When Forever Comes Crashing

When Forever Comes Crashing is the third studio album by American metalcore band Converge, on April 14, 1998 through Equal Vision Records.

When Forever Comes Crashing
Studio album by
ReleasedApril 14, 1998 (original)
March 22, 2005 (remaster)
RecordedDecember 22, 1997 – January 3, 1998
StudioGodCity, Salem, Massachusetts
Genre
Length39:28
LabelEqual Vision
Producer
Converge chronology
Petitioning the Empty Sky
(1996)
When Forever Comes Crashing
(1998)
The Poacher Diaries
(1999)
Alternative cover
2005 remaster artwork by Aaron Turner.
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link
Punknews.org link
Sputnikmusic link

Recording

The album was recorded at God City Studio from 22 December through 3 January 1998. Steve Austin of Today Is the Day, along with Converge, produced the album and also provided backup vocals on the track "The Lowest Common Denominator". Jay Randall, from Agoraphobic Nosebleed, Jeff Fineburg, Ben Cummings, Matt Pike (not to be confused with Matt Pike of Sleep and High on Fire fame), Grail Mortillaro, Ryan Parker and Tre McCarthy also appear as backing vocalists.

Release

When Forever Comes Crashing was originally released on April 14, 1998 through Equal Vision Records.

Shortly after the release of Converge's 2004 album You Fail Me through Epitaph Records, Equal Vision reissued remasters of Petitioning the Empty Sky and When Forever Comes Crashing. The updated version of When Forever Comes Crashing featured new artwork from Isis frontman Aaron Turner, production work from Converge's Kurt Ballou in addition to Mike Poorman and Alan Douches, and an demo version of "Bitter and Then Some" as a bonus track. The liner notes also contain the second part of the essay written by the "Aggressive Tendencies" columnist and editor of the Canadian online magazine Exclaim!, Chris Gramlich.[3][4][5] The first part of the essay is found on the Petitioning the Empty Sky remaster.

In 2006, Jacob Bannon's Deathwish Inc. released a vinyl box set collection for the remasters of Petitioning the Empty Sky and When Forever Comes Crashing in a package dubbed Petitioning Forever.[6]

Track listing

No.TitleLength
1."My Unsaid Everything"3:23
2."The High Cost of Playing God"4:17
3."In Harm's Way"4:20
4."Conduit"4:10
5."The Lowest Common Denominator"3:53
6."Towing Jehovah"2:20
7."When Forever Comes Crashing"3:14
8."Ten Cents"2:20
9."Year of the Swine"3:47
10."Letterbomb"3:47
11."Love as Arson"3:22
Total length:39:28
Equal Vision Records remaster CD (2005)
No.TitleLength
12."Bitter and Then Some (Demo Version)"1:27
Total length:40:55

Personnel

gollark: "Inherently quantum"? As far as I know any quantum computing operation can run on nonquantum stuff, just often very slowly.
gollark: Isn't the canon just "needs some quantum operations or it's very slow", not "requires quantum computing"?
gollark: They probably also don't go in the exact directions subway designers would want.
gollark: > mad social scientistI'd really like to see something like this somewhere.
gollark: Just nanorobotically/magically assemble everything exactly where it's needed.

References

  1. "Converge Petitioning the Empty Sky / When Forever Comes Crashing". Retrieved 2017-04-08.
  2. "Converge's Jake Bannon Revisits the Empty Sky and Crashing Forever". Noisecreep. Retrieved 2017-04-08.
  3. Gramlich, Chris (2005). "Waiting on Forever: Part I". Petitioning the Empty Sky (Reissue) (CD booklet). Converge. Albany, New York: Equal Vision Records. EVR109.
  4. Hughes, Josiah (January 1, 2002). "Review: Petitioning the Empty Sky / When Forever Comes Crashing". Prefix. Retrieved August 3, 2010.
  5. "About Us". Exclaim!. Retrieved August 3, 2010.
  6. "Petitioning Forever – Overview". Allmusic. Retrieved August 1, 2010.


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