Disclaimer (Seether album)

(Redirected from Driven Under)

Disclaimer is the debut studio album by South African rock band Seether. The album was released on 20 August 2002. It features three successful singles which would remain some of the band's most well-known songs. It is their first release under their current name after changing it from Saron Gas in 2002 to avoid confusion with the deadly nerve agent sarin gas.

Disclaimer
Studio album by
Released20 August 2002
Recorded2002 in Los Angeles, California
Genre
Length45:01
LabelWind-up
ProducerJay Baumgardner
Seether chronology
Fragile
(2000)
Disclaimer
(2002)
Disclaimer II
(2004)
Singles from Disclaimer
  1. "Fine Again"
    Released: August 2002
  2. "Driven Under"
    Released: 4 March 2003
  3. "Gasoline"
    Released: 19 August 2003
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Rolling Stone[2]

Background and release

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A great deal of pre-production took place in South Africa with supervision from a Wind-up representative. It continued in New York City before the album recording sessions began in Los Angeles. Veteran session drummer Josh Freese filled the role in the studio before an audition took place at Leads Rehearsal Studio. Among sixteen others, Nick Oshiro auditioned and joined the band in 2001. Seether would also enlist guitarist Patrick Callahan in the fall of that year after performing alongside his then-current band in Philadelphia.[3]

Disclaimer was released with ten different cover variations.[4] These feature images from the "Fine Again" music video with people holding signs depicting a negative outlook or a poor situation in life. The concept to implement it through the album cover was headed by the video's director, Paul Feeder. According to bassist Dale Stewart:

"[Feeder] came up with the idea of the people bearing [sic] their souls and holding up the signs and we thought it was a good concept. It's kind of like a thread that runs through the whole album, the fragility, or whatever you want to call it, you know in people. People are always screwed up about something, even if they act like they're not."[3]

In regards to recording and single output, the band allegedly faced a considerable deal of label pressure compared to future albums. According to a reflective Shaun Morgan in 2005:

"...With Disclaimer, we were still pretty green and all the say-so was made for us. We really didn’t have much and most of those decisions, I felt, were bad ones. Last time around we had a manager from South Africa. She wasn’t very good at what she was doing and she was letting [the record label] walk all over us."[5]

According to Morgan, "the producer [Jay Baumgardner] was shit, so recording the album was a long process. The producer would come into the studio on Monday morning, after we worked for the entire week and say, 'nope, do it again'," partially because Baumgardner owned the recording studio and made a profit from them. As a result, the recording process for the album took three months, unlike later albums which took around two weeks.[6]

Seven of the tracks that appeared on their previous album Fragile appeared re-recorded on Disclaimer. They were "Gasoline", "69 Tea," "Fine Again," "Driven Under," "Pride," "Your Bore," and "Pig". "Gasoline" had originally been a bonus track on Fragile. Eventually, it became a single along with "Fine Again" and "Driven Under", which had preceded it.

Songwriting

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"69 Tea" was the first song that Shaun Morgan remembers writing. He has said:

"We'd written songs in bands prior to that. I mean, I wrote that when I was about fifteen or sixteen years old. So for me it was like, wow, this is just me by myself and nobody else. I spent a lot of my teenage years just in my room playing guitar. I used to have tapes and tapes of songs that I would just sit and record. Unfortunately, I've lost all of them but luckily some of them would stick with me and as the years went by, I'd show them to different bands and some of them managed to sort of hang in there. But that was the first one I remember writing. That was actually our first single in South Africa, which basically put us on the map. That's a pretty fond memory."[7]

He also explained the song's meaning:

"Religion is not something that I talk about or that I care for people to know where I stand. In "69 Tea", there's a line that says, 'Save me smiling Jesus, get off that cross,' and that was overwhelmingly sarcastic. I wrote that when I was 16. It was something that was just there in front of me and that's the way I wanted to say it."[8]

"Fine Again" is about how one can be fine again after a breakup. Morgan wrote it when his parents got divorced, to reflect how he was feeling at the time. He was in the middle of the divorce and going through a lot of pain.

At the age of 23, Morgan experienced heartbreak, which inspired the song "Broken". Morgan's wife did not follow him from their homeland of South Africa to the United States, and chose to live in South Africa with their daughter. Morgan thus felt he lost his best chance to have the family experience he always wanted. He explained:

"I really wanted that family, and I really wanted to be part of that family unit. And I really thought this was going to be my nucleus and my happy place," Morgan lamented. "Ever since then I have had a hard time feeling like I'm worth anything. And ever since then I have had a problem caring. I feel like this emotional desert."[9]

Morgan wrote the song "Gasoline" in five minutes during soundcheck and the lyrics came out automatically. It is a song about all "MTV girls" and their fakeness.[10]

One of Morgan's earliest memories is his mother waving a gun in his father's face. He was locked up along with his brother in the bathroom. Later, his mother gave him a loaded .45 caliber gun in case of danger. "Driven Under" was inspired by these memories.[10]

Asked about the song called "Fade Away", he explained:

"Oh shit... I think "Fade Away" may be one of the most generic, terrible songs I ever wrote. I can't even listen to it anymore."[11]

Shaun Morgan had a girlfriend who used to be a prostitute when she was 12 years old. The song "Love Her", off Disclaimer II, is about this woman. According to Morgan, she was a "rich kid". He added:

"Think about it. If you were a beautiful woman, you can get anything you want from this world... and that's sad, because you have no talent other than your parents that fucking were pretty. There's nothing beyond that, I feel like nothing has changed. I wrote this song very long time ago."[12]

Musical style

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Disclaimer gained comparison to grunge acts of the early 1990s, particularly the angsty vocal style of Nirvana's Kurt Cobain.

Touring and promotion

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Seether began extensive touring in promotion of Disclaimer in July 2002. They performed alongside Our Lady Peace and other artists into the following year.

Beginning with "Fine Again" in the fall of 2002, a total of three singles were released from Disclaimer. The lead single was followed by "Driven Under" in early 2003 and "Gasoline" later that year. Each song was accompanied by a music video, all of which gained substantial airplay on MTV2.

Track listing

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All tracks written by Shaun Morgan and Dale Stewart

No.TitleLength
1."Gasoline"2:49
2."69 Tea"3:31
3."Fine Again"4:04
4."Needles"3:26
5."Driven Under"4:34
6."Pride"4:07
7."Sympathetic"4:07
8."Your Bore"3:53
9."Fade Away"3:53
10."Pig"3:22
11."Fuck It"2:58
12."Broken"4:18
Total length:45:01
2022 Deluxe Edition bonus tracks (disc 1)
No.TitleLength
13."Something in the Way (Nirvana cover, Live in the 99x Music Lounge, 2002)"3:05
2022 Deluxe Edition bonus tracks (disc 2 – Live at Hampton Beach Casino, 2003)
No.TitleLength
1."Gasoline"2:45
2."69 Tea"3:22
3."Needles"4:19
4."Pride"4:36
5."Driven Under"4:46
6."Your Bore"4:59
7."Pig"4:13
8."Sympathetic"4:13
9."Fine Again"4:34
10."Hang On" (would later appear on Daredevil: The Album and Disclaimer II)3:52
11."Burrito" (would later appear on Karma and Effect)4:23
12."Fuck It"3:33
13."Broken"3:58

Personnel

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Seether

Production

  • Jay Baumgardner – production, mixing
  • Dan Certa – engineer
  • Tom Baker – mastering

Charts

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Chart (2002) Peak
position
The Billboard 200[13] 92

Certification

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Region Certification Certified units/sales
United States (RIAA)[14] Gold 500,000^

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

References

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  1. ^ Taylor, Jason D. "Disclaimer - Seether". AllMusic. Retrieved 12 July 2011.
  2. ^ Cherry, Robert (19 September 2002). "Seether: Disclaimer: Music review". Rolling Stone (RS 905). Archived from the original on 31 January 2009. Retrieved 12 July 2011.
  3. ^ a b Interview with Dale Stewart, Nick Oshiro, and Pat from Seether Archived 3 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine (November 2002). Retrieved on 1-29-11.
  4. ^ Seether (2006). One Cold Night (DVD). Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Wind-Up Records.
  5. ^ Perlman, Jason Interview with Shaun Morgan Archived 27 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Ferrante's Power Equipment (2005). Retrieved on 1-29-11.
  6. ^ "The Story of Seether (2002–2017)". Metalshop TV (via Youtube). 16 October 2017. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 29 December 2018.
  7. ^ Seether: South African Seattle, VH1, 16 January 2012. Accessed 12 January 2018.
  8. ^ [1], VH1, 6 May 2013. Accessed 12 January 2018.
  9. ^ [2], VH1, 12 May 2017. Accessed 12 January 2018.
  10. ^ a b [3], VH1, 11 June 2011. Accessed 12 January 2018.
  11. ^ [4], VH1, 29 April 2015. Accessed 12 January 2018.
  12. ^ [5], Interview with Shaun Morgan, 11 June 2011. Accessed 2 February 2018.
  13. ^ "Disclaimer - Seether". Billboard.
  14. ^ "American album certifications – Disclaimer – Seether". Recording Industry Association of America.