"When the band disbanded in 2010, we were sitting on an album's worth of songs. Four years later, I approached Ben and Brent to see if they were interested in self-producing an album, as a way to celebrate the band's journey. We even wrote our first new song together in over 4 years, 'Good Memoirs'. It was such a fun project and a great way to show everyone the album that could have been."
- Jayson Evans (Vocals, Guitars)
All songs written and recorded by Jayson Evans (Guitars, Vocals), Brent Ebeling (Bass) and Ben Sanderson (Drums, Vocals), except for 'Insomnia (Bonus Track)', where bass is performed by Luke Dixon and drums by John Sinclair. Additional instruments by Jayson Evans.
All lyrics by Jayson Evans.
Produced by Jayson Evans. Recorded, mixed and mastered by Jayson Evans at Senator Studios.
Cover art photography by Wanagi Zable-Andrews.
'I Tried to Write a Short Song Title, But I Failed' was written as a response to the overly-produced and substance-less pop rock that was popular at the time. A producer the band had worked with said their song titles were too long and that they needed more catchy vocal parts, such as lyric-less responses, like 'woah's and 'ooh's. The producer also commented on the bands deeper lyrical subject matter, advising them to sing about more surface level things, such as 'a guy chasing a girl'. Jayson wrote the song ironically, incorporating these elements, with a twist: the seemingly romantic protagonist is eventually revealed to be a crazy stalker.
The song title, 'The Sky is Falling' is a reference to a famous line from the TV show, '24' - a show that Brent and Jayson used to watch together.
'Good Memoirs' was written in 2014. The band did so to see if they could still write a song like they did in the old days.
'Gettin' Aroun' (Just Like a Statue)' was the last song the band wrote before they disbanded in 2010.
The skit before 'Airstrike on '04' is referencing a real-life situation the band had: an old manager telling them that they should abandon their pop rock sound and get ahead of the 12-bar blues resurgence that he was sure was on its way.
As the album was recorded to celebrate the band's journey, Jayson asked to record 'Insomnia' (a song from their first demo, released ten years prior) with original members Luke Dixon and John Sinclair, as an easter egg for long-time listeners.