Death Cab For Cutie – New Year

Description

Kintsugi
Studio album by

Released March 31, 2015
Recorded 2014
Genre
Length 45:00
Label
Producer Rich Costey
Death Cab for Cutie chronology
Codes and Keys
(2011)
Kintsugi
(2015)
Thank You for Today
(2018)
Singles from Kintsugi
  1. Black Sun
    Released: January 26, 2015
  2. The Ghosts of Beverly Drive
    Released: March 8, 2015
  3. “Good Help (Is So Hard to Find)”
    Released: April 8, 2016

Kintsugi is the eighth studio album by American indie rock band Death Cab for Cutie, released on March 31, 2015, on Atlantic Records. Recorded at Eldorado Recording Studios, in Burbank, CaliforniaKintsugi is produced by Rich Costey, and is the first Death Cab for Cutie album to feature an outside producer. The album was nominated for Best Rock Album at the 58th Grammy Awards.

During the production of the album, lead guitarist and founding member Chris Walla announced that he was leaving the band, though he continued contributing to the recording and creative process as a full member until the album’s completion.

Production

The band first hinted that they were working on a follow-up to 2011’s Codes and Keys by posting several photos of their studio and recording equipment to Instagram in October 2013.[3][4] In October 2014, the band spoke to Stereogum about their then-untitled eighth album, their experience working with an outside producer, and Walla’s departure.[5]

The album title is derived from kintsugi, a type of Japanese art involving fixing broken pottery, and as a philosophy of treating breakage and repair as part of the history of an object, rather than something to disguise.

Composition

On the album, Gibbard returns to an evocative, revealing writing style he had avoided on prior albums,[6] and frequently refers to places versus people: “Culver CityBeverly Drive, “the cliffs of the Palisades” — each serves as a clearly defined setting on an album that looks beyond Gibbard’s divorce to ponder the larger systems of power and privilege at work in L.A.,” observed writer Mikael Wood. “No Room in Frame” addresses in general terms a decaying love, which widely interpreted as inspired by Gibbard’s divorce from actress Zooey Deschanel.[7][8] “The Ghosts of Beverly Drive” was written early on,[9] and focuses on Gibbard’s time living in Los Angeles. In the song’s chorus, Gibbard finds himself “return[ing] to the scene of these crimes, where the hedgerows slowly wind.”[10] “Little Wanderer” expresses hope for a love across distance, ending with an embrace in an airport.[11] Walla was reportedly not a fan of the acoustic “Hold No Guns”, and suggested it should be withheld from the album, but was overruled.[6]

Gibbard based the celebrity critique “Good Help (Is So Hard to Find)” on an amalgam of individuals he met living in Hollywood.[7][12]

Release

The album’s title, track listing, and artwork were revealed via social media on January 12, 2015, with the song “Black Sun” to be released as the lead single from the album.[13] The songs “Black Sun”, “The Ghosts of Beverly Drive”, and “No Room in Frame”, received their live debut during a performance at The Crocodile in Seattle on January 20, 2015, two months prior to the album’s release. Black Sun was officially released on January 26, 2015, following several weeks of snippets of lyrics being posted on various social media sites and the official website.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia