Black Sails in the Sunset | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | AFI |
Cover: | AFI - Black Sails in the Sunset cover.jpg |
Released: | [1] |
Length: | 46:04 |
Label: | Nitro |
Producer: | AFI |
Prev Title: | Black Sails EP |
Prev Year: | 1999 |
Next Title: | All Hallow's E.P. |
Next Year: | 1999 |
Black Sails in the Sunset is the fourth studio album by American rock band AFI. It was released on May 18, 1999, through Nitro Records. With the addition of guitarist Jade Puget as a permanent member, it is the first AFI album to feature the current line-up of the band.
The band members, sans Jade Puget, were roommates when guitarist Mark Stopholese departed AFI. Puget had just graduated from college and was living in Davey Havok's room while the band was on tour. They asked him to join the band as the new guitarist and immediately began writing the album; Puget had already written the basis for "Malleus Maleficarum". The band describes the album as forming the beginning of their subsequent sound, which contains more melodic vocals, as opposed to their first three albums, which maintain a fast, non-melodic punk sound. "God Called in Sick Today" marked the band's first ballad-style song.[2]
The album has been described stylistically as hardcore punk, horror punk,[3] and post-hardcore.
The band name and album title appears in the Caslon Antique font, in a semi-reflective silver on the outside cover. The band commissioned illustrator Alan Forbes to depict skulls emerging from the water on the cover. Bassist Hunter Burgan later shared a concept design from Forbes, which prominently depicts a literal skeleton and other faces and bones.[4]
The album cover illustration features an uneasy black-and-blue ocean below an orange sky and dark clouds. A black-sailed ship on the horizon sails to the far right.
The back cover shows the same horizon but crops out the ship, which appears in white on the CD label and behind the CD tray. The inner edge of the CD case reveals the message "Beyond and To All Time I Stand", a lyric from the hidden track, "Midnight Sun". The liner notes feature an illustration of a ship in a storm, as well as photos of the band and a more decorative band logo.
Black Sails in the Sunset was received well by critics. Alternative Press gave the album four-and-a-half out of five stars, commenting that "with new guitarist Jade Puget adding a sense of brooding, thespian eloquence to the disc's shadowy post-hardcore, AFI all but reinvented themselves," and "With longer, deeper, richer, more complex compositions than they've ever attempted before, Black Sails tackles everything from brooding hardcore ... to shimmering balladry..." The publication also went as far as to say that the album is "their first epic."
Decoy Music praised Havok's lyrical contribution to the album, commending his efforts to "find himself," saying "the way he expresses how he feels is pure poetry." Yarborough concluded by recommending the album to "anyone who likes heavy punk."[5]
In 2021, it was named one of the 20 best metal albums of 1999 by Metal Hammer magazine.[6]
All tracks recorded during the album's sessions unless otherwise noted.
Credits adapted from liner notes.[13]
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