The End of the World (Adam and the Plants album) explained

The End of the World
Type:studio
Artist:Adam and the Plants
Cover:The End of the World (Adam and the Plants album).jpg
Released:1 May 2015
Studio:Room 210, Passaic, New Jersey
Producer:Adam Copeland
Genre:Indie rock
Length:37:42
Label:Self-released
Next Title:Born with the Gift of Magic
Next Year:2017

The End of the World is the debut studio album from the American rock band Adam and the Plants.

Content

The ten-track folk rock album was self-released on compact disc and digital download, on 1 May 2015. It was produced by Adam Copeland at Room 210, in Passaic, New Jersey, mixed by Skylar Adler at Skylar Ross Recording, and mastered by Alan Douches at West West Side Music. The End of the World features electric guitars, strings, and subtle bass and percussion. Copeland sites musical influence from the artists Neil Young, and Alex Chilton, and the genres of krautrock, shoegaze, and 1990s hip-hop. Copeland explains The End of the World is thematically about "work[ing] through personal struggles and demons that brought him from the end of one world, or life, to start another." The song "Texas" was released as a single, in the Autumn of 2014.

Tris McCall says the song "Texas" is "a good one [...] from the ever-sharp songwriter Adam N. Copeland [and] a showcase for his storytelling and scene-setting, and it's set to guitar accompaniment that feels reminiscent of Good Earth-era Feelies." The Jersey Journal calls The End of the World "great [and] really dynamic," describing it as an "apocalyptic journey [that] features "three guitars fighting over the scraps of a rhythm" and the gentle sound of waves crashing onto the shore." NJ.com describes it as a "wonderfully smart and accessible alt-rock album."

Personnel

References

Citations
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