Leitmotif (album) explained

Leitmotif
Type:studio
Artist:Dredg
Cover:Leitmotif album cover art by Dredg.jpg
Released:May 30, 1999
Recorded:Summer 1998
Studio:Brilliant Studios, San Francisco, California
Length:54:28
Label:Woven Recordings
Interscope (re-release)
Prev Title:Orph
Prev Year:1997
Next Title:Extended Play for the Eastern Hemisphere
Next Year:2001

Leitmotif is the debut studio album by American rock band Dredg. The album was originally self-released on May 30, 1999,[1] through the band's own label, Woven Recordings, before being nationally re-released in the United States by Interscope Records, with different artwork, on September 11, 2001. A "leitmotif" is also a recurring musical theme associated within a particular piece of music with a particular person, place, or idea. The album is currently out of print.

Content

Leitmotif was recorded in ten days.

Interscope Records re-released Leitmotif unchanged from its original version, both in the recording and in the booklet's text, essentially duplicating the band's original, independently released demo.

The newer case features the uniform brown paper package with white text as pictured, to the lower right, with only the phrase "We live like penguins in the desert. Why can't we live like tribes?" printed on the inner sleeve; a phrase used in the lyrics to Triangle on Dredg's next album, El Cielo. The older case features the cover pictured, to the upper right, as well as more brown and blue topographical photos on the case and the booklet which are similar to the cover. Aside from the difference in artwork, the two versions of Leitmotif remain nearly identical.

Most of the lyrics can be found at Traversing ; the lyrics to parts of several verses (and most of one whole song) are unknown outside the band. All the music found on this album is created by Dredg; there are no samples. As claimed in the booklet, "all instruments and sounds are real. No samples."

Leitmotif was produced and engineered by Dredg and Travis Crenshaw, and was recorded at Brilliant Studios in San Francisco, CA.

In May 2010, to celebrate the album's 11th birthday, the band re-released a limited edition of the album on vinyl, with only 500 copies produced.[2] In addition, the band performed the album in its entirety during the tour dates surrounding the anniversary. During the live performance of the album, Gus Lyndon Farwell, who sang the operatic parts on track 6, "Movement III: Lyndon", on the original recording, made a guest appearance on the song.

Track listing

Release history

RegionDateLabelFormat
United StatesMay 30, 1999Woven RecordingsHDCD
September 11, 2001Interscope RecordsCD
May 11, 2010Ohlone RecordingsVinyl LP

Notes and References

  1. Book: Inc, CMJ Network . CMJ New Music Report . 2002-11-18 . CMJ Network, Inc. . en.
  2. Web site: Note from the band. dredg. 22 May 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20160215193619/http://www.dredg.com/news/10461. 15 February 2016. dead.