We were originally slated to record in the small room at the original Salad days studio in Boston with Brian McTernan. When I called to get directions the week before we were leaving, Brian informed me the studio had flooded and that the recording couldn't happen on the dates we had booked. This led to my utter panic. We had a summer tour booked and needed our LP done so the cd would be out in time! Our drummer Blake very much shared that sentiment. Glenn, our fifth member at the time, suggested we go to Trackmaster, a local studio where the Goo Goo Dolls had recorded a Boy Named Goo. That record had gone platinum so I figured that meant we would get a platinum level recording, right? WRONG. Glenn really struggled matching some of the rhythm guitar I played and with some of his leads. I just think, though he had fun and live brought great energy, the style we played wasn't something he could play. Also, I don't really recall Glenn being in a band with two guitarists aside from evergreen and that was at least 5 years prior. I remember that there is a lead in one song he worked on for HOURS trying to nail. Literally hours, I walked in the booth and made a suggestion about taking a break or something along those lines and he said "one more fucking word and I'm walking out of here." He quit the band two weeks later.
It's a real shame how the LP turned out as a whole, because Blake and Eric played so well on it. The energy level is just perfect but the production values paired with my brother's sick/ asthma attack attempt at singing brought it down. Also, Mark, the engineer, didn't help. "Oh, so you guys are a hardcore band? Like SNFU, right?" Yeah, Mark, EXACTLY like that.