The Search Party Never Came

The Search Party Never Came EP by Vanna is the band's second release and their Epitaph Records debut. It was released on June 6, 2006.

The Search Party Never Came
EP by
ReleasedJune 6, 2006
RecordedFebruary 2006, at Q Division
GenrePost-hardcore, metalcore
Length22:10
LabelEpitaph Records
ProducerFred Archambault
Vanna chronology
Therefore I Am / Vanna
(2006)
The Search Party Never Came
(2006)
Curses
(2007)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link

The band decided to part ways with original lead vocalist Joe Bragel during the recording process of this album in February 2006. An alternate version of "That Champagne Feeling", which was put onto Epitaph's Winter 2006 Sampler, was recorded with Joe Bragel prior to his departure.

Guitarist Nicholas Lambert took over the screaming while Evan Pharmakis continued to handle the low growls and clean singing vocals. Though Joe can still be heard on parts of "Dead Language..." & "I Am The Wind...". Along with the choir and gang vocals.


Track listing

  1. A Dead Language For A Dying Lady – 4:13
  2. That Champagne Feeling – 3:34
  3. I Am The Wind, You Are The Feather – 3:46
  4. Schadenfreude – 2:41
  5. The Search Party Never Came – 4:16
  6. She's A Real Battleaxe – 3:40

Personnel

Vanna
  • Nick Lambert - unclean vocals, guitar
  • Evan Pharmakis - clean vocals, additional unclean vocals, guitar
  • Shawn Marquis - bass, backing vocals
  • Brandon Davis - drums
Production
  • Produced, engineered, and mixed by Fred Archambault
  • Recorded and mixed at Q Division
  • Additional engineering and editing by Matt Tahaney
  • Mastered by Tom Baker at Precision Mastering
  • Drum Tech by Carl Plaster
Additional Credits

Choir vocals: Grace Read, Sarah Vanasse, Stephanie Seeliger, Joe Bragel
Gang Vocals: Jon Burke, Rich McLaughlin, Drew Pillsbury, John Meuse, Eric Perini, Micheal Foti, Joe Bragel

gollark: Some will tell you that it's because the people agreed to impose basic rules, but that's probably wrong.
gollark: You only use it once.
gollark: What's the use of aliasing intercalate there?
gollark: Yes, seems like it.
gollark: Hmm.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.