After two decades, it would be all too easy for a band to just phone it incapitalize on the fanbase theyve built up in that time and just make a watered-down version of themselves. Not for The Early November, however. Ever since forming in New Jersey in 2001, the band, now consisting of frontman Ace Enders and founding drummer Jeff Kummer have constantly been striving to find the best and most definitive version of themselves. With this self-titled record, the seventh studio album of their career, the duo have come as close as is possible to doing so. It's an album that ties the past, present and future all together, and as such, it marks what Enders calls a period or exclamation point in our sentence. It's not a new beginning, per se, but nevertheless something emphatic that signifies, in Enders words again, a pivotal moment for them both.
The initial spark of this record was frustration, he says. Although we are growing in many ways and it's a beautiful thing to be able to do what we do, it was born out of feeling like youre doing the same thing over and over again, and out of this I dont care mentality. Not I dont care about the world, but really digging deep artistically and having the view that if this is it, then I want The Early November to finally have the album that's good enough to be the self-titled album. There have been so many highs and lows throughout the career of this band, adds Kummer, but it got very dark. And a lot of this record is coming out of that, but were still here with a collection of brand new songs and it feels right. I feel more connected to where Ace's mind is with this record than I ever have before.
Interestingly and ironically, that synergy sprang from a more negative place. Because at a time when all these nostalgic festivals, tours and events were springing up to celebrate the emo/punk/post-hardcore scenes that The Early November had been a part of/associated with, the band were either ignored or overlooked. But rather than succumb to feelings of defeatism or inadequacy, resignation or disappointment, Enders and Kummer instead used it as inspiration.