Amen (Amen album)

Amen
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 21, 1999
Recorded1998–1999
StudioIndigo Ranch Studios (Malibu, California)
Genre
Length42:44
Label
ProducerRoss Robinson
Amen chronology
Slave
(1994)
Amen
(1999)
We Have Come for Your Parents
(2000)
Singles from Amen
  1. "Coma America"
    Released: November 29, 1999[1]

Amen is the second studio album by American rock band Amen and its first for a major label, released on September 21, 1999, by I Am/Roadrunner Records. The first track on the album, "Coma America", became the band's first single. In 2001, the album was re-released with four new bonus tracks.

Amen was recorded by Casey Chaos on vocals, Shannon Larkin on drums, Sonny Mayo and Paul Fig on guitar and John Fahnestock a.k.a. Tumor on bass guitar. The album was produced by Ross Robinson. It sold around 15,000 copies in its first year.[2]

Background and recording

After moving to Los Angeles in the early 1990s, vocalist Casey Chaos formed Amen in 1994.[3] The band's debut album, Slave (1994), achieved little success upon release but would come to the attention of producer Ross Robinson three years later.[3] Robinson would soon sign Amen as the first act on his I Am Recordings imprint, distributed by Roadrunner Records.[3] Amen was recorded at Indigo Ranch Studios in Malibu, California between mid-1998 and early 1999.[4]

According to Joel McIver, the recording sessions for Amen "[went] down in popular legend as one of the most demanding interactions between man and [recording] console ever".[3] Chaos was infamously known to have been taken to hospital after slicing an artery in his hand and breaking his ribs whilst recording his vocals one day, and suffered black eyes due to the intensity of his singing.[1][5] The album was recorded back-to-back with Vanilla Ice's Hard to Swallow, Machine Head's The Burning Red and Slipknot's self-titled debut album; Chaos would end up helping Robinson with Vanilla Ice's album and was forced to sleep in one of the studio's vocal booths for six months as a result.[4]

Releases

In 2001, the album was re-released by Roadrunner Records and included the four unreleased songs from the single of "Coma America". At this point, Amen had already switched to Virgin Records.[6] The reissue was denounced by the band's frontman Casey Chaos, who released a statement, saying: "Don't buy our record. Just don't buy the fucking album. What I want to do is just press up 1000 CDs of the B-sides (from 'Coma America') and give them away at the shows for free or tell people to go to fucking Napster."[7]

In 2007, Metal Mind Productions re-released the album in a new digipack edition on gold disc, digitally remastered using 24-Bit process, with a limited run of 2,000 hand-numbered copies.[8]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic [9]
Kerrang![10]
Metal Hammer10/10[10]
NME7/10[11]

Alternative Press included the album in their list of the best punk albums from 1999.[12] Kerrang! placed Amen at number 22 on their list of "The 50 best albums from 1999" in a retrospective list from 2020.[13] Metal Hammer featured the album on their list of "The 10 most underrated Roadrunner Records albums", calling it "Possibly the most intense album that Roadrunner released in the late '90s (yeah, even including Slipknot)".[14][15] In 2016, Slipknot and Stone Sour frontman Corey Taylor named Amen as one of the "10 records that changed [his] life", saying:

"That album is so fucking good! I remember when it came out – I had just bought a CD player for my shitty car, we had three days off on the Slipknot tour and I finally got to drive my car. I got that piece of shit car way faster than it should have been able to go to the sound of that album."[16]

Track listing

All songs written by Casey Chaos.

No.TitleLength
1."Coma America"2:18
2."Down Human"3:44
3."Drive"3:08
4."No Cure for the Pure"3:23
5."When a Man Dies a Woman"3:30
6."Unclean"2:50
7."I Don't Sleep""2:25
8."TV Womb"2:38
9."Private"3:12
10."Everything Is Untrue"4:19
11."The Last Time"2:16
12."Fevered"2:28
13."Broken Design"2:23
14."Resignation/Naked & Violent"4:09
Total length:42:44
2001 bonus tracks
No.TitleLength
15."Whores of Hollywood"1:45
16."Lovers are Killers"2:55
17."Life Crime"1:23
18."Black God"4:14

Credits

Personnel

Production

  • Ross Robinson - producer, A&R
  • Chuck Johnson - engineer, mixing on "Coma America"
  • Rob Agnello - engineer
  • George Marino - mastering
  • Steve Evetts - mixing (tracks: 3, 5 to 18)
  • Joe Barresi - mixing (tracks 2 and 4)

References

  1. ^ a b Griffiths, Nick (1999). "Say Your Prayers". Rock Sound. Archived from the original on January 24, 2003. Retrieved May 8, 2023 – via whoresofhollywood.com.
  2. ^ Krgin, Borivoj (December 17, 2001). "CD Reviews - We Have Come for Your Parents". Blabbermouth.
  3. ^ a b c d McIver, Joel (October 2001). "Let Us Prey". Record Collector. No. 266. Parker Publishing. pp. 54–58.
  4. ^ a b Hermann, Andy (August 27, 2018). "The Story of Indigo Ranch, the Improbably Beautiful Birthplace of Nu Metal". Vice. Retrieved August 28, 2023.
  5. ^ Arnopp, Jason (September 25, 1999). "Damaged". Kerrang!. No. 769. UK: EMAP. p. 23.
  6. ^ "Amen", Discogs
  7. ^ "AMEN'S DEBUT HASN'T A PRAYER!". NME. February 1, 2001. Archived from the original on February 18, 2022. Retrieved June 7, 2022.
  8. ^ http://www.metalmind.pl/en/metalmind_news789.html[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ Amen at AllMusic
  10. ^ a b "Amen | Roadrunner UK Website". roadrunnerrecords.co.uk. Archived from the original on February 9, 2001. Retrieved May 5, 2023.
  11. ^ NME (September 12, 2005). "Amen". NME. Retrieved May 5, 2023.
  12. ^ Stegall, Tim (September 28, 2021). "1999's 15 best punk albums heralded a new age of mainstream rock". Alternative Press. Retrieved May 31, 2023.
  13. ^ "The 50 best albums from 1999". Kerrang!. July 10, 2020. Retrieved April 13, 2023.
  14. ^ updated, Stephen Hilllast (September 21, 2016). "10 obscure Roadrunner Records albums that should have been massive". louder. Retrieved April 13, 2023.
  15. ^ Louder (June 11, 2019). "20 classic albums turning 20 in 2019". louder. Retrieved April 13, 2023.
  16. ^ updated, Terry Bezerlast (November 20, 2016). "Corey Taylor: 10 albums that changed my life". louder. Retrieved April 13, 2023.