The Crusade is the third studio album by American heavy metal band Trivium. It was released on October 10, 2006, through Roadrunner Records and was produced by Jason Suecof and the band themselves. The album marked a significant musical change from the metalcore sound of their preceding album Ascendancy, with the band utilizing thrash metal influences. Accordingly, vocalist/guitarist Matt Heafy sings with primarily 'clean' vocals throughout The Crusade, rather than utilizing the 'screaming' style heard on Ascendancy.
The Crusade peaked at number 7 in United Kingdom and was later certified silver in for sales in excess of 60,000 copies. In the United States, the album debuted at No. 25 on the US Billboard 200 albums chart on its release, selling 31,000 copies in the US in its first week.[7] It has sold over 100,000 copies in the United States.[8]
Background
Before the album was released, three songs from the album were released on the band's MySpace: "Detonation", "Anthem (We Are the Fire)", and "Entrance of the Conflagration". Music videos for "Entrance of the Conflagration", "Anthem (We Are the Fire)", "The Rising", "To the Rats", and "Becoming the Dragon" were produced and released on Roadrunner's website.[9]
"Anthem (We Are the Fire)" was a hit for the band in the United Kingdom, with the track debuting at number 1 on the UK Rock & Metal Singles Chart and spending several further weeks in the top 10.[10] As of 2019, the single is also the band's only track to break into the UK Singles Chart, peaking at number 40.[11]
The album represents a drastic change in style from their previous album, Ascendancy, abandoning the metalcore genre and featuring a style described generally as thrash metal[14][15][16][17][18] and reminiscent of thrash metal band Metallica's 1980s albums,[19] along with progressive metal[1] and speed metal.[18] As a result, vocalist Matt Heafy used much less screaming and more of a clean vocal style similar to James Hetfield throughout most of the record.[19] Heafy justified this by noting that "the four of us were never into bands that scream and we don't like any of the current bands that scream, so we asked ourselves why we're doing it."[20] Screamed vocals (along with the metalcore genre itself) would return as a regular attribute on the band's proceeding album, Shogun, although screaming can occasionally be found in The Crusade, most notably in "Becoming the Dragon".
Lyrical themes on the album include famous killings. "Entrance of the Conflagration" is about Andrea Yates' murder of her five children, "Unrepentant" is about Nazir Ahmad's murder of his three daughters and stepdaughter, "Contempt Breeds Contamination" is about the death of Amadou Diallo, and "And Sadness Will Sear" is based upon the murder of Matthew Shepard.[21] Many of the lyrics on the album are more direct political and personal critiques than those on Trivium's other albums. In a 2022 interview with Primordial Radio, Heafy revealed this aspect was influenced by Against Me!, particularly their 2005 album Searching for a Former Clarity.[22]
^Entrance of the Conflagration (track listing). Trivium. Roadrunner Records. 2006. RR PROMO 953.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
^Matt Heafy, Pete Bailey (November 25, 2022). Revisiting The Crusade with Trivium (Matt Heafy) (Podcast). Primordial Radio. Event occurs at 38m25s. Retrieved September 22, 2023. At the time was really, really listening to... I was listen to Against Me a lot for lyrical inspiration. That was when the Searching for a Former Clarity record came out. And Laura Jane Grace's lyrics on that record were always super specific and super pointed and I think I was very influenced by that.