Our Gangs Dark Oath Explained

Our Gang's Dark Oath
Type:studio
Artist:Aiden
Cover:Aiden - Our Gangs Dark Oath.jpg
Released:June 1, 2004
Recorded:January 2004
Genre:Post-hardcore
Length:44:56
Label:Dead Teenager
Producer:Steve Carter
Prev Title:A Split of Nightmares
Prev Year:2004
Next Title:Nightmare Anatomy
Next Year:2005

Our Gangs Dark Oath is the debut studio album released by post-hardcore band Aiden on June 1, 2004. Originally, the album was only available in North America, but it was recently re-released in Europe and again by Victory Records.

"Our Gang's Dark Oath" is also the name of the second chapter of "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" by Mark Twain.[1]

Background, music and lyrics

Our Gangs Dark Oath is a post-hardcore album with elements of punk rock and sometimes screamo. The album's style is similar to the band AFI, with lyrics being about singer Wil Francis' history of drug abuse and struggles from being on his own by his mid-teen years and leaving jail (Francis was in his early 20s when Our Gangs Dark Oath was recorded). Francis got kicked out of school in 8th grade and never went to high school.[2] Francis said during Aiden's early years, he was angry at the world but later stopped caring about it.[3]

World by Storm

The beginning of "World by Storm" contains a sound clip from the courtroom scene of Boondock Saints.

Also, this song contains two segments of silence along with two hidden tracks. "World by Storm" ends at 3:50 followed by silence until 8:00. Then an untitled hidden track begins, a track which contains nothing but a piano. The "Piano Track" plays in regular time until 10:30, at which point the song fades out for just a second and exactly the same song begins playing in reverse. This plays until 13:00.

At this point, the song ends and another segment of silence begins. This silence ends at 15:10 and another untitled hidden track begins: this one containing acoustic guitar and the lead singer's voice. This track leads to the end of the song and album. The breakdown of "World by Storm" is as follows:

Critical reception

AllMusic gave the album a neutral review, writing, "Aiden offer up a competent, if not slightly generic, dose of post-hardcore with a dark punk edge" and noting that "the group sounds more like the younger cousins of My Chemical Romance or AFI who just happened to be weaned in a screamo scene."

Chart positions

Chart Position
Top Independent Albums32
Top Heatseekers Albums30

Personnel

Aiden
Production

References

  1. Griffiths, Mark. Kerrang! #1261, May 16, 2009. Treasure Chest. An Intimate Portrait Of Life In Rock. wiL Francis, p. 58
  2. Web site: Rock Eyez - Interview with wiL Francis- Vocals - Aiden 2009.
  3. Web site: UTG INTERVIEW: William Control | Under the Gun Review.