Joel
Madden – Vocals Benji
Madden – Lead Guitar, Vocals Billy
Martin – Guitar and Keyboards Paul
Thomas – Bass Dean
Butterworth - Drums
From
the opening sounds of GOOD CHARLOTTE’s fourth album GOOD MORNING REVIVAL--which
launches with an artful, innovative sound collage that slides into the
irresistible “Misery”--it’s evident that the world-famous band who’ve sold over
nine million albums has revolutionized its sound for 2007. And by the time the
optimistic parting shot “March On” rolls around, it’s evident that this is the
vibrant, adventurous and unexpected rock
album that has redefined the group.
Returning
to work with producer Don Gilmore (Pearl Jam, Linkin Park, Avril Lavigne)--who
helmed Good Charlotte’s eponymous 2000 breakthrough debut--was the decisive
change that reinvigorated the band. After a pair of successful albums like
2002’s tremendously popular triple platinum The Young and the Hopeless and 2004’s subsequent million-selling
follow-up The Chronicles of Life
and Death (which were
realized with producer Eric Valentine), GC singer Joel Madden says its modus
operandi on GOOD MORNING
REVIVAL (Epic/Daylight)
was simply to “make a record that we loved and that felt good.”
In an
effort to achieve that goal, Gilmore challenged Joel and his identical twin,
Good Charlotte’s guitarist Benji Madden, to bring their A game. And he was
highly critical. “We threw out 50 or 60 songs and pretty much started over,”
Benji says. “Don was like, ‘I want to reinvent you guys. I want people to ask
themselves, ‘Is that Good Charlotte?’”
“Don wanted a fresh, new us,” Joel explains. “And he was
like, ‘If you guys are ready for that then I want to work with you. And we were
like, ‘Dude, we are so ready for that, you have no idea.’ He kept pushing us and
we’d keep bringing songs to him and he’d be like, ‘Nah. It’s not what I’m
looking for. And then he was like, ‘you know what? I’m going to take you guys
out of L.A. and you’re going to work without interruptions and then we’re going
to get it.’”
“We
wanted to love every track,” bassist Paul Thomas explains. “Our goal this time
out was to make it an awesome listen straight through. No fucking filler,
man.”
For the
Maddens, who--unlike their bandmates Paul, guitarist/keyboardist Billy Martin
and new Good Charlotte drummer Dean Butterworth--had become fixtures of the
paparazzi-addled L.A. nightclub scene as well as prominent DJs, the opportunity
to ship up to Vancouver to create new music was absolutely necessary and
remarkably fruitful.
The
first day in British Columbia the Maddens had the bulk of “Victim of Love,” the
contagious harmony-laden rock & roll
song, down. “We knew we were onto
something,” Joel explains. And literally every day it was like we were writing a
new song. After two months in Canada, isolating ourselves and getting away from
everything that we were comfortable with was amazing. We came away with most of
what you hear on this record.”
By the
time the group officially hit the studio with Gilmore, the downtime between its
last tour and its official reconvening was as therapeutic as it was
motivational. “The fact that we were able to stop, take a deep breath and kind
of find some appreciation for all that we’ve accomplished has a lot to do with
why this record sounds as vital and electrifying as it does,” says Martin. “We
used to just take every offer that came our way and we’d never get much in the
way of downtime. Now that we’ve had that time off it feels like a new band in a
lot of ways.”
One of the album’s highlights is its first single: the
blistering, unforgettable rocker “The River,” an impassioned song
about sin and redemption
that traverses the dark side of Los Angeles. For the song, the band brought longtime
friends and fellow musicians M. Shadows and Synyster Gates (of Avenged
Sevenfold) into the mix, marking the first time GOOD CHARLOTTE has officially
collaborated with another artist on an album. It turned out to be a natural fit for
both bands.
“We’ve been friends with
Avenged for a longtime. This wasn’t planned, but it ended up working out,” Joel
explains. “We were sitting around listening to some new music and they liked
that song so we asked them to jump on. It felt right and sounded really cool.
Aside from being friends of ours, we’re also fans of their music and since this
is our first collaboration, we couldn’t be happier that they’re a part of our
record.”
GOOD MORNING REVIVAL sustains its momentum with
tracks like the fuzzy, club-driven “Dancefloor Anthem” and the genre-defying,
Gorillaz-like You Tube favorite “Keep Your Hands Off My Girl” (which was
introduced to audiences on the band’s U.S. fall 2006 tour and will be the lead
single in Europe, Asia and South America). Good Charlotte has proven that it can
thrive in a number of musical realms.
“Honestly,
the first time I heard it, I was like, ‘Are you fucking kidding me? People will
never know that’s a Good Charlotte song,” concedes Billy. “And then Joel’s like,
‘Well, that’s the point!’ But soon enough it had me in its clutches.”
“It’s
kind of weird,” Joel says. “That song takes a lot of balls. I know some people
will listen to it and probably think, ‘No thank you.’ It’s definitely not as if
we sat down and penned a piece of art. It’s kind of like a sarcastic take on the
whole club scene.”
Elsewhere, on the hard-charging dance beat-steered rocker,
“Misery”--in which the singer observes the “tacky,
plastic, shallow, empty” people that distinguish the City of Angels--the
keyboards are really pronounced. While the gorgeous “A Beautiful Place,” which
evokes strains of Travis, The Beach Boys and the Flaming Lips, asserts that Good
Charlotte is as much of a bona fide pop band and serious chart contender
as it is a techno group or a punk quintet.
“I wrote
that song in Mexico,” Benji says of “A Beautiful Place.” “I was down there
during hurricane season and I was in this beautiful beach environment. I had a
night off and I was just thinking about how lucky I’ve been. “That’s a real Dean [Butterworth] moment. It was different when we
wrote it, but then Dean started playing that real pronounced drum part. The
drums are part of the hook. And it changed the whole sound.”
Speaking
of new vibes, the ups and downs of relationships propel rock anthems like “Break
Her Heart” and the opposites attract tack of “Something Else.” These songs,
along with the tender, melodic ballad “Where Would We Be,” find Joel--who
recently ended a lengthy, highly-publicized relationship with a certain movie
star--putting his feelings out there for public scrutiny. “I’m sure people are
going to say these songs are about this or that,” he admits. “Love is a big part
of me and I’ve accepted that and it’s in my music. And I’m not afraid to just
show it.”
Such
honesty coupled with success and personal growth couldn’t help but inform
GOOD MORNING REVIVAL. “This record shows a lot more of us than anything
we’ve done in the past,” Benji says. “Because it’s hard to be an angry kid, all
mad at the world when you’ve got it so good. I mean, that angst will always be
there for Joel and I because of the way we grew up. Our father wasn’t the best
role model as people know. But I definitely have a moment every day where I go,
‘Wow. What a rad life.’ I look at myself as being really
blessed.”
To which
Joel adds, “It’s been a roller coaster ride for us in our own little way. We
were up, then we kind of went down a bit. But now we’re up again. I think our
new record has really been as much about looking back
as it is about moving forward. We’ve realized a lot, and I’m really
grateful that we’re still doing what we love.”
Revitalized
and inspired, GOOD MORNING
REVIVAL finds Good
Charlotte at its creative pinnacle.
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