Acrobatic Tenement: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox album|
{{Infobox album|
| name        = Acrobatic Tenement
| name        = Acrobatic Tenement
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| next_year    = 1997
| next_year    = 1997
}}
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{{Album ratings
{{Music ratings
| rev1      = [[AllMusic]]
| rev1      = [[AllMusic]]
| rev1Score = {{Rating|4|5}}<ref>{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r350159|pure_url=yes}}</ref>
| rev1Score = {{Rating|4|5}}<ref>{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r350159|pure_url=yes}}</ref>
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==Track listing==
==Track listing==
{{Tracklist
{{Track listing
| title1          = Star Slight
| title1          = Star Slight
| length1        = 1:18
| length1        = 1:18

Latest revision as of 04:33, 4 June 2025

Template:Use mdy dates Script error: No such module "Unsubst-infobox". Template:Music ratings Acrobatic Tenement is the debut studio album by American post-hardcore band At the Drive-In, released on August 18, 1996, on Flipside.[1] The album was reissued by Fearless Records in 2004, along with the band's subsequent albums In/Casino/Out and Relationship of Command, and was re-released again in 2013.

Only one track from Acrobatic Tenement appeared on the band's 2005 retrospective compilation album This Station Is Non-Operational, with "Initiation" appearing as a live BBC recording.

Background and recording

Acrobatic Tenement was initially released on August 18, 1996, exclusively on compact disc through the Los Angeles–based independent record label/fanzine Flipside, after some of its editors saw the band perform in Los Angeles.[2] The record was recorded at Commercial Soundworks in Hollywood for only $600 (Template:Inflation) after the band concluded a tour of the United States.[3] The album has been noted for its lack of guitar distortion, due to guitarist Jim Ward believing that his distortion-free recorded parts would not be used for the final master.[4]

Reflecting upon the aftermath of recording Acrobatic Tenement, frontman Cedric Bixler recalled in 2013: "Before [the album's release], the band had broken up. We did a U.S. tour and we decided to split up. I always needed Jim to be there, but he'd had a falling out with Omar [Rodríguez-Lopez]. We'd made a bunch of dumb moves at the time—kicked the drummer [Ryan Sawyer] who was on the record out, and then the other guitar player [Adam Amparan]—but then Tony [Hajjar] and Paul [Hinojos] came and played. Omar switched to guitar at the time, because he played bass on that album, so when we played live, it was a lot different."[5]

Much of the album, particularly the track "Ebroglio," was inspired by the life and suicide of Julio Venegas, a friend of the band. Venegas' death later inspired the concept album storyline of De-Loused in the Comatorium, the debut album by Bixler and Rodríguez' subsequent project the Mars Volta.[6]

Track listing

Template:Track listing

Personnel

References

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Template:At the Drive-In

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