Against Me! as the Eternal Cowboy | |
Type: | Studio |
Artist: | Against Me! |
Cover: | Against Me! - Against Me! as the Eternal Cowboy cover.jpg |
Recorded: | July 15, 2003 and August 2003 |
Studio: | Goldentone Studios, Gainesville, Florida, Ardent Studios, Memphis, Tennessee |
Length: | 25:07 |
Label: | Fat Wreck Chords |
Producer: | Rob McGregor |
Prev Title: | Against Me! Is Reinventing Axl Rose |
Prev Year: | 2002 |
Next Title: | We're Never Going Home |
Next Year: | 2004 |
Against Me! as the Eternal Cowboy (sometimes referred to as just The Eternal Cowboy) is the second studio album by the punk rock band Against Me!, released on November 3, 2003 by Fat Wreck Chords. It was the group's first release for the label and their first album with bassist Andrew Seward, who had replaced original bassist Dustin Fridkin the previous year. The album was produced by Rob McGregor, who had also produced their first album Against Me! Is Reinventing Axl Rose (2002). Two singles were released in support of the album, "Cavalier Eternal" and "Sink, Florida, Sink", though each features different versions of the songs than those found on the album. As the Eternal Cowboy was Against Me!'s first album to reach the Billboard charts, reaching No. 36 on Top Independent Albums.
In 2009 Fat Wreck Chords released The Original Cowboy, a demo recording that the band had done in preparation for recording the album.
While on tour for Reinventing Axl Rose in 2002, Against Me! asked their label, No Idea Records, for $3,000 of financial support to help repair their tour van, which was broken and had no air conditioning. When the label refused, the band left No Idea and decided to sign to another label. The band then met Fat Wreck Chords employee Toby Jeg at a show in the Mission District of San Francisco, California. When Jeg offered the band the opportunity to record a 7" single, Grace asked if they could record a full-length instead; Jeg told Grace he would call the label head, Fat Mike, to discuss the idea. Fat Wreck Chords had previously considered offering the band a contract, but had voted it down as they thought they would be "stealing" the band from No Idea. A few months later in late 2002, Fat Mike called Grace, and the band was offered a $25,000 advance, significantly higher than the $800 budget Reinventing Axl Rose was recorded with; Grace agreed to this, and bluffed their way onto the label by claiming they had already written songs for their next record; this led to the band having to rush and quickly write new songs before recording.[1] [2]
Against Me! announced plans to record the album in July 2003, stating that they would work with producer Rob McGregor, who had recorded their first album and two previous EPs, and that the album would be released November 4.[3] The band planned to record at Ardent Studios in Memphis, Tennessee, where they could make an all-analog recording with very few overdubs.[4] Laura chose to record in Memphis as it was where The Replacements, who she was very into at the time, had recorded their albums. In order to ensure that McGregor would be familiar with the new songs by the time they went to Memphis, the band recorded demos for the entire album at his Goldentone Studios in their hometown of Gainesville, Florida on July 15 in the span of a few hours. The rest of the album was recorded that August at Ardent.[5] The version of "Cavalier Eternal" from the July 15 Goldentone session was used on the album, as Fat Wreck Chords head Fat Mike preferred it to the version recorded at Ardent.[6] The entire Goldentone demo session was released in 2009 by Fat Wreck Chords as The Original Cowboy.
Against Me! as the Eternal Cowboy was mixed and engineered by Pete Matthews and assistant engineer Adam Hill, and was mastered by Brad Blackwood at Euphonic Masters. Singer/guitarist Laura Jane Grace designed the album's artwork and layout, using photographs taken by Bryan K. Wynacht.[5]
Grace described the record in 2003 as a concept album "that explores love and war", explaining an ambiguity with regards to the album's title's reference to its songs: an Eternal Cowboy can be "symbolic of the power structure" or of "someone forever wandering, lost and alone".[7]
Clocking in at 25 minutes, As The Eternal Cowboy is the band's shortest album, and borders on being classed as an EP. Laura Jane Grace explained the album's speed was due to the band's collective anxiety on making records after bluffing their way onto the label; "All these songs are too fucking fast. We were just nervous when we went in and were tracking, and we recorded them all too fast. At that point, we had never messed around with listening to a click or remembering the tempo we were in. It was just whatever the mood was." The album was originally 24 minutes long, resulting in the band having to re-record parts of the songs to make them longer. Fat Wreck Chords did not care about the album's short length, something which Laura Jane Grace attributed to the label's focus on their new signing, None More Black, instead of the band.
The album's title and track listing were announced in September 2003, followed by news that the band's previous label No Idea Records would release the singles for "Cavalier Eternal" and "Sink, Florida, Sink", using alternate versions of the songs from the recording sessions, including the version of "Cavalier Eternal" recorded at Ardent.[8] [9]
Critic Charles Spano of Allmusic gave Against Me! as the Eternal Cowboy four stars out of five, remarking that "the Gainesville, FL, outfit may have embraced a slightly slicker production than with its fan favorite, Reinventing Axl Rose, but no matter how you stack it, As the Eternal Cowboy is an accomplished record of country-folk-punk that would only qualify as over-polished by the most hard-lined, anti-bar code punk kids' criteria." He also called it "one of the few early-2000s punk albums that transcends its genre and has the rock & roll clout to storm the mainstream." Nick Greer of Sputnikmusic also scored the album four out of five, noting that "This CD is the first in their discography to include a more rock feel to the music. The drumming is slower, the background vocals less prominent, the singing less gruff and less like screaming. Some songs are riff-based instead of chord progression-based, which utterly betrays punk and folk alike for rock and roll. This change, an obvious turnoff for original fans, isn't terrible."
Band
Production
The Original Cowboy | |
Type: | demo |
Artist: | Against Me! |
Cover: | Against Me! - The Original Cowboy cover.jpg |
Released: | July 7, 2009 |
Recorded: | July 15, 2003 at Goldentone Studios in Gainesville, Florida |
Genre: | Punk rock |
Length: | 22:11 |
Label: | Fat Wreck Chords |
Producer: | Rob McGregor |
Prev Title: | New Wave |
Prev Year: | 2007 |
Next Title: | White Crosses |
Next Year: | 2010 |
On July 7, 2009 Fat Wreck Chords released the entire July 15, 2003 demo session for Against Me! as the Eternal Cowboy under the title The Original Cowboy.[4] The recordings were mastered in 2009 by Emily Lazar and Joe LaPorta at The Lodge.[11] Reflecting on the session, Grace remarked that "The Original Cowboy was only meant to be a trial run, but, listening to it today, there's a part of me that feels foolish for ever recording these songs a second time."[4] The label posted an MP3 of the demo version of "Unsubstantiated Rumors (Are Good Enough for Me to Base My Life On)" for free download prior to the album's release.[12]
Corey Apar of Allmusic gave The Original Cowboy only two and a half stars out of five, calling it "one of those records that forces an important question – why was this released?", noting that the songs "basically sound the same" as on the original album, whereas "usually when demos surface, they're noticeably different than the finished songs – stripped down melodies on acoustic guitar, choruses missing harmonies, some of the lyrics might even be different. Yet 'Unsubstantiated Rumors' is the only song here with significant changes". He also criticized the lack of any extra material such as B-sides or live tracks.