Remove ads, unlock a dark mode theme, and get other perks by upgrading your account. Experience the website the way it's meant to be.

New Found Glory – Catalyst

Discussion in 'Article Discussion' started by Melody Bot, May 20, 2024.

  1. Melody Bot

    Your friendly little forum bot. Staff Member

    This article has been imported from chorus.fm for discussion. All of the forum rules still apply.

    Flash back to the year 2004 for a bit. Several pop-punk, emo and hardcore bands have been signed to major label deals, CDs are still selling in waves, and it’s an ultra-exciting time for this scene of music. New Found Glory came in riding a major high after their most successful record, Sticks and Stones, blanketed the pop-punk scene with great singles like “My Friends Over You” and “Head On Collision” getting some airplay on MTV’s popular Total Request Live (TRL). Enter Catalyst. The record was set up for success as well with a bulletproof lead single of “All Downhill From Here” that wasn’t going to do anything to dissuade longtime fans of NFG from liking the new material. Catalyst had a harder edge to it, starting with the hardcore-esque gang vocals of “Intro” that bled into the lead single, while the guitars just felt heavier in general throughout the LP. While this album had a mix of styles and sounds that were brought forth, and musically it’s a bit all over the place, it’s hard to not admit that this is still one of the band’s strongest albums to date.

    Other early standouts, like “This Disaster,” are punchy, with Chad Gilbert’s guitars matching the punishing percussion from Cyrus Bolooki in masterful fashion. As Jordan Pundik ponders, “All my life I’ve been looking for the answers / To the questions she never asked and / We never planned on this disaster / When will I let it go?” it’s hard to not relate to the conflict in the lyrics. The speedy punk rock of “Truth Of My Youth” remains a staple of New Found Glory’s sets to this day, and allows for the band to get the crowd moving to the tones they set forth.

    Catalyst featured some interesting single choices, like the ballad of “I Don’t Wanna Know” that leaned more into the adult pop that the band perfected on Coming Home, while they enlisted James Dewees for some keyboards on “Failure’s Not Flattering.” The latter seemed to accelerate the band’s sound, while some found the ballad falling a bit flat in the hard-nosed approach of the album as a whole. Dewees would later tour with New Found Glory for a bit to lend keys/synths to the band’s trademark pop-punk sound.

    Middle album cuts like “Your Biggest Mistake” are fairly simplistic in their construction, but they continued to blend hardcore gang vocals with the pop-punk sound to round out NFG’s repertoire. The spiraling guitar riff from Gilbert on “Doubt Full” allowed for bassist Ian Grushka to pulsate alongside his bandmates with precise riffs, while Pundik sings on the chorus, “When it feels like I’ve already been there / Sounds like I’m preaching the choir / If it looks like it won’t work out / I’m the one, the one full of doubt.” While other tracks like “Over the Head, Below the Knees” are a bit somber in their delivery and a mid-tempo song of “Ending In Tragedy” could’ve benefited from better sequencing in the tracklisting, or even been better off as a B-side.

    Things take a turn for the better on “At Least I’m Known For Something,” that continues to take a heavier stab at New Found Glory’s pop-punk sound that is truly showcased well on their Kill It Live recording. “No News Is Good News” is another example of when the style that the band were going for works best, while “I’d Kill To Fall Asleep” largely plays out like late-album filler. The closing ballad of “Who Am I” features up-tempo verses, while the chorus takes a more introspective turn as Pundik wonders, “So who am I? / Don’t say it’ll stay this way forever.”

    The other B-sides that were recently revisited on the first vinyl pressing of Catalyst like “Whiskey Rose,” “Radio Adelaide,” and “Constant Static” would’ve worked better in the sequencing of the main album had they replaced some of the unnecessary mid-tempo cuts towards the back half of the album. But hey, as strong as these B-sides are, it’s only a further testament to showing that New Found Glory brought their A-game to the studio and writing sessions that became Catalyst.

    more

    Not all embedded content is displayed here. You can view the original to see embedded videos and other embedded content.
     
    theasteriskera and Dparkes88 like this.
  2. Dparkes88

    Newbie

    Loved reading this and immediately put this on the speakers! Truth Of My Youth will forever be my anthem of growing up and getting the hell away from my hometown. I’m really hoping they do some sort of aftershow at WWWY playing this one since they are doing Sticks and Stones. Forever thankful for NFG!
     
    paythetab likes this.
  3. Bartek T.

    D'oh! Prestigious

    Definitely my favorite from them, need to look for those b-sides. Not sure what I'd cut anyways, I liked the mid-tempo tunes too
     
    paythetab likes this.
  4. mit_backwards

    Regular

    Radio Adelaide would have been a banger and its a shame that it was used as a B-side.
     
  5. albatrossskyer

    w00tSTAR Worldwide

    i love nfg. still in constant rotation
     
    stoph224 and paythetab like this.
  6. Pepetito

    Trusted Supporter

    I may be in the minority but I thought this album was about half really good and half pretty meh.

    Radio adelaide and constant static should have easily made it over Ending in Tragedy, I dont wanna know, your biggest mistake, over the head.
     
  7. fredwordsmith

    Trusted Supporter

    Your Biggest Mistake rules when they play it live.
     
    parkerxcore and Jason Tate like this.
  8. BradBradley

    Regular

    I absolutely love Your Biggest Mistake.
     
    parkerxcore and Jason Tate like this.
  9. Mattyjnow05

    Newbie Supporter

    Anyone want to try and put together a better track list swapping out songs for b sides? Maybe change up existing sequencing too?
     
    Pepetito likes this.
  10. pbueddi

    Trusted

    Yeah definitely some skips on this record, but super solid overall.
     
    Paulms85 likes this.
  11. Bartek T.

    D'oh! Prestigious

    No skips for me as far as I remember now, the production flourishes are worth it alone
     
    Colby Searcy likes this.
  12. Colby Searcy

    Is admired for his impeccable (food) tastes Prestigious

    Yeah I don’t skip a single song, I think the sequencing is damn near perfect
     
    Bartek T. likes this.
  13. Pepetito

    Trusted Supporter

    Sounds like you are volunteering!
     
  14. AlwaysEvolving21

    Trusted Supporter

    Such an incredible summer album for. This and Ocean Avenue were my soundtracks the summer going into my senior year in high school.
     
  15. theredline

    Trusted Supporter

    Amazing record but some of the vocals are peak nasally for me. I love some of the later records because he gets so much better vocally!
     
    Paulms85 likes this.
  16. CAC3

    Dog

    Love this record, love NFG.

    Self Titled- Sticks and Stones - Catalyst - Coming Home is an elite four album run. You could also throw in the first two From the Screen to Your Stereo's in there. What a band. I hope Chad is doing ok and that we get some new music from them.
     
    stoph224 and Paulms85 like this.
  17. IAmMikeWhite

    @IAmMikeWhite Supporter

    It's definitely their record where Jordan sings at his highest register the most often. I also feel like there's a lot of pitch correction and note swooping. All that said...I love it.
     
    theredline likes this.
  18. carouac

    Newbie Supporter

    Agreed. It has some absolutely great songs(the synths in "Failure" are fucking awesome) but it has a pretty high "meh" quotient, higher than I think a lot of people remember. I prefer the albums that flank it in their discography vastly.
     
    Paulms85, Pepetito and fredwordsmith like this.
  19. cricketandclover

    Things have changed.

    My least favorite of their big 3 but still a fun album. Agree on the vocal issues.
     
    Paulms85 likes this.
  20. Pepetito

    Trusted Supporter

    Assuming the big 3 are self titled , sticks and stones and this one........its by far my least favorite.
     
  21. theredline

    Trusted Supporter

    That must be what I’m hearing. Still great songs just some vocal moments I’d love to hear re-recorded!
     
  22. cricketandclover

    Things have changed.

    Yep!
     
    Pepetito likes this.
  23. Paulms85

    Regular Supporter

    Back in 2004 was No News is Good News debuted on Absolutepunk.net before the album was released? Having a vague memory of being online late (UK time) waiting for it. Something ringing a bell.

    Possibly my top track from this album. Along with This Disaster and At Least...
     
    Pepetito likes this.
  24. Pepetito

    Trusted Supporter

    Those 3 along with I'd kill to fall asleep are my favorites
     
    Paulms85 likes this.
  25. BradBradley

    Regular

    And then we got Not Without A Fight - NFG’s best album!
     
    blink180ryan likes this.