- Source: Major minor
- Source: Major/Minor
Music
Major and minor, the adjectives used to describe the tonality of a scale, key, or chord
Major-minor tonality, a system of music in which specific hierarchical pitch relationships are based on a key "center" or tonic
Major/minor composition, a musical composition that begins in a major key and ends in a minor key
Major/Minor, an album by Thrice
Other
Academic majors and minors, the primary and secondary academic disciplines to which an undergraduate student formally commits.
Major Minor Records, a record label started by Phil Solomon in 1966 and later bought by EMI
Major Minor's Majestic March, a 2009 music video game for the Nintendo Wii
The Major and the Minor, a 1942 romantic comedy film directed by Billy Wilder
Major Minor, a character in the cartoon Snagglepuss
Major minor, a species of fly in the genus Major
See also
Major (disambiguation)
Minor (disambiguation)
Major/Minor is the eighth studio album by American rock band Thrice. The album was released on September 6, 2011, through Vagrant Records.
Recording and production
Thrice entered Red Bull Studios in early May 2011 with producer Dave Schiffman. The group had previously worked with Schiffman on 2005's Vheissu as an audio engineer, and on 2009's Beggars as a mixer. Thrice also previously used Red Bull Studios to record their acoustic live EP The MySpace Transmissions in 2007. When Thrice presented Schiffman with the demos they had been working on, his initial reaction was that the group was trying to make a grunge album. According to vocalist Dustin Kensrue, this was not their intention, and the finished product after production sounded "kind of bigger and meaner than the demos." Both musically and production-wise, the group's previous album Beggars was a "stripped-down" record, and Thrice wanted Major/Minor to sound "bigger and in-your-face" without sounding "smashed and oversaturated." Kensrue also noted that Schiffman joined the album process later than a producer normally would to help record an album, and that his input was minimal. He said:
We had him come down to our practice space when all the songs were kind of being played and [he] just kind of listened through and talked about them and made a couple changes based on little things said here or there, but it was really minimal in that regard. He was mostly just bringing his experience as an engineer and mixer, just knowing how to get the sounds nailed down. We're really comfortable with him.
After the recording for Major/Minor had been completed, Thrice returned to their home studio to record "two or three" additional tracks to be used as B-sides. The home studio was also used to record Thrice's 2007/2008 albums The Alchemy Index Vols. I & II and The Alchemy Index Vols. III & IV, and Beggars.
Release and promotion
Major/Minor was initially released in a double LP vinyl record format on September 6, 2011, through Vagrant Records. The gatefold vinyl edition came with additional liner notes from the band members and the first pressing was limited to 4,000 copies. Two weeks later, on September 20 in the US and September 19 in the UK, Major/Minor was released in CD and digital download formats. Pre-orders for the album received an instant download of an acoustic version of "Anthology". The iTunes version of Major/Minor comes with an acoustic version of "Yellow Belly," and pre-orders through the store placed before the official release date exclusively received an acoustic version of "Promises."
In July 2011, Thrice offered a free download of the opening track "Yellow Belly" through the website ChinaShop. The rush of traffic to the website caused the site to crash, and the song was subsequently uploaded to SoundCloud. "Yellow Belly" was previously debuted live at The Bamboozle festival in April 2011. In August 2011, an acoustic version of "Anthology," and a lyric video for "Promises" were posted online. Beginning on September 7 and lasting until the day of the digital/CD release, Thrice posted one new song from Major/Minor each weekday for online streaming. "Promises" impacted radio on October 4, 2011.
= Supporting tours
=Thrice's first headlining tour in support of Major/Minor ran from September 30 to November 11, 2011, and featured openers La Dispute, Moving Mountains and O'Brother. Kylesa was originally intended to be an opener for this tour, but announced they would not be able to perform due to an illness in the family several months before the tour began.
Reception
= Critical response
=Upon its release, Major/Minor was met with critical acclaim, earning an average score of 82 based on 10 reviews from Metacritic. In a positive review, Raziq Rauf of BBC Music praised the production of the album, stating that "there’s a simplicity to the music and songs that allows the listener to enjoy them at a very elemental level." With a four out of five rating, Punknews praised the grunge influence of the album, comparing their sound to "an authentic 1990s Pearl Jam/Soundgarden creation." IGN labeled the album as "one of the strongest rock efforts of the year," with reviewer Chris Grischow praising Kensrue's vocals on "Yellow Belly", "Blinded", "Promises", "Cataract" and "Anthology". Alex Djaferis of AbsolutePunk praised the lyrics of the album, stating it was "sheer poetry and in this day and age, such a brave and welcome change."
Track listing
All music written by Eddie Breckenridge, Riley Breckenridge, Dustin Kensrue and Teppei Teranishi; all lyrics written by Kensrue.
Personnel
Major/Minor album personnel adapted from vinyl liner notes.
Thrice
Eddie Breckenridge – bass
Riley Breckenridge – drums
Dustin Kensrue – vocals, rhythm guitar
Teppei Teranishi – lead guitar
Production, recording and artwork
Jordan Butcher – art direction, design, artwork
James Musshorn – assistant engineering
Dave Shiffman – production, recording, mixing
Eric Stenman – assistant engineering
Teppei Teranishi – additional recording at New Grass Studios
Howie Weinberg – mastering
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kompleks histokompatibilitas utama
- Partai utama
- Sixteen (seri TV)
- Langobardia Major
- Major League Baseball
- Ursa Minor
- Variola
- Skala pentatonik
- Canis Major
- Otot teres major
- Major and minor
- Major minor
- Semi-major and semi-minor axes
- Major/Minor
- Major Major Major Major
- The Major and the Minor
- Relative key
- Key signature
- Major Minor Records
- Minor scale