Young Modern | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by Silverchair | ||||
Released | 30 March 2007 24 July 2007 |
|||
Recorded | Seedy Underbelly Studios, Los Angeles, April–November 2006 | |||
Genre | Alternative rock, art rock | |||
Length | 45:12 | |||
Label | Eleven Eleven/Atlantic/Independent |
|||
Producer | Daniel Johns Nick Launay |
|||
Silverchair chronology | ||||
|
||||
Singles from Young Modern | ||||
|
Young Modern is the fifth and final album by Australian alternative rock band Silverchair, released on 30 March 2007. Young Modern entered the Australian albums chart at #1 on 15 April 2007, their fifth consecutive album to do this, making them the first band to accomplish this feat in Australia. The album opened at #8 on the New Zealand albums chart.
Young Modern received four Aria Awards at the 2007 Aria Awards, including Single of the Year (for "Straight Lines") and Album of the Year.
Contents |
Silverchair spent five weeks in the Australian Hunter Valley in late 2005 to practice and sharpen material that Daniel Johns had previously written. Following this, the band recorded intermediate full band demo versions of the songs. To record the final versions of these songs, the band travelled to Los Angeles to record with record producer Nick Launay at Seedy Underbelly Studios. Johns co-produced the album alongside Launay.[1] During the L.A. sessions, additional songs were written and recorded. Van Dyke Parks was hired to compose orchestral arrangements for three songs: "If You Keep Losing Sleep", "All Across The World" and the 3 part epic "Those Thieving Birds/Strange Behaviour".[2] Johns and Parks travelled to Prague to have the orchestral arrangements recorded by the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra.[3]
Unlike previous Silverchair albums, Young Modern was funded independently by the band, rather than by a record label. This was done to "remove the added label pressures", according to Billboard.[4] The name Young Modern comes from a nickname given to Silverchair's lead singer, Johns, by Van Dyke Parks during their time working together on Diorama in 2002.[5] The album features various guest appearances from Australian and international musicians such as Luke Steele, Julian Hamilton and Paul Mac.[6]
Young Modern was released on 30 March 2007 in Australia, and 24 July 2007 in the United States of America.[7] The album was released in several versions—the original contained 11 songs, while the iTunes version contained an extra song, "English Garden". A limited edition DVD was also released, which contained a documentary entitled "The making of Young Modern", as well as the "Straight Lines" music video.[7]
The first single from Young Modern, "Straight Lines", was released on 20 March 2007, a week before the album's release.[8] "Straight Lines" entered the ARIA Charts at #1 on 25 March 2007, and held that rank for four weeks.[9] It also peaked at #11 on the RIANZ charts.[10] "Straight Lines" was certified double platinum by the Australian Recording Industry Association.[11] On 28 October 2007, "Straight Lines" won "Best Selling Australian Single" at the ARIA Music Awards of 2007, as well as "Single of the Year".[12]
A second single, "Reflections of a Sound", was released on 14 July 2007 as a digital single.[13] The music video for "Reflections of a Sound" was first screened on 8 June 2007, and was produced by Damon Escott and Stephen Lance of Head Pictures.[14]
The third single from Young Modern was "If You Keep Losing Sleep", released on 9 October 2007.[15] The song spent one week on the ARIA charts at #16, before dropping out of the charts.[9] The music video for "If You Keep Losing Sleep" was orchestrated by Van Dyke Parks, and was produced by Damon Escott and Stephen Lance, who also created the "Reflections of a Sound" video.[16] The video was described by Molly Meldrum as "the best video I’ve seen from Australia ever".[17] Young Modern's fourth single, "Mind Reader", was released as an internet-only single on 23 February 2008. It had first appeared on radio in January that year.[18]
Professional ratings | |
---|---|
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [19] |
Entertainment Weekly | (A-)[20] |
The Phoenix | [21] |
PopMatters | [22] |
Rolling Stone | [23] |
Young Modern was received with high acclaim from reviewers. Allmusic's review said the album contained "catchy melodic hooks, inspired lyrical themes, and stunning string arrangements", and called it the "pinnacle of the band's fascinating development". Reviewer Clayton Bolger heaped praise on most of the songs on the album, calling "Straight Lines" an "instant rock classic".[5]
Rolling Stone reviewer David Fricke called Silverchair's members "young (in their late twenties)...[and] aggressively modern",[24] and Entertainment Weekly called the album a "polished glam-rock suite".[25] Sputnikmusic reviewer Tyler Fisher also approved of the album, although he did not think it was as good as it was made out to be, commenting "It is not as good as the ARIA awards will undoubtedly make it out to be but still one of the better mainstream listens of the year."[2]
During his weekly entertainment segment on the popular Australian breakfast show Sunrise, Australian music personality Molly Meldrum made a sincere comparison of the album to the classic Beatles album Sgt. Pepper.
Nick Pearson of PopMatters, meanwhile, was highly critical of the album. He began his review with the statement "Once you reach the level of intellectual maturity where you can tell the difference between cryptic but poetic lyrics and nonsensical crap, you have outgrown Silverchair", and continued in the same fashion throughout. Pearson likened Johns to Kurt Cobain, saying they share a common inability; "his inability to write lyrics". His only praise was for the third single released from the album, "If You Keep Losing Sleep", stating "'If You Keep Losing Sleep' is proof that Silverchair are capable of recording interesting music".[26]
All songs written by Daniel Johns unless otherwise noted.[7]
|
|
Chart (2006–2007) | Providers | Peak position |
---|---|---|
Billboard 200 | Billboard | 70[28] |
Billboard Top Independent Albums | Billboard | 6[28] |
Australian Album Chart | ARIA | 1[29] |
New Zealand Album Chart | RIANZ | 8[30] |
Preceded by Grand National by The John Butler Trio |
Australian ARIA Albums Chart number-one album 9–30 April 2007 |
Succeeded by On a Clear Night by Missy Higgins |
Preceded by Tea and Sympathy by Bernard Fanning |
ARIA Album of the Year 2007 |
Succeeded by Apocalypso by The Presets |
|