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The Format – Interventions + Lullabies

Discussion in 'Article Discussion' started by Melody Bot, Oct 24, 2023.

  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.

    How does one begin to encapsulate the meteoric rise of lead vocalist Nate Ruess’s career? Like most stories, you start at the very beginning. The Format (Nate Ruess and multi-instrumentalist Sam Means) formed in February 2002, and while their friendship goes as far back as grade school, their band chemistry was felt almost immediately. That electric-charged feeling of when a group of talented musicians come together to make art was felt far and wide in The Format. I first got wind of this band when they opened up for Jimmy Eat World and Paramore, and I found their charming mix of emo, pop, and Beach Boys-esque melodies to be immediately infectious. The Format was signed to Elektra Records for what would become their debut LP, Interventions + Lullabies, and much like many other major label artists during this period of time, the merging of record companies led to conflicts on whom the executives found worth pushing on radio, MTV, etc. The Format were ultimately left on the outside looking in when Warner Brothers (and finally Atlantic Records) had the rights to the band’s music. “The First Single” was the only song to be promoted during this album cycle, and it would remain a staple in the band’s set until their breakup in 2008.

    Interventions + Lullabies was released 20 years ago over the weekend, and still with very little fanfare or recognition from the band’s social media accounts on this birthday, I decided to take it upon myself to give this special record its moment in the sun. While Nate Ruess would become a household name with fun., you never forget where you came from. The Format would tug on all the right heartstrings on their all-too-brief music period that plateaued with their opus, Dog Problems.

    This album correctly kicks off with “The First Single,” that features the memorable chorus hook of, “You know me, or you think you do,” that finds that early magic between Ruess/Means at an all-time high. “Wait, Wait, Wait” continues the momentum train on the right track with another up-tempo song that showcases the mature lyrical prowess of Ruess at such a young age. The second verse of, “And these chords remain / We’ll use them to exploit the friends / We’ve since forgot / Those friends we’ve lost / You all know just who you are / Cause I’ve since made graves / But I’m too scared to etch the names / For fear that I’m the one who’s changed,” is crisp, talented wordplay.

    Other early standouts like “Give It Up,” with its memorable hook of, “So give it up / Throw your hats in the air / And change just as they land as you’re saying, ‘we’ll get out of here'” remind me of the reason why I became so enamored with this band in the first place. While “Tie The Rope” deserved to be released as a radio single with its pop-bliss first verse of, “I’m in envy of addicts, you’re obsessed with stars / Don’t, don’t you sound so excited just showing me your vanity / Whisper it once, just a little bit / C’mon whisper it twice / I cant stand to see the spotlight shine one more night / It’s killing me to see you.” Plus the ode to the radio anthem of “Tune Out” that bleeds gracefully into the heartfelt “I’m Ready, I Am” as Ruess admits, “I’m trying to find truth in words, in rhymes, in notes / In all the things I wish I’d wrote / ’cause I feel like I’ve been losing you.”

    The band continues to spread their wings on the back half with the more somber “On Your Porch,” the rock n’ roll emo-ringed anthem of “Sore Thumb,” and the reflective “A Mess To Be Made.” “Let’s Make This Moment a Crime” is a good enough title to be etched in emo lore history, and the song “Career Day” should’ve been the track to close out Interventions + Lullabies since “A Save Situation” is too somber to remember all the good times that were had while listening to this album.

    Nate Ruess and Sam Means would find moderate success with their sophomore follow-up, Dog Problems, that put their band chemistry and expansive musical creativity on a fully realized display. Interventions + Lullabies is a worthy debut LP that deserved to put onto so many more iPods and CD players in 2003, and my wish is for this record to continue to be a cult favorite in our scene.

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  2. theasteriskera

    Trusted Supporter

    In 8th grade ('03) a friend of mine gave me a burned copy of this & TBS' Tell All Your Friends, & those 2 albums have had so much influence on my taste in music since. It's wild that 20 years has passed, but I'm glad this still gets so much praise. I hope they actually figure out how to make those reunion shows happen :brokenheart:
     
  3. mit_backwards

    Regular

    Just want to say that I saw The Format open for Something Corporate and Yellowcard back in 2004. What a show.

    Great album. Dog Problems though is a GREAT album.
     
  4. Buscemi knows best

    You owe me a Sausage McMuffin

    Had never heard of The Format until they played a show with The Matches, Men Women & Children, and Motion City Soundtrack. Fell in love instantly and saw them several times.

    I'd kill to see that whole bill and be 14 again, too.
     
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  5. theasteriskera Oct 24, 2023
    (Last edited: Oct 25, 2023)
    theasteriskera

    Trusted Supporter

    Just relistened to this again, still holds up so well :heart: And I think they closed with A Save Situation so that the last words would be "we all fall down", because the first words on Dog Problems are "ashes to ashes"
     
  6. arcarsination

    Newbie

    I bought this album on a whim and didn't like it at first listen. I gave it to a buddy of mine (still one of my best friends), and he got me into it. Still one of those bands I think about and wish they were still around. Fun never grabbed me the way The Format did...
     
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  7. JamesMichael

    Software Engineer Prestigious

    Classic for sure.
     
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  8. theformat04 Oct 24, 2023
    (Last edited: Oct 24, 2023)
    theformat04

    Newbie

    First discovered them opening for Yellowcard in ‘04. Drove around to every store in my city trying to find the album the next day. The cover is now tattooed on my forearm. Impossible to overstate what this band means to me.
     
  9. Biko

    Newbie Supporter

    First heard them at a county fair where they were opening for Switchfoot. I wasn’t even in the audience, I just happened to overhear when I was waiting for a ride outside where they were playing. Ended up finding Interventions + Lullabies at Best Buy and was hooked after that.
     
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  10. paythetab

    Chorus.FM Album Reviewer (Adam Grundy) Supporter

    That’s dedication!
     
  11. atlastitsok

    Regular

    They got some spin on local radio before the album came out and got pretty big in Arizona. Had tickets for their reunion shows that got postponed and eventually canceled with covid
     
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  12. swedishheat

    Newbie

    Hah, they stopped by my school during that tour. I was one of the only people that showed up, I felt so bad. There was a banner on campus, stating that they'd be there, but I didn't believe it. it was just so random to play a show on a Saturday morning. I figured it must have been some other band called The Format, but I showed up, and lo and behold, it was them.

    I was so hyped to see them, and there was literally only 4-5 people there. I filmed their whole set, here's the first song, you can see the other videos on YouTube, I'm not sure how to link to the whole playlist anymore.

     
  13. Brent

    Trusted Prestigious

    I went to go see June open for them in Pomona years ago and didn't want to stick around for The Format, as I didn't know who they were. The guys from June were begging us (me and my gf) but we dipped anyways. What a colossal mistake that was.
     
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  14. brothemighty

    Trusted

    man, tie the rope is one of my favorite songs ever
     
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  15. theasteriskera Oct 25, 2023
    (Last edited: Oct 25, 2023)
    theasteriskera

    Trusted Supporter

    This is a gem I'll be watching all of these later ty for sharing!! Does anyone remember an acoustic version of On Your Porch that was floating around online with Nate smoking a cigarette while singing? I looked yesterday but couldn't find it on Youtube, I'm pretty confident it was pre-Youtube I think maybe Myspace
     
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  16. RedDotRecording

    Record Engineer/Producer. Musician. Coffee Punk.

    Damn, I love this album.

    Perfect songs all around. Truly remarkable.

    Dog Problems is monumental, too. Even better, I think.

    fun.'s Aim and Ignite feels to me like the follow up to Dog Problems. It's a really great record, too. Jack Antonoff had spent a lot of time with Sam and Nate when his band was touring with The Format so he had a good sense of what The Format was doing.

    I caught The Format in 2007 at Station 4 in Minneapolis with Piebald and Limbeck. What a great show. What a great album (followed by an even better album).
     
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