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 – New Found Glory

Discussion in 'Article Discussion' started by Melody Bot, Sep 25, 2020.

  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.

    There is just nothing better than early 2000s pop punk. Sure, I’m biased having grown up during this time, but the success of bands in this genre speaks for themselves. Blink-182, Sum 41, Fall Out Boy, Yellowcard, The Starting Line, Good Charlotte, and New Found Glory, were all over MTV and their albums were flying off the shelves of Sam Goody and FYE stores. New Found Glory helped push this pop punk boom to new heights when they released their self-titled album, New Found Glory in 2000.

    After making waves with their debut album, Nothing Gold Can Stay, New Found Glory signed with Drive-Thru Records. This move would forever change both the band and the record label. On their first LP for Drive-Thru, New Found Glory would successfully blend their love of pop music, punk and hardcore into a record that was raw, yet showed signs they stumbled onto something special.

    New Found Glory was the perfect soundtrack for anyone coming of age in their teens (as is hinted at with the album cover). One second you’re head over heels for someone and the next, you can’t stand them. All the while, you’re learning how to deal with these different emotions. You take this idea, toss in some infectious hooks and choruses that burrow their way into your brain and the result is this album.

    What still impresses me about New Found Glory is just how good the first six tracks are. It’s an unskippable Side A of the record that is loaded with some true classics in the New Found Glory catalog. The record begins with a blast of energy with the quick drumming of Cyrus Bolooki and call and response guitar playing on ”Better Off Dead.” The tempo and catchiness of this song sets the table for what’s to come on the rest of the album.

    “Dressed to Kill” remains a staple of the NFG catalog. Lead singer Jordan Pundik sings about missing an ex and the way he delivers each line nails the feeling you have when a relationship ends before you want it to. The struggles to sleep, friends telling you to cheer up and move on, this song has all of it. “Sincerely Me” still remains my favorite Ian Grushka performance and I’ll always be a fan of how Bolooki’s drumming compliments the bass riff.

    “Hit or Miss” is in the conversation for the best New Found Glory track. Not only is it a great song, but it was the band’s first hit and was the one that put them on the map. Yes, it was originally released on Nothing Gold Can Stay, but it was this reworked version that helped launch their career. The song also established all the key ingredients that make up a great NFG song: choruses you can’t help but sing along to, memorable guitar riffs and a well-timed bridge breakdown. The band has returned to this formula several times, but it’s this song that’s the OG. “Second to Last” follows a similar song structure to “Hit or Miss” only the song is heavier and it never took off the way the previous track. It’s still a great NFG B-side though.

    Speaking of B-sides, the second half of the album has some really solid deep cuts. You have the ballad of the album in “Eyesore”, the adrenaline-pumped “Sucker,” and “Boy Crazy.” “Boy Crazy” is a song that is still likely to be found on breakup playlists. It’s a track that oozes immaturity, but when you’re young and heartbroken, you could wrongly believe that all girls are “crazy” or “stupid.” I have no doubts that there is someone out there who used lyrics from the chorus in their AOL away message following a breakup back in the day. There’s also “All About Her,” which opens with a great riff from guitarist Chad Gilbert and sticks to some of the themes of “Boy Crazy,” except this song finds the guy trying to get the girl back.

    All of this builds up to the closer, “Ballad for the Lost Romantics,” a track for “fools who have no meaning” and one where Pundik sings about drinking the night away with friends and not worrying about what tomorrow will bring. Again, this is an album perfect for your teenage years, or a “truth of your youth” to put it in NFG terms.

    I’m now in early 30s territory and obviously this record is not as relatable as it once was for me. Still, it’s a nice glass of nostalgia and serves as a reminder for how important this band was to me. New Found Glory’s music has picked me up at times of heartbreak and also played a big part in memorable nights with friends. They’re one of the few bands that’s able to make music that’s both fun, yet also wear their hearts on their sleeve. NFG was able to successfully channel this for the first time on Self-Titled.

    New Found Glory might not be the greatest New Found Glory album, but there’s no doubt that it’s the most important. While 1999 saw Blink-182 burst onto the mainstream thanks to the success of Enema of the State and Saves the Day slowly making a name for themselves with Through Being Cool, the release of New Found Glory in 2000 belongs in the conversation of influential pop punk albums along with these. New Found Glory not only set the stage for the sound of pop punk during this period, but they helped start the pop-punk/emo explosion on Drive-Thru Records. After 20 years, this album remains a hit and is far from a miss.

    more

    Not all embedded content is displayed here. You can view the original to see embedded videos, tweets, etc.
     
  2. xenoabe

    Regular

    This album is so influential in my music tastes. I tried to grab the repressed vinyl but it kept selling out before I got to it.
     
    bobby_runs and benschuyler like this.
  3. benschuyler

    Regular Prestigious

    Easily the most formative album of my youth. It truly is the one that started it all for me.
     
    bobby_runs likes this.
  4. Former Planets

    Aaaachem!

    I remember hearing a Get Up Kids song somewhere and went on Kazaa looking for it. I ended up downloading "It Never Snows in Florida" which was misattributed to GUK. I loved it so I went to Best Buy the next day to find "Nothing Gold Can Stay," but they only had S/T which had just come out. I was not disappointed.
     
  5. theasteriskera

    Trusted Supporter

    I found so many bands during this time period solely because people misnamed song files. What a wild time...
     
    fowruok, 333 GANG and benschuyler like this.
  6. Scuba Chris

    Newbie Prestigious

    I bought this album on the blind because one of the cool kids at my school couldn't stop talking about this album. As soon as I popped the CD in and "Better Off Dead" started not only did I know I had a new favorite band, I knew my musical tastes had shifted. NFG - Self Titled was my gateway album.
     
  7. mit_backwards

    Regular

    NFG was our local band and everybody knew somebody who was related to somebody in the band in some way. I was friends with Jordan's cousins for example.

    Anyways when this album came out I found out the girl I had a crush on was really into them, so I skipped first period (junior year of high school) to go to the record store and snag a couple of copies. Made it back to school and gave one to her. She gave me a big hug and thanked me. She said she would call me after school so we could listen to the album together over the phone.

    She never did and I dont think we ever spoke again. You gotta watch out for the beautiful ones.

    NFG FOREVER...and ever x infinity.
     
  8. benschuyler

    Regular Prestigious

    This.
     
  9. IAmMikeWhite

    @IAmMikeWhite Supporter

    Non-singles are not called B-sides. The industry vernacular is “album cuts.”

    “The Minute I Met You” and “So Many Ways” are b-sides.
     
    xburningcoffin and bobby_runs like this.
  10. kpatrickwood

    Give what you can.

    Well yeah, but it looks like he was specifically talking about the second half of the record, which on vinyl... would be side B.

    Let's go to the judges...

    who gives a shit.

    Well folks there ya have it.
     
    theredline likes this.
  11. Former Planets

    Aaaachem!

    Ehhh, if you’re going to review music that’s something you’re a little bit expected to know....
     
    xburningcoffin and kpatrickwood like this.
  12. kpatrickwood

    Give what you can.

    I'm gonna go ahead and stick to my guns here and say that referring to songs that are literally on side B of an album as "B-sides" is not inaccurate.

    That said, when a band releases a single from the second half of the album that it's featured on, it's total anarchy. So, I get why people also just use the blanket b-side terminology for tracks that were recorded for a specific album but didn't make the final cut.
     
  13. Former Planets

    Aaaachem!

    the term comes from non-album tracks being traditionally released on the b-side of 7” singles
     
  14. xburningcoffin

    KC

    Nah, it should be written as side B of the album; when you use the term “b-side/s” it’s definitely, universally understood to be referring a non-album, unreleased track often seen on singles. Cool, you don’t care about making grammatical sense but I would imagine anyone who makes a career as a writer would want to get this right.
     
  15. IAmMikeWhite

    @IAmMikeWhite Supporter

    Right. And I hate that I come off like an a***ole correcting someone's writing, but I've seen the mistake made a few times, and I think it's a misunderstanding.
     
    xburningcoffin likes this.
  16. Ya'll spending your weekend in some weird ways.
     
    kpatrickwood and pbueddi like this.
  17. IAmMikeWhite

    @IAmMikeWhite Supporter

    I don't think the reviewer was specifically talking about the B Side of the vinyl because 1) This album was not originally released on vinyl 20 years ago, and 2) the reviewer refers to "Second to Last" as a b-side, which would be on Side A of the vinyl.

    It's industry vernacular. And if you're writing within the industry, I think you should mind those details.
     
  18. IAmMikeWhite

    @IAmMikeWhite Supporter

    COVID, man. We're all going a little nuts here.
     
  19. HelloThisIsDog

    Trusted

    Anyone know who that is playing guitar with them for the live stream?
     
  20. mit_backwards

    Regular

    Will from Cartel
     
    HelloThisIsDog likes this.
  21. xburningcoffin

    KC

    What did everyone think of the livestream? I felt like it was super nostalgic to hear those songs again but seriously wish I could have seen that in-person. They thrive on the energy of the crowd, they tried their best to make it fun but it felt weird.
     
  22. deflector

    formerly pizzatime

    Can't listen to this anymore; it's like a cake that's too sweet.
     
  23. manoverboard679

    If you have to ask, you can't afford it

    Totally agree. I actually went back to the tracklist to ensure I wasnt crazy that Second to Last wasnt on the actual album
     
  24. kidblink

    Regular Supporter

    Any update on when the reissues ship?
     
  25. theasteriskera

    Trusted Supporter

    I'm in a vinyl release group on FB and some people got notifications late last week that theirs are shipping. So hopefully we'll see them in the next week or 2
     
    kidblink likes this.