The Process of Belief
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| The Process of Belief | |||||
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| Studio album by Bad Religion | |||||
| Released | |||||
| Recorded | 2001 at Sound City, Los Angeles & Westbeach Recorders, Hollywood, California | ||||
| Genre | Punk rock | ||||
| Length | 37:10 (U.S. version) 40:48 (Japanese version) |
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| Label | Epitaph | ||||
| Producer | Brett Gurewitz and Greg Graffin | ||||
| Professional reviews | |||||
| Bad Religion chronology | |||||
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The Process of Belief is an album by the punk rock band Bad Religion, released in 2002. It marks the band's first album released on Epitaph Records since 1993's Recipe for Hate (although that label released the All Ages compilation) and to feature original guitarist Brett Gurewitz since 1994's Stranger Than Fiction. It was also the first Bad Religion album to feature new drummer Brooks Wackerman, replacing Bobby Schayer who suffered a severe shoulder injury which left him unable to drum professionally.
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[edit] Musical style
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The album marked the return of Bad Religion's punk rock roots, and many have compared it favorably to classics like No Control and Generator.
[edit] Production and marketing
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The Process of Belief was recorded in 2001 at Sound City, Los Angeles and Westbeach Recorders, Hollywood, California, and mixed at Larabee East. This was the first time Bad Religion recorded an album at Westbeach Recorders since Recipe for Hate.
[edit] Reception
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The Process of Belief was released on January 22, 2002 and is the first Bad Religion album distributed via Epitaph Records since 1993's Recipe for Hate. It peaked at number 49 on the Billboard 200 album chart,[1] and also number 1 on Top Independent Albums, making it Bad Religion's highest U.S. chart position to date.[2] The album sold very well, due to success of its radio hit "Sorrow," and yielded many concert favorites like "Kyoto Now!," "Epiphany," and "Supersonic." This would be Bad Religion's most successful album since 1996's The Gray Race. It also spawned two top 20 singles in Ireland.
[edit] Track listing
- "Supersonic" (Graffin) – 1:47
- "Prove It" (Graffin) – 1:15
- "Can't Stop It" (Gurewitz) – 1:10
- "Broken" (Gurewitz) – 2:55
- "Destined For Nothing" (Graffin) – 2:35
- "Materialist" (Graffin) – 1:53
- "Kyoto Now!" (Graffin) – 3:20
- "Sorrow" (Gurewitz) – 3:21
- "Epiphany" (Graffin) – 4:00
- "Evangeline" (Gurewitz) – 2:11
- "The Defense" (Gurewitz) – 3:53
- "The Lie" (Graffin) – 2:19
- "You Don't Belong" (Gurewitz) – 2:50
- "Bored And Extremely Dangerous" (Graffin) – 3:25
[edit] Japanese Bonus Tracks
- "Shattered Faith" - (Graffin) – 3:38
[edit] B-Sides
- "Who We Are" - (Gurewitz) - 3:01
[edit] Personnel
- Greg Graffin - vocals, producer
- Brett Gurewitz - guitar, producer, mixing
- Brian Baker - guitar
- Greg Hetson - guitar
- Jay Bentley - bass guitar
- Brooks Wackerman - drums
- Jerry Finn - mixing
- Bob Ludwig - mastering
- Billy Joe Bowers - engineer
- Jeff Moses - assistant engineer
- Mackie Osborne - art direction, design
[edit] Notes/Trivia
- The albums title comes from a line in track 6, "Materialist", which reads "The Process of Belief is an elixir when you're weak" a Graffin song which reveals "I must confess, at times I indulge it on the sneak, but generally my outlook's not so bleak".
- Track 15, "Shattered Faith", a bonus track on the Japanese release, is very similar to "The Kids Aren't Alright" by The Offspring in the chorus and parts of the riff.
- A previously unreleased song left off from the album is on Punk-O-Rama Vol. 8 titled "Who We Are". "Shattered Faith" also appears on Punk-O-Rama Vol. 8.
- This album celebrates the 20th anniversary of the first Bad Religion album How Could Hell Be Any Worse?, although the band had been around for twenty-two years.
[edit] References
- ^ The Process of Belief's entry at Billboard.com. Billboard.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
- ^ Bad Religion's Artist Chart History. Billboard.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
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