" – 4:31 (Anderson/Lee) (Previously unreleased)

DVD

Promo Videos

Bonus Videos

Suede: Up Close and Personal, Live At Mediacorp Studio, Singapore, 15 August 2002

Suede: Live At FNAC, Madrid, 20 September 2002

Bonus DVD Feature

UK singles charting

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b Cohen, Jonathan. "Billboard Bits: Fatboy Slim, Suede, Keb' Mo'". Billboard.com. March 23, 2001.
  2. ^ a b Raphael, Amy. "Waking Up to a New Morning...". guardian.co.uk. 15 September 2002.
  3. ^ Author unknown. "The Drugs Don't Work". NME.com. Sept 24, 2002.
  4. ^ Author unknown. "Brett heads for country house!". NME.com 13 July 2000
  5. ^ a b Barnett, p. 241-242
  6. ^ Barnett, p. 245
  7. ^ Carpenter, Troy. "London Suede Begins Recording New Album". Billboard.com. June 1, 2001.
  8. ^ Author unknown. "Brett Anderson - Toilet (Banter) Trader!". NME.com. June 27, 2001.
  9. ^ Barnett, p. 246
  10. ^ Barnett, p. 247
  11. ^ Barnett, p. 250
  12. ^ a b Author unknown. "Cred Music!". NME.com. Aug 16, 2001.
  13. ^ a b c Rutherford, Dani. "Suede's 'New Morning'". Xfm. July 2, 2003.
  14. ^ Barnett, p. 253
  15. ^ a b c Author unknown. "'Morning' Glory!". NME.com. Apr 30, 2002.
  16. ^ a b Barnett, p. 256
  17. ^ Carpenter, Troy. "Billboard Bits: Memorial Day, Anastasio, Suede". Billboard.com. May 12, 2003.
  18. ^ a b c Post by Brett Anderson on Nov 8, 2007. brettanderson.co.uk. Last Accessed Aug 28, 2008.
  19. ^ a b Marshall, Julian. "Suede: Obsessions", NME.com. November 21, 2002.
  20. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "A New Morning Review". Allmusic
  21. ^ Fox, Jason. "Suede : A New Morning". NME.com. 4 October 2002
  22. ^ Poole, Steve. "Suede: A New Morning". The Guardian. 27 September 2002
  23. ^ a b Author unknown. "Suede Split". NME.com. Nov 6, 2003.
  24. ^ Author unknown. "Rarities CD for Suede Fanclub Members". NME.com. Dec 1, 2003.
  25. ^ http://www.suede.co.uk/band/a-new-morning/