Life Starts Now is the third studio album by Canadian rock band Three Days Grace. The album was released on September 22, 2009.[1] It was produced by Howard Benson. It was the second time in a row that the band has worked with him, after the commercially successful One-X.[2]Life Starts Now expresses a lighter lyrical mood compared to the previous album. It is the first Three Days Grace album to be released by Sony Music Entertainment and the last to be released by Jive Records, as Sony disbanded the label in 2011.
Background and production
After being on the road for five years with Three Days Grace, the bass guitarist, Brad Walst, said, "We all came home and got a hard dose of life," which the band then used to create a more "musically in-depth and personal album". He described Life Starts Now as a record about "confronting life and how fragile it can be".[3] Speaking about the album, the guitarist, Barry Stock, said, "This time around we really wanted to go with something different than what we've done in the past."[4]
The group began writing the album while on tour in 2007.[5] Pre-production began in January 2009 while the band began recording the music at The Warehouse Studio in Vancouver that March.[6][7] The album was completed in August the same year.[8] The group unveiled the cover art for Life Starts Now on August 19, 2009.[9] The band hired an artist from Poland to create the artwork after they stumbled across their website. The cover features two masked men smashing a pile of televisions as winged creatures rise from the destruction, which the group felt "was a good reflection of the album's themes."[10] After finalizing all aspects of the album, they officially announced that the album would be released on September 22, 2009.[1] The album was made available for streaming on September 21.[11]
The band performed at iHeartRadio in December 2009 to promote the album's release.[12] The group embarked on the Life Starts Now Tour from November to December 2009, with support from Default and The Used.[13] They continued to tour throughout 2010 with Breaking Benjamin joining them in support of the album.[14] The band was later joined by Chevelle and Adelitas Way in March to April 2010.[15] They also supported Nickelback on the Dark Horse Tour in September 2010 and Avenged Sevenfold on the Welcome to the Family Tour in May 2011.[16]
Composition
According to Walst, the group cut back on layering as many guitars this time around. The band decided to step it up and made the album a bit more musical to create a "heavy sounding album."[17] Stock stated they wanted "more 'Zeppeliny' bigness in a different kind of way," focusing on tone and raw sound.[4] They recorded the album in a live room together rather than laying down tracks and layering things separately. Adam Gontier described Life Starts Now as "very raw and real."[18] Lyrically, the band wrote the album after looking at life differently from experiencing an "awful lot in our personal lives."[18] The band noted how the album was a lot more optimistic than their previous albums which Walst stated how they needed "to go through some dark times to actually get to that hope."[10]
Commercial performance
The album debuted at number three on the Billboard 200, selling 79,000 copies in the US in its first week, thus becoming the band's highest-charting album in the US to date.[19] The album also debuted on the BillboardTop Rock Albums chart at number two. The album's lead single "Break" peaked at number 26 on the Canadian Hot 100,[20] as well as number one on the BillboardHot Rock & Alternative Songs chart.[21] "The Good Life" at number 52 on the Canadian Hot 100 and number one on Billboard Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart.[20][21] With the exception of "Lost in You", all of the band's singles from the album topped the BillboardMainstream Rock chart.[22] As of July 2010, the album had sold 398,826 units in the US.[23]
Upon its release, Life Starts Now received mixed reviews from music critics. The AllMusic reviewer, James Christopher Monger, who gave the album three out of five stars, wrote, "Life Starts Now continues the theme of One-X, Gontier's personal demons, but with a hint of sunlight." He complimented the album, writing that it "treats the well-worn metal themes of anger, isolation, heartache, and redemption with the kind of begrudging respect they deserve, pumping out a competent flurry of fist-bump anthems and world-weary, mid-tempo rockers".[25] Sputnikmusic gave the album a mixed review calling the album "rehash number two."[27] A negative review came from the About.com reviewer, Tim Grierson, who wrote, "The problem isn't that Life Starts Now doesn't have good songs โ the problem is that there aren't enough of them and that even the strongest moments feel overly familiar. Frontman Adam Gontier continues to expose his tortured soul, but without consistently gripping tunes to back up his anguish, Three Days Grace seem stuck in their misery rather than transcending it."[24]Ben Rayner of the Toronto Star also gave the album a negative review, stating it possesses "no sound of its own, just a shallow range between Linkin Park and Nickelback."[28] Kaj Roth gave a more positive review on the album stating, "This is without doubt their strongest album so far." He praised Gontier's melodies and Howard Benson's production on the album.[26]
Accolades
The album was nominated for Best Rock Album at the 2010 Juno Awards.[29] It won the Favorite New Album award at the 2010 CASBY Awards.[30] The album was officially certified Platinum in Canada[31] and Gold in the US on March 1, 2011, and Platinum on February 12, 2018.[32]
^Bower, Elizabeth (September 18, 2009). "Three Days Grace Gets Reality Check". The Peterborough Examiner. Peterborough, Canada. Archived from the original on December 9, 2012. Retrieved October 15, 2009.