Static Prevails Explained

Static Prevails
Type:studio
Artist:Jimmy Eat World
Cover:Static Prevails (Jimmy Eat World album - cover art).jpg
Alt:A blue-tinted photo of several chimneys on a rooftop
Recorded:1995
Genre:
Label:Capitol
Prev Title:Jimmy Eat World
Prev Year:1994
Next Title:Clarity
Next Year:1999

Static Prevails is the second studio album by American rock band Jimmy Eat World, released on July 23, 1996, through Capitol Records. Following the release of the band's self-titled debut album (1994), they signed to Capitol in mid-1995 for further releases. Carrier member Rick Burch replaced bassist Mitchel Porter, who left to become a Mormon missionary. Recorded at Sound City in Los Angeles, California, and at Big Fish, in Encinitas, California, Wes Kidd, Mark Trombino, and Jimmy Eat World acted as producers for the album.

Static Prevails saw the band move away from skate punk and pop-punk, and into a more aggressive sound consisting of post-hardcore, emo and punk rock. Preceded by a three-month United States tour, it was promoted with a mini tour of the country, a stint with the Smoking Popes and the Figgs, and a US tour with Sense Field in early 1997. A music video was filmed for "Rockstar", and "Call It in the Air" was released as the lead single in August 1996. The album received mixed reviews from music critics, who mostly commented on the vocals and guitarwork. It has since been viewed as a benchmark for the second wave of emo.

Background and development

Jimmy Eat World released their self-titled debut studio album in 1994, through local label Wooden Blue records.[1] As the members left high school, frontman Jim Adkins was part of a production company with Joel Leibow, co-founder of Wooden Blue. The production company listed itself in Maximumrocknroll guide Book Your Own Fuckin' Life, which assisted bands, promoters, and venues to book shows across the United States. After being contacted by Christie Front Drive for a show, Leibow asked the band to do a split single with Jimmy Eat World. Various major labels contacted the band and asked for a tape of their music. Loren Isreal, a talent scout from Capitol Records went to a show to check out Sense Field; however, the opening act, Christie Front Drive, caught his attention. Isreal asked them if they had new material he could hear, with the band responding by mentioning they had released a split with Jimmy Eat World.[2]

Sometime later, Jimmy Eat World played a benefit show; a staff member at Capitol was in the audience, and approached them. In mid-1995, they signed a development deal with the label that included one album, with the possibility for six more.[3] [4] As the band did not know any entertainment lawyers, they hired Lind's family attorney to gloss over the contract.[5] Around this time, bassist Mitchel Porter became a Mormon missionary at the insistence of his family, and left the band.[5] Carrier bassist Rick Burch, who guitarist Tom Linton had been best friends with since the seventh grade, replaced Porter.[3] Capitol set up the band to record demos for their next album with Jon Auer of the Posies in Seattle, Washington. They then visited Capitol's A&R person Craig Aaronson at his house in Los Angeles, California, where they showed him the demos they had done. Aaronson was discussing the band's songwriting process, which he felt made no sense; Adkins explained they used to write songs as a series of "cool part[s]" one after another.

Recording and production

When Jimmy Eat World was searching for an engineer to record Static Prevails, they came across former Drive Like Jehu member Mark Trombino. The band recorded two songs with him, "Opener" and "77 Satellites", both of which were released through record label An Industry for Outer Space on 7-inch vinyl.[6] At Capitol's insistence, Jimmy Eat World went to a rehearsal room in Los Angeles, having been told to write some new songs and rewrite others, being guided by a producer they had hired.[7] The band did pre-production at Mind's Eye Digital in Mesa, Arizona, with engineer Larry Elyea. Static Prevails was recorded in 1995 at Sound City in Los Angeles, and at Big Fish in Encinitas, California. While Jimmy Eat World wanted Trombino to produce the album, Capitol insisted on the production duo of Tom Rothrock and Rob Schnapf, who had previously produced for the likes of Foo Fighters and Beck. The label eventually relented, with Jimmy Eat World working with Trombino, and Wes Kidd of labelmates Triple Fast Action; the band were also given a producer credit.[7]

Billy Bowers and Jeff Sheehan served as assistant engineers at Sound City. When Jimmy Eat World recorded Seventeen", it initially featured the chorus line "You're only seventeen"; however, when they realized it sounded too similar to a song by Winger, Linton changed the lyrics, and the band re-recorded it.[8] Trombino, who also acted as engineer, mixed all of the tracks, apart from "Rockstar" and "Seventeen", in Studio C at Capitol Studios. Peter Doell, Billy Smith, and Steve Genewick worked as assistant engineers at Capitol. Rothrock and Schnapf mixed "Rockstar" and "Seventeen" at Sunset Sound, with Cappy Japngie serving as an assistant engineer. Captiol Records insisted on Rothrock and Schnapf mixing the tracks because the label planned to send them to alternative radio stations; subsequently, the vocals on both tracks ended up high in the mix.[7] Stephen Marcussen mastered all of the recordings at Precision Mastering, while Craig Aaronson served as the executive producer.

Composition

Static Prevails marked a shift from Jimmy Eat World's previous skate punk material in the vein of NOFX, Rocket from the Crypt, and J Church, into aggressive but melodic post-hardcore, emo, and punk rock,[9] by bands such as Seam, Tortoise, and Sunny Day Real Estate.[2] Drummer Zach Lind attributed this change in style to listening to Christie Front Drive, who they found to be "really melodic but still very powerful". Lind played in a more aggressive and noisier style of rock-oriented drumming, with elements of his punk roots.[10] Static Prevails splits lead vocals evenly between Linton and Adkins, which contrasted from the Linton-dominated Jimmy Eat World, where Adkins only sung lead on one track.[11] Ted Simon compared Adkins' vocals to those of the Replacements' frontman Paul Westerberg. In addition to playing the drums, Lind played the accordion and the concertina. Tracks such as "Seventeen", "Digits" and "Robot Factory" are reminiscent of releases on indie labels like Homestead and Twin/Tone Records.

Eric Richter of Christie Front Drive provided additional vocals on "Digits", while Kidd played an acoustic guitar on "Claire", Lind's ex-girlfriend Sarah Pont played violin, and Trombino contributed on the Moog synthesizer. The opening track, "Thinking, That's All", and "Call It in the Air" are screamo-esque songs, the former channeling the sound of Unwound.[11] [12] Linton said Adkins came up with the basic form of "Thinking, That's All", which the other members added to.[13] The band had been playing "Rockstar" live for sometime, prior to signing with Capitol, with Linton often mumbling his speech as he had no lyrics for it. It was only during the demo session with Auer that he wrote the words, as the label thought it was a hit-sounding song.[13] "Claire" evokes Texas Is the Reason with its quiet and loud sections, aided by a violin.[12] Lind said the song was "formative" for the band, as it showed them that a simplistic arrangement can "make something [sound] cool".[14] Linton said they took influence for it from Sunny Day Real Estate, particularly their song "In Circles" (1994), while Adkins the lyrics were "very journal entry-ish".[13]

"Call It in the Air", with its punk-esque sound, earned a comparison to Sense Field.[12] Lind said it exemplified the band's punk roots.[15] Lind said the opening drum part to "Seventeen" intentionally ripped off Drive Like Jehu, to the annoyance of Trombino.[16] [17] "Episode IV" is the first track the band wrote without any "loud, saturated guitar sounds", according to Adkins.[18] He came up with the basic structure, which he showed to Linton, who thought it had a sound akin to "Hurt" (1994) by Nine Inch Nails. Linton opted to whisper his vocals instead of singing to "keep it a really delicate song".[13] "Digits" was influenced by the work of Christie Front Drive; an earlier version of it was released on Jimmy Eat World's split with Christie Front Drive.[6] [13] "Caveman" features the sound of crickets throughout its length, which was achieved by taking a Neumann U67 microphone outside Big Fish Studios.[19] For sometime, Linton struggled with the song's lyrics; he only came up with them while in the bathroom at the studio "looking at aerosol cans and trying to find some rhythming words to match the verse".

The band used to open their shows with "World Is Static" as it would shift direction partway through. Alongside this, Adkins said they were employing choruses more often as they found enjoyment in repetition.[13] The drums in it were inspired by John Anderson, the drummer of Boys Life.[20] Staff members at Capitol asked Linton to tell Adkins to stop screaming as he was doing it for the majority of "World Is Static": "I was like, 'Yeah, I can't tell him that, because he'll just scream louder. Burch compared the hushed atmosphere of "In the Same Room" to falling snow. When mixing the song, Adkins said him and Trombino recorded radio static for its beginning, which Trombino compressed to make it sit around the vocals. The title of "Robot Factory" comes from a power plant in the McClintock area of Tempe, Arizona.[13] The closing track, "Anderson Mesa", features a string arrangement; its title references the observatory of the same name.[21] [22] [23] Adkins said it was about him living in Flagstaff, Arizona, where he previously attended college prior to dropping out.[13]

Release and promotion

After the band handed in Static Prevails, the staff at Capitol were "bummed [...] Just guys being like, 'Uh ... this is a lot different than what we expected'", according to Linton.[2] Jimmy Eat World toured the West Coast of the US in anticipation of the album between May and July 1996.[24] Capitol released Static Prevails on July 23, 1996.[25] The cover artwork features a sideways photo of chimneys, taken on a rooftop in Denver, Colorado, by Paul Drake.[26] The original vinyl version featured different artwork, and included the bonus 7-inch vinyl of "In the Same Room" and "77 Satellites".[27] The band made a music video for "Rockstar", which was included on some copies of the CD version of the album as enhanced content. It was filmed at Koo's Cafe, a DIY venue in Santa Ana, Calfironia, with directors Richard and Stefanie Reines of Drive-Thru Records.[13]

Capitol released "Call It in the Air" as the lead single on August 26, 1996, on a 7-inch vinyl, with "Rockstar" as the B-side.[28] [29] Jimmy Eat World promoted Static Prevails with a mini US tour along the West; later, the band embarked on the God Bless America tour with the Smoking Popes and the Figgs.[30] [12] [28] In February 1997, Jimmy Eat World embarked on a cross-country US tour with Sense Field.[31] Capitol felt the original version of "Seventeen" would work in the film Never Been Kissed (1999), and in return for letting the label use it in the film, the band met Drew Barrymore.[8] Adkins felt the lyrics of the original tied in well with the lead character of the movie.[13] Along with their third studio Clarity (1999), Static Prevails was re-released in 2007; "77 Satellites" and "What Would I Say to You Now" were included as bonus tracks.[32] Static Prevails, along with Clarity and their fifth studio Futures (2004), was re-pressed on vinyl in 2014.[33]

Reception

Static Prevails was met with mixed reviews from music critics. AllMusic reviewer Mike DaRonco stated that "what Static Prevails essentially lacks is the songwriting maturity that Jimmy Eat World could have perfected; but it's almost as if the studio heads at Capitol wouldn't let them so that there would be more room for radio-friendly pop songs. In the end, nobody won." Harry Guerin of RTÉ found it to be "largely a textbook emo record" that "never really keeps your attention throughout". According to him, the album has "too many instances of familiar sounding riffs and overwrought vocals [...] to be convincing". The staff at The New Rolling Stone Album Guide called it "very much of its time", complete with "anxiety-ridden vocals, lyrics of suburban melodrama, and screaming punk guitars".[34]

BBC Music writer Tim Nelson opened his review asking if the album title was "presumably meant ironically", as "staying still is one thing this propulsive pop album [...] doesn't do." In his eyes, the music "crosses the abyss between indie indulgence and soul-sucking corporate pap with aplomb".[35] Barbara Restaino of Lollipop Magazine said that she though she would "really like it" to begin with, however, Adkins and Linton's voices "started to annoy me" after a while.[36]

Michael Carriere viewed Static Prevails and Clarity as landmarks in the second wave of emo.[37] In 2012, Jason Heller of The A.V. Club noted, "As with so many punk bands that signed to a major during that decade, Jimmy Eat World gained precious few new fans—and lost many old ones—with Static Prevails."[38] Coinciding with the album's 25th anniversary, Bandbox and Captiol Records released a version of the album with an accompanying booklet written by Alex Rice. He highlighted five songs from the band's catalogue – "Believe in What You Want" from Clarity, "Bleed American" from Bleed American (2001), "Futures" from their fifth studio album Futures (2004), "Action Needs an Audience" from their seventh studio album Invented (2010), and "Pol Roger" from their ninth studio album Integrity Blues (2016) – that drew influence from Static Prevails.[13] Louder writer Alistair Lawrence said songs like "Claire" and "Digits" "create something uneven but distinct, which would unintentionally form part of the roadmap for emo's rite of passage through the late '90s".[39] Andrew Sacher of BrooklynVegan felt that "Claire" was the "earliest example of what Jimmy Eat World would achieve artistically" with Clarity.[40]

Track listing

All songs written by Jimmy Eat World. All recordings produced by Wes Kidd, Mark Trombino, and Jimmy Eat World.

Personnel

Personnel per booklet.[41] Jimmy Eat World

Additional musicians

Production

References

Citations

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Jimmy Eat World. Jimmy Eat World. 1994. Wooden Blue Records. booklet. I.S.Y. 004.
  2. Web site: Jimmy Eat World (for Now). Vice. Ozzi, Dan. October 12, 2016. October 11, 2020. October 12, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201012073143/https://www.vice.com/en/article/qbvvmb/jimmy-eat-world-for-now. live.
  3. Web site: Jimmy Eat World Biography & History. AllMusic. Leahey, Andrew. October 11, 2020. October 12, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201012073143/https://www.allmusic.com/artist/jimmy-eat-world-mn0000852688/biography. live.
  4. Web site: Jimmy Eat World – Reflecting on the 20th Anniversary of 'Clarity'. https://web.archive.org/web/20190223034646/http://www.undertheradarmag.com/news/jimmy_eat_world_reflecting_on_the_20th_anniversary_of_clarity/. Under the Radar. King, Ian. February 22, 2019. February 23, 2019. October 13, 2020.
  5. Web site: Brave New World. https://web.archive.org/web/20160110172154/https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/news/brave-new-world-6414247. Phoenix New Times. Mehr, Bob. September 27, 2001. January 10, 2016. July 21, 2021.
  6. The Singles. Jimmy Eat World. 2001. Golf Records. booklet. CDHOLE049.
  7. Web site: Clarity prevails. Dallas Observer. Crain, Zac. March 4, 1999. October 13, 2020. October 11, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201011140752/https://www.dallasobserver.com/music/clarity-prevails-6398007. live.
  8. Web site: f.a.q.. https://web.archive.org/web/19991129023344/http://www.jimmyeatworld.net/faq.html. Jimmy Eat World. November 29, 1999. October 13, 2020.
  9. Keiper 2002, p. 83
  10. Web site: Zach Lind of Jimmy Eat World. Modern Drummer. May 2004. October 11, 2020. October 12, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201012073144/https://www.moderndrummer.com/2004/05/zach-lind/. live.
  11. Web site: Dissected: Jimmy Eat World (with Jim Adkins). Consequence of Sound. Caffrey, Dan; Kaye, Ben; Gerber, Justin. June 14, 2013. October 11, 2020. 3. January 16, 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150116080100/http://consequenceofsound.net/2013/06/dissected-jimmy-eat-world-with-jim-adkins/3/. live.
  12. Web site: Rock 'n' roll with Jimmy Eat World. https://web.archive.org/web/20030425040019/http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/1996/sep/09-13-96/arts/arts2.html. The Michigan Daily. Bartos, Colin. September 13, 1996. April 25, 2003. October 13, 2020.
  13. Bandbox Issue #44: Jimmy Eat World. Rice, Alex. 2022. Bandbox/Capitol Records. booklet. B0023654-01.
  14. Web site: Zach Lind on Twitter: 'Claire, one of our best songs we've ever done...'. https://web.archive.org/web/20210724094825/https://twitter.com/zlind76/status/1418649223378071553. Twitter. Lind, Zach. July 23, 2021. July 24, 2021. September 2, 2021.
  15. Web site: Zach Lind on Twitter: 'Call it in the Air! This is us being the best version...'. https://web.archive.org/web/20210723232222/https://twitter.com/zlind76/status/1418650100260249602. Twitter. Lind, Zach. July 23, 2021. July 23, 2021. September 2, 2021.
  16. Web site: Zach Lind on Twitter: 'Seventeen - this intro drum part is a direct...'. https://web.archive.org/web/20210724024527/https://twitter.com/zlind76/status/1418650769377533953. Twitter. Lind, Zach. July 23, 2021. July 24, 2021. September 2, 2021.
  17. Web site: Zach Lind on Twitter: 'Mark was nice though while being mildly annoyed...'. https://web.archive.org/web/20210724070858/https://twitter.com/zlind76/status/1418650978920796161. Twitter. Lind, Zach. July 23, 2021. July 24, 2021. September 2, 2021.
  18. Web site: Jimmy Eat World on Twitter: 'episode 4 is probably the first song we wrote with no...'. https://web.archive.org/web/20210723192318/https://twitter.com/jimmyeatworld/status/1418652909739286529. Twitter. Jimmy Eat World. July 23, 2021. July 23, 2021. September 2, 2021.
  19. Web site: Jimmy Eat World on Twitter: 'we moved a u67 outside at big fish studios to record crickets...'. https://web.archive.org/web/20210724082100/https://twitter.com/jimmyeatworld/status/1418655217923461123. Twitter. Jimmy Eat World. July 23, 2021. July 24, 2021. September 2, 2021.
  20. Web site: Zach Lind on Twitter: 'Intro Drum part prob heavily influenced by John...'. https://web.archive.org/web/20210723193625/https://twitter.com/zlind76/status/1418656235952345088. Twitter. Lind, Zach. July 23, 2021. July 23, 2021. September 2, 2021.
  21. Web site: Jimmy Eat World Bio Con't.. https://web.archive.org/web/19990220004051/http://hollywoodandvine.com/jimmyeatworld/bio.shtml. Capitol Records. February 20, 1999. October 11, 2020.
  22. Web site: Zach Lind on Twitter: 'Anderson Mesa - Jim is this a real place near Flagstaff?...'. https://web.archive.org/web/20210724001122/https://twitter.com/zlind76/status/1418659284393463809. Twitter. Lind, Zach. July 23, 2021. July 24, 2021. September 2, 2021.
  23. Web site: Jimmy Eat World on Twitter: 'yeah, it's where they have a giant telescope...'. https://web.archive.org/web/20210723194936/https://twitter.com/jimmyeatworld/status/1418659536798314497. Twitter. Jimmy Eat World. July 23, 2021. July 23, 2021. September 2, 2021.
  24. Static Prevails. Jimmy Eat World. 1996. Capitol Records. sleeve. DPRO-11231.
  25. Anon. 1996, p. 59
  26. Web site: Jimmy Eat World answer your questions / In Depth. Drowned in Sound. Diver, Mike. March 11, 2008. May 12, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20190607162236/http://drownedinsound.com/in_depth/3036199-jimmy-eat-world-answer-your-questions. June 7, 2019. live.
  27. Static Prevails. Jimmy Eat World. 1996. Capitol Records. sleeve. 7243 8 32404 1 8.
  28. Reece 1996, p. 21
  29. "Call It in the Air". Jimmy Eat World. 1996. Capitol Records. sleeve. S7-19204.
  30. Web site: Givin' Us Static. Phoenix New Times. Simons, Ted. August 8, 1996. October 11, 2020. October 11, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201011134614/https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/music/givin-us-static-6423860. live.
  31. Martin 1997, p. 10
  32. Web site: AP Exclusive: Jimmy Eat World to reissue first two albums. Alternative Press. November 16, 2006. August 7, 2016. August 22, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160822204033/http://www.altpress.com/index.php/news/entry/archive_1516. live.
  33. Web site: Jimmy Eat World announce 'Futures' 10-year anniversary tour. Alternative Press. Crane, Matt. June 24, 2014. May 12, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200306224058/https://www.altpress.com/news/jimmy_eat_world_announce_futures_10_year_anniversary_tour/. March 6, 2020. live.
  34. Brackett; Hoard eds. p. 432
  35. Web site: Jimmy Eat World, Clarity. BBC Music. Nelson, Tim. August 7, 2007. August 13, 2007. https://archive.today/20071021085323/http://www.bbc.co.uk/music/release/8xzf/. October 21, 2007.
  36. Web site: Jimmy Eat World – Static Prevails – Review. Lollipop Magazine. Restaino, Barbara. May 1, 1997. September 7, 2021. September 7, 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210907074545/https://lollipopmagazine.com/1997/05/jimmy-eat-world-static-prevails-review/. live.
  37. Web site: Jimmy Eat World: The Past is History. Shepherd Express. Carriere, Michael. December 13, 2007. October 11, 2020. October 12, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201012073207/https://shepherdexpress.com/music/music-feature/jimmy-eat-world-past-history/. live.
  38. Web site: How Jimmy Eat World's 'The Middle' became the best song for a bad time. Jason. Heller. The A.V. Club. 4 September 2012 . September 6, 2012. October 12, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201012073208/https://music.avclub.com/how-jimmy-eat-world-s-the-middle-became-the-best-song-1798233196. live.
  39. Web site: Every Jimmy Eat World album ranked from worst to best. https://web.archive.org/web/20220622163900/https://www.loudersound.com/features/every-jimmy-eat-world-album-ranked-from-worst-to-best. Louder. Lawrence, Alistair. June 22, 2022. June 22, 2022. July 6, 2022.
  40. Web site: Jimmy Eat World's 10 best deep cuts. https://web.archive.org/web/20220907143654/https://www.brooklynvegan.com/jimmy-eat-worlds-10-best-deep-cuts/. BrooklynVegan. Sacher, Andrew. September 7, 2022. September 7, 2022. September 7, 2022. live.
  41. Static Prevails. Jimmy Eat World. 1996. Capitol Records. booklet. CDP 7243 5 39615 0 3.