Evanescence (Evanescence album)

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Evanescence
A cover with a black background and vapor passing over the band's name, with an iridescent-colored light shining behind it.
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 7, 2011 (2011-10-07)
RecordedFebruary 22, 2010 – April 2010[a]
April 2011 – June 2011[b]
StudioBlackbird, Nashville, Tennessee
Genre
Length47:15
LabelWind-up
ProducerNick Raskulinecz
Evanescence chronology
The Open Door
(2006)
Evanescence
(2011)
Lost Whispers
(2016)
Singles from Evanescence
  1. "What You Want"
    Released: August 9, 2011
  2. "My Heart Is Broken"
    Released: November 11, 2011
  3. "Lost in Paradise"
    Released: May 25, 2012

Evanescence is the third studio album by American rock band Evanescence, released on October 7, 2011, by Wind-up Records. The band began writing the album in June 2009. Its release was delayed several times; on February 22, 2010, the band entered the studio with producer Steve Lillywhite but later stopped working with him because he "wasn't the right fit". At the time the album was scheduled for an August or September 2010 release, but Lee later announced that Evanescence had postponed recording to write more material. In April 2011, the band returned to the studio with producer Nick Raskulinecz. Evanescence is the first Evanescence album to be written as a band, with Lee, guitarist Terry Balsamo, guitarist Troy McLawhorn, bassist Tim McCord and drummer Will Hunt co-writing the music together.

According to Lee, the band brought influences from Björk, Depeche Mode, Massive Attack, MGMT, and Portishead to the album. Evanescence's songs contain sounds and influences characteristic of nu metal, hard rock, and symphonic metal. The album received generally positive reviews from music critics, and debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 chart with 127,000 copies sold in its first week. It also topped four other Billboard charts: Rock Albums, Digital Albums, Alternative Albums, and Hard Rock Albums. The album was successful worldwide, appearing on the charts of over 20 countries. The band promoted Evanescence by premiering songs online on a number of websites and appearing on several television shows.

The first single from the album, "

promotional single on June 11. In 2011 the band embarked on the Evanescence Tour, their third worldwide tour, to promote the album with The Pretty Reckless and Fair to Midland
.

Background

After finishing the tour for Evanescence's previous album,

harp.[5][6] After about 18 months, she began writing music again.[1] At the beginning of 2009, she wrote a song with her friend programmer Will "Science" Hunt that was in an electronic direction, which inspired her to bring some of that sound into the next Evanescence album.[5][7] Lee and Hunt worked on programming-driven music at her home studio and in Texas.[8][7] In the early sessions, she went into the studio with producer Steve Lillywhite, who had contacted Evanescence's record label wanting to work with her.[4][8] In a June 2009 post on the Evanescence website, Lee wrote that the band was writing material for an album planned for release the following year.[9] In November 2009, the band played two one-off shows in New York and Brazil.[10][3] Lee said that she "ended up falling back in love with Evanescence again" and collaborated with the rest of the band, with the album becoming "a group project."[1]

Recording

Evanescence and Will "Science" Hunt entered the studio with producer Steve Lillywhite on February 22, 2010 to begin recording the album. Sessions took place in

Bjork, Nine Inch Nails, and music with a lot of programming as inspiration. She said that the idea was to "take synthetic and atmospheric sounds and find a way to blur the line between organic and synthetic",[8][10][12] and called it a "rhythmically driven record".[7] The Roots drummer Questlove contributed drums on a song titled "You Got a Lot to Learn".[13] In March, Lee posted two audio clips from the sessions on her Twitter,[14][15] and stated in an interview that the band were working on about 16 songs.[10] At the time, the album was intended for an August or September 2010 release.[16]

The Lillywhite sessions ended in April 2010.[11] On June 21, 2010, Lee announced that Evanescence had suspended recording to continue work on the album and "get our heads into the right creative space". She also stated that their label Wind-up Records was experiencing "uncertain times" which would further delay the album's release.[17] Lee later stated that Lillywhite "wasn't the right fit" for the band and it ultimately wasn't "coming together right". When the rest of the band came into the sessions with Lillywhite and they tried to record the songs, "we just weren't all the way there. it wasn't sounding right".[18][19] Lee said that some of the songs recorded under Lillywhite, which were more stripped-down and programming-based, weren't right for Evanescence and she realized were more fitting to a solo project.[18][1] In a June 2011 interview, label president Ed Vetri said that he supported Lee's decision to restart: "One thing we do at Wind-up is, we're patient. I[f] it's not right, it's not coming out. If it takes a year or four years, [we're] going to take the time it needs to write the right record."[1]

Lee and the rest of the band worked together on reworking the songs and writing more music as a group. "We've really relied on each other. And everyone being a part of this album, from the ground up, is an entirely new approach for us", Lee stated; "there's nobody that's just coming in to play guitar. Everybody's invested."

jammed and sat down and wrote together, which was a first for Evanescence as before this album Lee had always written the music by herself or with one other person.[6][1] The band then went into the studio with producer Nick Raskulinecz, whose recent work they liked.[19][20] They began recording with Rasculinecz in early April 2011, at Blackbird Studio in Nashville.[21][3] On June 12, Lee announced that guitarist Troy McLawhorn was officially back in Evanescence, and confirmed the album's release date to be October 4, 2011.[22] The label changed the release date to October 11.[23]

Raskulinecz said that songs started with Lee's piano melodies, and Lee, Balsamo and McCord were the core of the music he had heard at that time. When drummer Will Hunt came in "things evolved a little bit more, and he was in on some of the songwriting", and guitarist McLawhorn was also "really important in bringing some great ideas to the table".[20] Raskulinecz called Hunt "an animal on the drums" and said that the "rhythm section of [Hunt] and [McCord] is on fire" and "everybody in [the band] is a great musician".[20]

Alongside the layering of parts, Raskulinecz and engineer Paul Fig focused on the base of the album being entirely performance-based. Raskulinecz had the band play and record multiple live takes, then "

comping from there, and then going back and punching in."[20] Fig stated that Raskulinecz "likes to concentrate on the performance, so it's usually beginning to end. ... Generally we'll have six or seven playlists of drums we like and we'll comp something together from those performances. But he really doesn't want it to sound like somebody chopped it up and then slapped it together."[20] Hunt played a 26-inch kick drum, which Fig miked with a Sennheiser e 602 on one side and a FET 47 on the other. His drum kit's toms were recorded with AKG 451s set in hypercardioid.[20]

Apart from piano, Lee recorded various keyboards including a

PZM on the floor beneath, and AKG C-12s farther away.[20] Lee recorded demo vocals without headphones with a Shure SM7. "When we did the vocals for real, obviously we did it differently. She's an amazing singer—she can sing all day long", Raskulinecz stated. Fig added that in the few days that Raskulinecz was working somewhere else, he was working with her on vocals and he "was worried maybe I was pushing her too hard. But she's like an athlete. She stepped to the plate and hit it out of the park."[20] Lee spent about a month recording vocals, stating that she really pushed herself vocally.[24] Her lead vocals were recorded with a long-body Neumann U 47, and her backing vocals were captured with a Telefunken Elektroakustik 251.[20] Some of the songs have 30 to 40 tracks of vocals.[20]

Balsamo and McLawhorn played multiple guitars through a variety of large and small amps, including Marshalls (2250 and JCM 800), AC-30s, Bogner Shiva and Uberschall, and Buddha Superdrive combo amps. A combination of guitar mics were used, including Shure 57s, FET 47s, AKG 441s, Mojave Audio MA-100s, and Sennheiser 421s, going across four amps. For some overdubs, they used an MA-100, MA-200 and a [Neumann] 87. Raskulinecz said that as there were a lot of piano parts on the songs there aren't many guitar-style overdubs.[20]

After the instruments and most of the vocal tracks were completed, Chris Vrenna contributed more electronic sounds and textures. There are over 30 pairs of stereo tracks of electronics on every song. "It’s little parts and noises and ambience; more synth, lots of low bass. This album has a massive low end", Raskulinecz noted.[20]

The last stage of the process was recording the strings from David Campbell, who worked with Lee on Evanescence's previous albums.[20][7] Strings were recorded at Avatar Studios in Manhattan in two days.[20] In the final mix, most songs had over 100 tracks.[20] Raskulinecz said that "To play one song back, we had to have two Pro Tools rigs and a tape machine. We completely maxed out the first Pro Tools rig with just the band—guitar, bass, drums, vocals, piano. Then there was another Pro Tools rig that had all of the programming and electronics and some of the strings on it. And then there was a Studer 24-track chasing with all the rest of the strings on it."[20] The album was mixed by Randy Staub at The Warehouse in Vancouver, on Studio 1's SSL G Series console, and Ted Jensen mastered it at Sterling Sound in New York City.[20]

Lee said of working with Raskulinecz:

Nick is an awesome producer. He really helped me get the plan and have confidence in the decisions that we made. For me, I have a lot of ideas and sometimes it just comes down to "OK, everything that I'm doing I have two options!" ... as I'm doing these things I'm asking him from the vocal booth or the piano room or whatever, "Which one of these should I do?" He's good at helping me make a quick decision. I really trust his opinion because he makes great records.[24]

In December 2015, Lee posted her cover of "Baby Did a Bad Bad Thing" by Chris Isaak, which she recorded in 2009 was intended to appear on the initial album. She explained that the record company had rejected the original project: "The suits had a change of heart during a frustrating recording process and I was told that none of the songs I'd been pouring my heart into for a year, in any form, were good enough- time to start over. I was devastated. I was furious. I was determined to take control of the situation and use it to push myself forward. It ended up making me angry enough to write Evanescence's heaviest album- which I love- and we did end up using 3 songs from the original project."[25]

Title and concept

In a June 2011 Kerrang! interview, Lee said that the album would be self-titled[26] and was "about the band; it's more of a band record." Lee explained that the concept "to me is about falling back in love with this thing, with Evanescence, with what I've obsessed over for a decade, longer than that."[3] There were originally many album-title ideas, but Lee said that as the project became more collaborative "it just felt like this is who we are, it's a band. And to have that feeling in the music where the band is so pumped up, it was just the only title that felt right. It's about falling back in love with this thing in a major way."[18] In an MTV News interview, she said that 16 songs had been recorded but not all would be included on the album.[3] It was later decided to release two versions of the album: a deluxe edition with all 16 songs and a standard edition with 12.[27]

Evanescence's cover artwork was introduced on the band's website on August 30, 2011.[28] It is their first album cover which does not feature Lee.[28] In an interview, she discussed the cover: "Well, both of our other records are me on the cover, and I think it's cool to have that photo, you know, that people can look at and go, 'OK, that's who that is.' But I feel like, by now, they know who we are, and I wanted something really different. I didn't feel like we had to put a photo on the cover, I wanted it to be more mysterious and more about Evanescence itself, not just me."[28] The cover, black with vapor behind the band's name, is a play on the meaning of "evanescence" ("to dissipate like vapor").[28]

Composition

Musical style and inspiration

Looser. This album is not so glossy or tight. It's more instinctive. It's big on groove and there's some real musicianship that we're really proud of. Everyone knows our sound but that's just a foundation and we've danced on top of that! It's still very heavy and dark but we were having fun with it.

— Amy Lee, about the album's sound[1]

During the Steve Lillywhite sessions, Lee described the album as a "rainbow of sounds" with heavy, stripped-out songs.[29] According to Lee, it had electro influences and a lot of drum programming fused with live drums, citing Taiko drums.[7][30] As for the lyrical theme, she said the songs were about what she was going through at the time, and there were moments of "Hey, I'm over it and I'm good" and others of fun sarcasm, saying "everything's not the most dramatic thing in the world." She also added that there were songs that would get "really, really deep."[8] The album's themes were unknown worlds, the ocean's abyss, life within dreams, strength, detachment, love and liars.[31] During the later sessions with Nick Raskulincecz, she discussed two of the album's themes: brokenness ("Brokenness has become a little bit of theme, without necessarily offering a solution") and oceans.[19] In a later MTV interview, Lee mentioned other themes: "the quest for freedom, and then there's songs that are just about falling in love".[32] Lee wrote a few songs on the harp, including "Secret Door" and "My Heart is Broken."[19] She said that Evanescence used new and vintage instruments (such as a harp, synthesizers and the Moog Taurus Pedal) and recorded the ballads "Secret Door" and "My Heart Is Broken".[19] In a Kerrang! interview, Lee said she was inspired by her life and personal relationships.[26]

Colorful singer with long, dark hair onstage
Lee cited Björk (pictured) as an influence on Evanescence.

According to Lee, the album was fun but not in a "poppy way" and the band enjoyed its recording. She was inspired by her relationship with Evanescence's fans: "I can really hear myself singing about my relationship with Evanescence and with the fans. There's always one big relationship on a record that I sing about the most. I feel like my big relationship on this album [is] with Evanescence itself, and with the fans. I think lyrically you're hearing a lot about a relationship, a struggle with a relationship or love in a relationship, and mostly I'm singing about that."[33][34]

For the album, the band was influenced by artists such as Björk, Depeche Mode, Massive Attack, MGMT, and Portishead.[35][10] Lewis Corner of the Digital Spy website noted that rumbling guitars and dainty strings were present on most of the album's songs: "Amy Lee declares over roaring guitars and classical strings, reinforcing their medieval influences as opposed to the electronic sound they've been purporting."[36]

This marks the first Evanescence recording since their 1998 self titled demo to not feature backing choruses, which were introduced until the Origin demo album in 2000.

Music and lyrics

Lee shares writing credits with other members of the band on 11 of the standard-edition album's 12 songs.

strings. In the chorus Lee sings, "I will never find a way to heal my soul/ And I will wander 'til the end of time/ Torn away from you/ My heart is broken".[41][43]

The fifth track, "The Other Side", has churning, chunky guitars, a

electro-pop song with grinding guitars and a "weeping" piano.[49]

Release and promotion

Evanescence was first released in snippets, with portions of "What You Want", "The Other Side" and "Lost in Paradise" previewed on

On August 8, Evanescence appeared on "MTV First: Evanescence" to introduce the album's first single, "What You Want", with a live performance and an extended interview.

mastered songs from the new album ("What You Want", "The Change", "The Other Side", "My Heart Is Broken" and "Lost in Paradise") to a selected audience of 30.[61][41] In September 2011, Lee said that the band wanted the album to be released as soon as possible given the long wait time, with her noting, "I'm not waiting until 2012, we have to push this through and make it happen this fall".[24] Evanescence appeared at the Rock in Rio festival on October 2, 2011, performing "What You Want", "Made of Stone", "The Change", "The Other Side", "My Heart Is Broken", "Sick" and several songs from their previous two albums.[62] Before Evanescence's US release, Lee appeared on the Billboard website on October 11 to promote the album.[63][64] The band appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on October 15, performing "What You Want" and "Going Under".[65] On December 12, Evanescence appeared at the Nobel Peace Prize Concert, where they performed "Lost in Paradise" and 2003's "Bring Me to Life".[66] On February 1, 2012, the band performed "My Heart Is Broken" on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno,[67] and two days later they played "Made of Stone" and "The Other Side" on Conan.[68]

Tour

Young woman with long, dark hair singing and playing piano onstage
Lee performing on October 25, 2011, during the Evanescence Tour

Evanescence began their tour to promote the album with a concert at War Memorial Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee, on August 17, 2011.[69] This was followed by performances at Rock on the Range in Winnipeg on August 20,[70] Rock in Rio on October 2[71][72] and at the José Miguel Agrelot Coliseum in Puerto Rico on October 6.[69][73] The band began the first US leg of their tour on October 10 in Oakland, California, and finished it in New York City.[18] Evanescence then played several concerts in the United Kingdom, beginning at London's Hammersmith Apollo on November 4 and finishing the leg on November 13 at the O2 Academy Birmingham.[74] Supported by The Pretty Reckless,[75] Fair to Midland[74] and Rival Sons,[76] the tour's set list included songs from Evanescence's three albums.[27] Lee said, "We're definitely focusing mainly on the new material. We're really excited about that music the most – obviously it's the newest – but of course we'll be playing some from both of our other albums too. I guess I'd say in general, our show's on the heavy-energy side, so we'll be running around singing a lot of fast songs."[77]

The Evanescence Tour continued in 2012 with concerts in the United States, Asia and Europe,

Prairie Capital Convention Center in Springfield, Illinois and ended on September 2 at the Outer Harbor in Buffalo, New York.[78]

Singles

"

UK Singles Chart, respectively.[81][82] Its video, filmed in a Brooklyn, New York warehouse on July 30, 2011 with the band performing the song live, was directed by Meiert Avis and released on September 13.[83][84]

"My Heart Is Broken" was distributed to hot, modern and adult-contemporary radio stations on October 31, 2011[85] and to pop stations the following day as the album's first mainstream single. Its video was released in January 2012, and the song was distributed to alternative and modern-rock stations on February 13.[86][87] The next mainstream single, "Lost in Paradise", was released internationally on May 25. Its video, released on February 14, 2013, focuses on Evanescence's tour with footage of the band performing the song filmed by fans around the world. "The Other Side" was a promotional single which was distributed to modern-rock stations on June 11[88] and alternative stations the following day.[89] Although a lyric video was uploaded to the band's YouTube channel on August 30, 2012, Lee said that no other video would be made for the song.[90]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic63/100[91]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[92]
Digital Spy[36]
Entertainment WeeklyB[93]
The Gazette[94]
IGN8/10[95]
Kerrang![47]
Los Angeles Times[96]
Rolling Stone[97]
Spin5/10[49]
USA Today[98]

Evanescence received generally positive reviews from music critics. Review aggregator

Montreal Gazette's Mark Lepage praised the album's musicality, calling it "one rolling, chugging, plangent epic."[94]

Entertainment Weekly's Kyle Anderson wrote, "When [Lee] uses baroque orchestral accoutrements to wage an air assault on her demons ... she's more than just the token girl in the pit."[93] In Digital Spy, Lewis Corner said that outside of the electronic excursions Evanescence's "melodious rock sensibilities remain firmly in tact" and "we wouldn't want it any other way."[36] IGN's Chad Grischow stated that Evanescence "delivers on the orchestral-laced hard rock thrust and Amy Lee's soaring vocals ... with a few surprising experiments along the way".[95] Writing for Winnipeg Free Press, Rob Williams said the mix of musical styles "makes everything sound big and alive" and "with so many extra bells and whistles, despair has never sounded so epic."[100] Theon Weber of Spin thought that Lee's performance was not restrained enough and "Evanescence gets lost in the cavernous spaces carved out by their unsecret weapon."[49] Nick Catucci of Rolling Stone said that Lee "remains one of hard rock’s leading ladies" but he did not find the album's "sometimes syrupy mix of piano, guitar and strings" to be as cathartic or "saucy" as Evanescence's previous album.[97]

goth-metal melodrama."[96] NME complimented its heaviness and minimal ballads.[104] Guitar World's Scott Iwasaki wrote that the album infuses classical music and 1990s influences and "brings Evanescence to a new level".[105] Metal Hammer listed it as one of the 50 best metal albums of the 2010s, praising the band's stylistic fusion and pairing with Raskulinecz, and deeming the album "sturdy and slick".[106] Kerrang! ranked it at number 11 on its list of the best albums of the year, and defined it as "their richest, most diverse body of work to date".[107]

Commercial performance

Evanescence debuted at number one on the

Hard Rock Albums charts in the United States,[111] and was 2011's 141st best-selling album in that country.[112] As of August 2012, Evanescence had sold 421,000 copies in the US.[113] On December 9, 2020, the album was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for shipments of over 500,000 units.[114]

The album sold more than 2,000 copies on its first day of sales in the United Kingdom[115] and debuted at number four on the UK Albums Chart with 26,221 copies sold in its first week.[116] It was certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) on August 22, 2014, denoting shipments in excess of 100,000 copies.[117] The album entered the Canadian Albums Chart at number two, selling 9,000 copies in its first week.[118] On January 12, 2012, the album was certified gold by Music Canada for shipments of over 40,000 units in Canada.[119] Evanescence debuted and peaked at number five in Australia,[120] was certified gold by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) for shipments of over 35,000 copies.[121]

Track listing

All tracks are written by Evanescence, except where noted

No.TitleLength
1."What You Want"3:41
2."Made of Stone" (Evanescence, William B. Hunt)3:32
3."The Change"3:42
4."My Heart Is Broken"4:29
5."The Other Side"4:05
6."Erase This"3:55
7."Lost in Paradise"4:42
8."Sick" (Evanescence, B. Hunt)3:30
9."End of the Dream" (Evanesence, B. Hunt)3:49
10."Oceans"3:38
11."Never Go Back"4:27
12."Swimming Home" (Evanescence, B. Hunt)3:43
Total length:47:15
Japanese edition bonus track[122]
No.TitleLength
13."The Last Song I'm Wasting on You" (originally appeared as a B-side to "Lithium") (Lee)4:07
Total length:51:22
Deluxe edition bonus tracks[123]
No.TitleLength
13."New Way to Bleed[123]"3:46
14."Say You Will"3:43
15."Disappear"3:07
16."Secret Door" (Evanescence, B. Hunt)3:53
Total length:61:44
iTunes Store deluxe edition pre-order bonus track[123]
No.TitleLength
17."What You Want" (Elder Jepson Remix)3:18
Total length:65:02
Deluxe edition bonus DVD[124]
No.TitleLength
1."What You Want" (music video)3:41
2."Making the What You Want Music Video – Day 1"6:43
3."Making the What You Want Music Video – Day 2"10:05
4."Behind the Scenes – In the Studio"8:25
5."Behind the Scenes at the Photoshoot"3:03
6."On the Songs"8:41
Total length:40:38

Personnel

Credits adapted from the liner notes of Evanescence.[125]

Evanescence

Additional musicians

  • Chris Vrenna – programming, additional keyboards
  • William B. Hunt – additional programming on "Swimming Home"
  • David Campbell – string consultant
  • Antoine Silverman – concertmaster
  • Maxim Moston – violin
  • Claire Chan – violin
  • Suzy Perelman – violin
  • Michael Roth – violin
  • Sarah Pratt – violin
  • Hiroko Taguchi – violin, viola
  • Jonathan Dinklage – violin, viola
  • Entcho Todorov – violin
  • Dave Eggar – cello
  • Anja Wood – cello
  • Claire Bryant – cello
  • Pete Donovan – bass

Technical

  • Nick Raskulinecz – production
  • Paul Fig – engineering
  • Nathan Yarborough – engineering assistance
  • Randy Staub – mixing
  • Zach Blackstone – mix assistance
  • Ted Jensen – mastering
  • Phyllis Sparks – harp technician
  • Mike Simmons – guitar technician, bass technician
  • John Nicholson – drum technician
  • Antoine Silverman – contractor

Artwork

  • Michelle Lukianovich – art direction, package design
  • Amy Lee – art direction, package design
  • Chapman Baehler – photography

Charts

Certifications

Certifications for Evanescence
Region Certification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[121] Gold 35,000^
Canada (Music Canada)[119] Gold 40,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[117] Gold 124,473[169]
United States (RIAA)[114] Gold 500,000

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Release history

Release dates and formats for Evanescence
Region Date Format Label
Australia[170] October 7, 2011 Universal
Germany[171] Wind-up
Ireland[172] Virgin
United Kingdom[173] October 10, 2011
Poland[174] Wind-up
France[175] EMI
Denmark[176] Capitol
Netherlands[177] Universal
United States[178][179] October 11, 2011 Wind-up
Italy[180] Virgin
Canada[181] EMI
Finland[182] October 12, 2011
Japan[122]
Sweden[183] Wind-up
Mexico[184] October 25, 2011
China[185] March 1, 2012 Starsign

Notes

  1. ^ Steve Lillywhite sessions
  2. ^ Nick Raskulinecz sessions

References

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  13. ^ Amy Lee (March 23, 2010). "Amy Lee of Evanescence Live from the EVR Booth on the Lillywhite Sessions". The Lillywhite Sessions (Interview). Interviewed by Steve Lillywhite. East Village Radio.
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