Foo Fighters guitarist and singer-songwriter Chris Shiflett has introduced his third solo album, ‘Misplaced At Sea’.
Introduced as we speak (July 12), ‘Misplaced At Sea’ is scheduled for an October 20 launch by way of Snakefarm within the UK and Eire. The album might be out there for pre-order tomorrow (July 13), per Shiflett on Twitter.
tomorrow!! information coming quickly! we’ve got some good bundles and what not. https://t.co/z6QZVd2vyV
— Chris Shiflett (@ChrisShiflett71) July 11, 2023
Together with the announcement of ‘Misplaced At Sea’ comes a model new single titled ‘Harm Management’. ‘Harm Management’ comes with a music video consisting of fan-shot footage of Shiflett’s current UK tour.
Watch the music video for Chris Shiflett’s ‘Harm Management’ beneath.
Shiflett mentioned of ‘Harm Management’ by way of a press assertion: “We made a guitar-centric file that encapsulates every thing I’ve been listening to through the years, from probably the most nation songs I’ve ever recorded to punk rock and even songs that sound like a California model of The Conflict.”
‘Harm Management’ follows the beforehand launched singles ‘Useless And Gone’ and ‘Black Prime White Strains’. These songs may also seem on ‘Misplaced At Sea’ upon its launch in October.
Try the quilt artwork and full observe checklist for Chris Shiflett’s ‘Misplaced At Sea’ beneath.
- ‘Useless And Gone’
- ‘Overboard’
- ‘Black Prime White Strains’
- ‘Harm Management’
- ‘Weigh You Down’
- ‘Burn The Home Down’
- ‘The place’d All people Go?’
- ‘I Don’t Belief My Recollections Anymore’
- ‘Carrie Midnight Texas Queen’
- ‘Events’
‘Misplaced At Sea’ was primarily written through the COVID-19 lockdowns, Shiflett revealed by way of his press assertion. The upcoming album will arrive simply a few months after Foo Fighters launched ‘However Right here We Are’, their first file with out late drummer Taylor Hawkins.
Hawkins died in a lodge room in Colombia in March 2022. He was 50-years-old. Launched in June, ‘However Right here We Are’ scored a five-star assessment from NME, with Ali Shutler writing: “‘However Right here We Are’ is a stupendous, noisy celebration of brotherhood and a stark, painful exploration of loss. It’s messy, gut-wrenching, formidable and beautiful, because the remaining members of Foo Fighters push themselves to their limits and past. By all of it, ‘However Right here We Are’ is an plain reminder of the therapeutic, unifying energy of music.”
After the discharge of ‘However Right here We Are’, the Foo Fighters made a not-so-surprise look at Glastonbury, the place they confirmed long-running rumours that they have been behind thriller band The Churnups.
That efficiency earned the band a four-star assessment from NME‘s Thomas Smith, who wrote: “9 songs is what they’ve time for, the quickest, breeziest Foo Fighters gig of this scale in donkeys. It’s a uncommon sight: severe urgency underpins each track, notably opener ‘All My Life’ and ‘No Son of Mine’.
“Even ‘Be taught To Fly’ and ‘The Pretender’, the latter of which does get damaged down and constructed again up, marching onwards together with pep and vitality.”