Burn Burn | ||||||||||
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Studio album by Our Lady Peace | ||||||||||
Released | July 21, 2009 | |||||||||
Recorded | February 2007 – June 2009 Los Angeles, California, US[1] |
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Genre | Alternative rock | |||||||||
Length | 38:03 44:54 (Deluxe edition) |
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Label | Coalition Entertainment | |||||||||
Producer | Raine Maida | |||||||||
Our Lady Peace chronology | ||||||||||
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Burn Burn is the seventh and most recent studio album by Canadian alternative rock band Our Lady Peace, released in North America on July 21, 2009.[2][4] The album's title is based on a quote by Jack Kerouac from his 1957 novel On the Road.[5]
The album, recorded at vocalist Raine Maida's home studio in Los Angeles between 2007 and 2009,[1] was released independent of any major label under the band's longtime management company Coalition Entertainment. Sony Music (the band's previous label) distributed the album in Canada,[2][6] and WMG's Independent Label Group did so in the United States.[2]
Burn Burn is Our Lady Peace's first album not to have involved collaboration with an outside producer, having instead been produced by band vocalist Raine Maida.[6] The album's release marked the longest gap between Our Lady Peace studio albums to date, with their previous album, Healthy in Paranoid Times, having been released in August 2005. At 38 minutes, Burn Burn is also their shortest album.
Contents |
"It took us six other records to figure out how we truly wanted to make records."
Production on Burn Burn began in February 2007, several months before the release of bandleader Raine Maida's solo album The Hunter's Lullaby. According to Maida, Burn Burn is a "proper rock album"—featuring a return to the raw originality of the band's first album Naveed, though a "little more mature".[6]
Maida produced the album himself, noting how he was excited to "not have anybody intrude on sessions".[6] The band had previously worked with producer Bob Rock for their two preceding albums, as well as Arnold Lanni for their first four albums.
Having been defunct since 2007, the official Our Lady Peace fansite was relaunched on March 11, 2009 in anticipation of Burn Burn.[8] The album's original cover was revealed with the relaunch,[8] and on May 1 was officially changed to portray a darker and more simplistic tone than the original.[8]
Burn Burn finished production in early March 2009, and the first single "All You Did Was Save My Life" was released on May 25. The album, as well as a deluxe edition entitled Burn Burn Burn, was released in North America on July 21, 2009.[2] Burn Burn debuted at #3 on the Canadian Albums Chart, selling over 11,000 copies in its first week.[9]
Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [10] |
Alternative Addiction | [11] |
Billboard | [12] |
Boston Globe | (positive)[13] |
Chartattack | [14] |
Melodic.net | [15] |
PopMatters | [16] |
Sputnikmusic | [17] |
Burn Burn received negative-to-average reviews,[18] with PopMatters calling it "their most intimate, immediate album to date". Allmusic compared the album's sound to latter-day Goo-Goo Dolls and 1980s U2, but also noted that the album "remain(s) deficient in hooks and melodies", and that the music "simmered" instead of having "boiled with indignation"[19] as it did in the band's previous albums.
Billboard praised the seventh track "Never Get Over You" as a "killer ballad", but ultimately criticized the album for being too "ballad-heavy" and "one dimensional".[20] Burn Burn doesn't particularly sound like anything Our Lady Peace has done in the past, according to Sputnikmusic, but "maybe that is what is so exciting about (it)".[21]
Chart (2009) | Peak position |
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Canadian Albums Chart[22] | 3 |
U.S. Billboard 200[22] | 41 |
The album contains 10 tracks of the 16 that were composed[23]—and is approximately 38 minutes in length. Lyrics were mostly written by Raine Maida, and the first track was co-written by Maida and former The Nixons vocalist Zac Maloy.
The official tracklisting for Burn Burn was released in May 2009, but was altered in early June to replace the track "The Right Stuff" with "The End is Where We Begin".[24] Sequencing of remaining tracks was also affected by the change. A Deluxe Edition of the album is also being released, with bonus tracks "The Right Stuff" and "Time Bomb" included, as well as a bonus DVD with studio performance footage and music videos for All You Did Was Save My Life and bonus track The Right Stuff.
No. | Title | Notes | Length |
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1. | "All You Did Was Save My Life" | First released single | 3:49 |
2. | "Dreamland" | Third single | 3:36 |
3. | "Monkey Brains" | 4:31 | |
4. | "The End Is Where We Begin" | Second single | 3:23 |
5. | "Escape Artist" | Original title of the album was this song's title | 4:02 |
6. | "Refuge" | 4:16 | |
7. | "Never Get Over You" | The title of the album originates from a lyric in this song | 3:57 |
8. | "White Flags" | 3:18 | |
9. | "Signs of Life" | 3:14 | |
10. | "Paper Moon" | 3:57 |
No. | Title | Notes | Length |
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11. | "Time Bomb" | formerly titled "Waiting for Something to Happen" | 3:31 |
12. | "The Right Stuff" | 3:24 |
Additional background vocals on "Signs of Life" by Eladio Reyes.
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