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Army of Anyone (album)

Army of Anyone is the only studio album by American rock band Army of Anyone. The band consisted of Richard Patrick of Filter, Robert DeLeo and Dean DeLeo of Stone Temple Pilots, and Ray Luzier, prior drummer of David Lee Roth's band and current drummer of the nu metal band Korn. The album was released on November 14, 2006, in America and December 4, 2006, in the UK. It was produced by Bob Ezrin and mixed by Ken Andrews. Despite largely positive reviews from critics, the album sold well below the expectations set from Filter and Stone Temple Pilots past multi-platinum albums, stalling around 88,000 copies sold. The album produced two singles, "Goodbye" and "Father Figure", the former peaking at no. 3 on the U.S. Mainstream Rock chart.

Army of Anyone
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 14, 2006 (2006-11-14)
StudioThe Village Studio, Santa Monica
GenreRock,[1] Hard rock, post-grunge[2]
Length49:24
LabelThe Firm Music
ProducerBob Ezrin, Army of Anyone
Singles from Army of Anyone
  1. "Goodbye"
    Released: July 28, 2006
  2. "Father Figure"
    Released: March 2007

Background Edit

The album's origin traces back to Richard Patrick and the DeLeo brothers taking breaks from their respective bands, Filter and Stone Temple Pilots. Shortly after releasing Filter's third album, The Amalgamut, Patrick checked himself into rehab in October 2002, ceasing all band activity and touring for the time being.[3] Around the same time, in late 2002, Stone Temple Pilots broke up due to increasing problems with lead singer Scott Weiland and his issues with substance abuse.[4]

Once out of rehab, Patrick began writing new material for a fourth Filter album.[5] Upon Patrick hearing that Dean and Robert DeLeo had wanted to work with him on a song for the album, he invited them over to do so.[6] The result of their meeting was a track called "A Better Place",[7] and a twelve-hour jam session.[7] Patrick felt so strongly about the music that he put the fourth Filter album on hold, despite his record label urging him to continue, in order to start a new band with the DeLeo brothers.[6] Ray Luzier was called to audition after the DeLeo brothers were impressed with Ray's sound check at a show. Luzier joined the band later after a successful auditioning.

Writing and recording Edit

Formal recording for the band's debut album commenced in 2005.[5] They entered the studio with Bob Ezrin, the producer behind Pink Floyd's epic rock opera The Wall.[5] The band had recorded more than 30 songs in Patrick's home studio, 11 of which would make their way on to their debut album, and another 2 being released as b-sides.

The album was originally slated for an early 2006 release through Columbia Records.[7] However, most of the personnel who backed them at the label were fired during the process of recording the album, making them opt to change their label.[8] Instead, the band signed to The Firm Music, a division of the band's management company The Firm, Inc.[9] Beyond the label switching, Patrick commented further delay was caused by personal commitments, such as members family's getting married and having children.[9] During this time, they also opted replace the album's original mix, with ones done by sound engineer Ken Andrews.[9] They were able to fit this into their schedules because they used Andrew's Pro Tools set up at his house, rather than renting out time at a high budget studio.[9]

Release and promotion Edit

The album was finally released on November 14, 2006. The band's first single was the track "Goodbye", which gathered significant radio airplay, peaking at number 3 place in the U.S. Mainstream Rock chart.[10] However, the second and final single, "Father Figure", failed to match that success, only peaking at number 31 in the same chart.[10]

The band started touring in support of the album on November 18, including performances of "Goodbye" on Late Night with Conan O'Brien and Last Call with Carson Daly.[11] In addition to playing songs from the album, they also included covers of the Stone Temple Pilots songs "Big Bang Baby," "Vasoline," and "Interstate Love Song," as well as "Hey Man, Nice Shot," "Take a Picture", and "Welcome to the Fold" by Filter. Additionally, an interlude version of "The Rain Song" by Led Zeppelin was played on occasion. The band would also go on to headline the SnoCore Tour in 2007 with the band Hurt,[12] and later toured with Three Days Grace.[13]

The song "It Doesn't Seem to Matter" is featured in the 2007 video game Burnout Dominator.[14]

Critical reception Edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [15]
Dose     [16]
Entertainment WeeklyB+[17]
Jam!     [2]
PopMatters          [18]
Rolling Stone     [19]

Army of Anyone was generally well received from critics. David Fricke of Rolling Stone compared the release favorably to earlier supergroup, Audioslave, but stated that it "...sounds much better than that on this debut"[19] and praised Patrick as "a less idiosyncratic singer than STP's Scott Weiland, cleaner in tone, more on the note."[19] Jo-Ann Greene of Allmusic described the album as boasting "sharply written numbers filled with dynamics, musical nuances, and a big sound courtesy of producer Bob Ezrin." She closed by noting, "With its mixtures of moods, subtle use of genre-shifting, and powerhouse guitars, Army of Anyone breaks down the rock barriers..."[15] The album received a positive review from Marc Weingarten of Entertainment Weekly as well, praising the group's '90s rock style and stating that "...There's a place for this band in 2006. . . the DeLeo brothers' melodic twists and turns prevent the songs from settling into a tired groove."[17]

Despite largely positive reviews, Army of Anyone was considered a commercial disappointment compared to prior multi-platinum selling releases from Stone Temple Pilots and Filter. The album debuted at #56 on the Billboard 200.[20] According to Nielsen SoundScan, the album has sold 88,000 copies as of April 2010.[21]

Track listing Edit

  1. "It Doesn't Seem to Matter" (Richard Patrick, Robert DeLeo, Dean DeLeo) - 3:51
  2. "Goodbye" (Patrick, R. DeLeo, D. DeLeo) - 4:31
  3. "Generation" (Patrick, R. DeLeo, D. DeLeo) - 3:30
  4. "A Better Place" (Patrick, R. DeLeo) - 4:58
  5. "Non Stop" (Patrick, R. DeLeo, D. DeLeo) - 3:58
  6. "Disappear" (Patrick, R. DeLeo) - 4:07
  7. "Stop Look and Listen" (Patrick, R. DeLeo) - 3:51
  8. "Ain't Enough" (Patrick, R. DeLeo) - 3:44
  9. "Father Figure" (Patrick) - 4:04
  10. "Leave It" (Patrick, D. DeLeo) - 4:27
  11. "This Wasn't Supposed to Happen" (Patrick, D. DeLeo) - 5:22

B-sides

  1. "Good Time to Loosen" (iTunes exclusive)
  2. "Used to Know Her" (iTunes exclusive)

Bonus tracks

  1. "Ain't Enough (Acoustic)" (Target exclusive)
  2. "It Doesn't Seem to Matter (Acoustic)" (Best Buy exclusive)
  3. "Disappear (Acoustic)" (Rhapsody exclusive)

Chart positions Edit

Album

Year Chart Position
2006 Billboard Top 200 56[20]

Singles

Personnel Edit

Army of Anyone

Production

References Edit

  1. ^ "Army of Anyone Says Hello with 'Goodbye'". Billboard.
  2. ^ a b "ARMY OF ANYONE". Jam.canoe.ca.
  3. ^ "FILTER Frontman Checks Into Rehab, Band Cancel Tour". Blabbermouth. 2002-10-01.
  4. ^ "Stone Temple Pilots' Dean DeLeo on the band's comeback album". MusicRadar.com. 2010-05-26. Retrieved 2012-07-13.
  5. ^ a b c "Blabbermouth.Net - Filter Frontman, Ex-David Lee Roth Drummer Comment On Army Of Anyone". Legacy.roadrunnerrecords.com. Archived from the original on 2013-02-01. Retrieved 2012-07-13.
  6. ^ a b Harris, Chris (2006-11-14). "Army Of Anyone Raiding Stone Temple Pilots, Filter Catalogs For Tour - Music, Celebrity, Artist News". MTV.com. Retrieved 2012-07-13.
  7. ^ a b c Moss, Corey (2005-09-29). "The Newest Supergroup: STP's DeLeo Brothers Join Filter Singer In Army Of Anyone - Music, Celebrity, Artist News". MTV.com. Retrieved 2012-07-13.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-09-08. Retrieved 2014-07-27.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. ^ a b c d Moss, Corey (2006-08-30). "Army Of Anyone Want To Be Judged By Their Fifth Album, Not Their Debut - Music, Celebrity, Artist News". MTV.com. Retrieved 2012-07-13.
  10. ^ a b "Album Search for "army of anyone"". AllMusic.
  11. ^ Harris, Chris Army Of Anyone Raiding Stone Temple Pilots, Filter Catalogs For Tour MTV.com (November 4, 2006). Retrieved on 1-11-09.
  12. ^ [1][permanent dead link]
  13. ^ "Blog Archive » Stp Guitarist Dean Deleo Talks Army Of Anyone & Trashes The Dallas Cowboys". GrungeReport.net. 2012-05-06. Retrieved 2012-07-13.
  14. ^ "Burnout Dominator Soundtrack Explodes". Ign. 23 February 2007.
  15. ^ a b "Army of Anyone - Army of Anyone Album Reviews, Songs & More". AllMusic. Retrieved 22 June 2022.
  16. ^ McDonnell, Jen (November 14, 2006). . Archived from the original on December 21, 2007.
  17. ^ a b "Army of Anyone - EW.com". Entertainment Weekly.
  18. ^ Blackie, Andrew (January 17, 2007). "Army of Anyone: Army of Anyone". PopMatters. Retrieved May 1, 2020.
  19. ^ a b c . Rolling Stone. 2 October 2007. Archived from the original on 2 October 2007.
  20. ^ a b "Army of Anyone - Chart history - Billboard". Billboard.
  21. ^ Peters, Michelle. "Stone Temple Pilots: The Billboard Cover Story". Billboard. April 2, 2010.
  22. ^ "Army of Anyone - Chart history - Billboard". Billboard.
  23. ^ a b "Army of Anyone - Chart history - Billboard". Billboard.

army, anyone, album, army, anyone, only, studio, album, american, rock, band, army, anyone, band, consisted, richard, patrick, filter, robert, deleo, dean, deleo, stone, temple, pilots, luzier, prior, drummer, david, roth, band, current, drummer, metal, band, . Army of Anyone is the only studio album by American rock band Army of Anyone The band consisted of Richard Patrick of Filter Robert DeLeo and Dean DeLeo of Stone Temple Pilots and Ray Luzier prior drummer of David Lee Roth s band and current drummer of the nu metal band Korn The album was released on November 14 2006 in America and December 4 2006 in the UK It was produced by Bob Ezrin and mixed by Ken Andrews Despite largely positive reviews from critics the album sold well below the expectations set from Filter and Stone Temple Pilots past multi platinum albums stalling around 88 000 copies sold The album produced two singles Goodbye and Father Figure the former peaking at no 3 on the U S Mainstream Rock chart Army of AnyoneStudio album by Army of AnyoneReleasedNovember 14 2006 2006 11 14 StudioThe Village Studio Santa MonicaGenreRock 1 Hard rock post grunge 2 Length49 24LabelThe Firm MusicProducerBob Ezrin Army of AnyoneSingles from Army of Anyone Goodbye Released July 28 2006 Father Figure Released March 2007 Contents 1 Background 2 Writing and recording 3 Release and promotion 4 Critical reception 5 Track listing 6 Chart positions 7 Personnel 8 ReferencesBackground EditThe album s origin traces back to Richard Patrick and the DeLeo brothers taking breaks from their respective bands Filter and Stone Temple Pilots Shortly after releasing Filter s third album The Amalgamut Patrick checked himself into rehab in October 2002 ceasing all band activity and touring for the time being 3 Around the same time in late 2002 Stone Temple Pilots broke up due to increasing problems with lead singer Scott Weiland and his issues with substance abuse 4 Once out of rehab Patrick began writing new material for a fourth Filter album 5 Upon Patrick hearing that Dean and Robert DeLeo had wanted to work with him on a song for the album he invited them over to do so 6 The result of their meeting was a track called A Better Place 7 and a twelve hour jam session 7 Patrick felt so strongly about the music that he put the fourth Filter album on hold despite his record label urging him to continue in order to start a new band with the DeLeo brothers 6 Ray Luzier was called to audition after the DeLeo brothers were impressed with Ray s sound check at a show Luzier joined the band later after a successful auditioning Writing and recording EditFormal recording for the band s debut album commenced in 2005 5 They entered the studio with Bob Ezrin the producer behind Pink Floyd s epic rock opera The Wall 5 The band had recorded more than 30 songs in Patrick s home studio 11 of which would make their way on to their debut album and another 2 being released as b sides The album was originally slated for an early 2006 release through Columbia Records 7 However most of the personnel who backed them at the label were fired during the process of recording the album making them opt to change their label 8 Instead the band signed to The Firm Music a division of the band s management company The Firm Inc 9 Beyond the label switching Patrick commented further delay was caused by personal commitments such as members family s getting married and having children 9 During this time they also opted replace the album s original mix with ones done by sound engineer Ken Andrews 9 They were able to fit this into their schedules because they used Andrew s Pro Tools set up at his house rather than renting out time at a high budget studio 9 Release and promotion EditThe album was finally released on November 14 2006 The band s first single was the track Goodbye which gathered significant radio airplay peaking at number 3 place in the U S Mainstream Rock chart 10 However the second and final single Father Figure failed to match that success only peaking at number 31 in the same chart 10 The band started touring in support of the album on November 18 including performances of Goodbye on Late Night with Conan O Brien and Last Call with Carson Daly 11 In addition to playing songs from the album they also included covers of the Stone Temple Pilots songs Big Bang Baby Vasoline and Interstate Love Song as well as Hey Man Nice Shot Take a Picture and Welcome to the Fold by Filter Additionally an interlude version of The Rain Song by Led Zeppelin was played on occasion The band would also go on to headline the SnoCore Tour in 2007 with the band Hurt 12 and later toured with Three Days Grace 13 The song It Doesn t Seem to Matter is featured in the 2007 video game Burnout Dominator 14 Critical reception EditProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 15 Dose nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 16 Entertainment WeeklyB 17 Jam nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 PopMatters nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 18 Rolling Stone nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 19 Army of Anyone was generally well received from critics David Fricke of Rolling Stone compared the release favorably to earlier supergroup Audioslave but stated that it sounds much better than that on this debut 19 and praised Patrick as a less idiosyncratic singer than STP s Scott Weiland cleaner in tone more on the note 19 Jo Ann Greene of Allmusic described the album as boasting sharply written numbers filled with dynamics musical nuances and a big sound courtesy of producer Bob Ezrin She closed by noting With its mixtures of moods subtle use of genre shifting and powerhouse guitars Army of Anyone breaks down the rock barriers 15 The album received a positive review from Marc Weingarten of Entertainment Weekly as well praising the group s 90s rock style and stating that There s a place for this band in 2006 the DeLeo brothers melodic twists and turns prevent the songs from settling into a tired groove 17 Despite largely positive reviews Army of Anyone was considered a commercial disappointment compared to prior multi platinum selling releases from Stone Temple Pilots and Filter The album debuted at 56 on the Billboard 200 20 According to Nielsen SoundScan the album has sold 88 000 copies as of April 2010 21 Track listing Edit It Doesn t Seem to Matter Richard Patrick Robert DeLeo Dean DeLeo 3 51 Goodbye Patrick R DeLeo D DeLeo 4 31 Generation Patrick R DeLeo D DeLeo 3 30 A Better Place Patrick R DeLeo 4 58 Non Stop Patrick R DeLeo D DeLeo 3 58 Disappear Patrick R DeLeo 4 07 Stop Look and Listen Patrick R DeLeo 3 51 Ain t Enough Patrick R DeLeo 3 44 Father Figure Patrick 4 04 Leave It Patrick D DeLeo 4 27 This Wasn t Supposed to Happen Patrick D DeLeo 5 22B sides Good Time to Loosen iTunes exclusive Used to Know Her iTunes exclusive Bonus tracks Ain t Enough Acoustic Target exclusive It Doesn t Seem to Matter Acoustic Best Buy exclusive Disappear Acoustic Rhapsody exclusive Chart positions EditAlbum Year Chart Position2006 Billboard Top 200 56 20 Singles Year Song U S Modern Rock U S Mainstream Rock2006 Goodbye 21 22 3 23 2007 Father Figure 31 23 Personnel EditArmy of Anyone Richard Patrick vocals Dean DeLeo guitars Robert DeLeo bass guitar backing vocals Ray Luzier drumsProduction Bob Ezrin producer Ken Andrews mix engineerReferences Edit Army of Anyone Says Hello with Goodbye Billboard a b ARMY OF ANYONE Jam canoe ca FILTER Frontman Checks Into Rehab Band Cancel Tour Blabbermouth 2002 10 01 Stone Temple Pilots Dean DeLeo on the band s comeback album MusicRadar com 2010 05 26 Retrieved 2012 07 13 a b c Blabbermouth Net Filter Frontman Ex David Lee Roth Drummer Comment On Army Of Anyone Legacy roadrunnerrecords com Archived from the original on 2013 02 01 Retrieved 2012 07 13 a b Harris Chris 2006 11 14 Army Of Anyone Raiding Stone Temple Pilots Filter Catalogs For Tour Music Celebrity Artist News MTV com Retrieved 2012 07 13 a b c Moss Corey 2005 09 29 The Newest Supergroup STP s DeLeo Brothers Join Filter Singer In Army Of Anyone Music Celebrity Artist News MTV com Retrieved 2012 07 13 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2015 09 08 Retrieved 2014 07 27 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b c d Moss Corey 2006 08 30 Army Of Anyone Want To Be Judged By Their Fifth Album Not Their Debut Music Celebrity Artist News MTV com Retrieved 2012 07 13 a b Album Search for army of anyone AllMusic Harris Chris Army Of Anyone Raiding Stone Temple Pilots Filter Catalogs For Tour MTV com November 4 2006 Retrieved on 1 11 09 1 permanent dead link Blog Archive Stp Guitarist Dean Deleo Talks Army Of Anyone amp Trashes The Dallas Cowboys GrungeReport net 2012 05 06 Retrieved 2012 07 13 Burnout Dominator Soundtrack Explodes Ign 23 February 2007 a b Army of Anyone Army of Anyone Album Reviews Songs amp More AllMusic Retrieved 22 June 2022 McDonnell Jen November 14 2006 This Week s CD Reviews Trail of the Dead Fat Joe Akon Army of Anyone and Swan Lake Archived from the original on December 21 2007 a b Army of Anyone EW com Entertainment Weekly Blackie Andrew January 17 2007 Army of Anyone Army of Anyone PopMatters Retrieved May 1 2020 a b c Army Of Anyone Army Of Anyone Music Reviews Rolling Stone Rolling Stone 2 October 2007 Archived from the original on 2 October 2007 a b Army of Anyone Chart history Billboard Billboard Peters Michelle Stone Temple Pilots The Billboard Cover Story Billboard April 2 2010 Army of Anyone Chart history Billboard Billboard a b Army of Anyone Chart history Billboard Billboard Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Army of Anyone album amp oldid 1094855522, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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