PRAISE FOR CAR SEAT HEADREST – TEENS OF DENIAL
Statement from Matador Records:
Dear Media, Friends, Fans, etc,
We were so inspired by Radiohead and Beyoncé’s recent success with surprise albums outta-the-blue that we decided to do the REVERSE with Car Seat Headrest’s hotly anticipated Teens Of Denial; instead, we’re pulling the LP and CD versions from circulation on the eve of the album’s release.
OK, sorry. The real story is a little more complicated and a lot more of a hassle. We’d love to blame it on someone else, but for once, we can’t.
Official legal statement below, official Will Toledo-penned statement below that, photo of thousands of recalled Teens of Denial LPs below that.
Love,
Matador Records
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The physical release date for the Car Seat Headrest album Teens Of Denial has been pushed back from May 20 to later in the US summer due to a recall of physical product, so that a song containing elements of a composition by Ric Ocasek (of The Cars) could be removed and replaced. Matador had negotiated for a license in good faith months ago, only to be told last week that the publisher involved was not authorized to complete the license in the United States, and that Ric Ocasek preferred that his work not be included in the song. Matador regrets that it was not informed of this much earlier, and has made changes to respect Mr. Ocasek’s wishes.
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Statement from Car Seat Headrest:
Life happens and sometimes not in ideal ways. If you’ve heard anything about the new album, then you’re probably aware that one of its songs made use of The Cars song “Just What I Needed.” Now, obviously, when we called the record ‘done’ and sent it off to be printed, we were working in full confidence that we had the legal side of it all worked out. We found out last week that this was not the case. I’m not going to get into the nitty-gritty of email chains and invested parties; suffice it to say that Matador (and I) were neither pulling a Banksy nor operating in ignorance of the law, but that we truly believed we had the issue resolved months ago, until last week.
As you may have heard, vinyl is being pulled from stores right now. There’s a total recall out, and all copies with the original version of the song will be destroyed. Nevertheless, Teens of Denial WILL COME OUT ON MAY 20TH, at least digitally. I spent the last 48 hours working on an alternate cut of the track, which is now called “Not What I Needed”. It’s not merely an edit – it is its own thing, about half a minute longer than the original track, and goes in a much different direction. Honestly, despite the apparent clusterfuck, I had fun doing it, and I think it’s a stronger song now. In any case I’ve grown up accustomed to working on an album right up to its drop date, so this is not a freak-out scenario for me. The album is going to come out on time and it’s going to be good.
The physical release will not come out on time, obviously. We’ll likely see a street date of sometime in July. I’m very sorry to everyone who was anticipating a preorder (it does sound GREAT on vinyl). It will be in your hands eventually. But it was very important to me that we keep the digital release for May. We’ve all been waiting long enough. Most of my music only exists online anyways, so it makes sense that this album should start the same way.
Thanks for your continued support, and I am very excited for this fucking record to come out already.
-Will Toledo
Teens of Denial Tracklist:
1. Fill In The Blank
2. Vincent
3. Destroyed By Hippie Powers
4. (Joe Gets Kicked Out of School for Using) Drugs With Friends (But Says This Isn’t a Problem)
5. Not What I Needed
6. Drunk Drivers/Killer Whales
7. 1937 State Park
8. Unforgiving Girl (She’s Not An)
9. Cosmic Hero
10. The Ballad of the Costa Concordia
11. Connect the Dots (The Saga of Frank Sinatra)
12. Joe Goes to School
“You might not believe in yourself by the end of “Fill in the Blank,” but you will certainly believe in Car Seat Headrest.” – Best New Track, Pitchfork
“It’s gonna take a bolt of lightening shooting from a unicorn’s a*** to beat this as album of the year” – STACK Magazine, Album of the Month
“One of the most exciting records we have ever heard, hands down” – NPR
“So lyrically strong and engaging that it could propel Car Seat Headrest into the league of lyrical heavyweights alongside Courtney Barnett and Chance The Rapper.” – The Line Of Best Fit
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