Project 86 Releasing 20th Anniversary Edition of Drawing Black Lines on Vinyl


Like many heavy music fans at the turn of the millennium, I was blown away by Project 86's seminal 2000 album, Drawing Black Lines. The SoCal band's sophomore effort combines aggression, melody, and atmosphere in an incredibly unique way, along with fiery lyrics and an incredibly distinctive sense of rhythm. 3/4 of the band members left Project 86 at the end of the 00's, but frontman, Andrew Schwab, has continued with the band name, releasing three (pretty damn good) albums since, and currently crowdfunding a fourth and final album. However, there was a bit of a kerfuffle last year when Schwab announced plans to celebrate Drawing Black Lines' 20th anniversary (COVID-19 threw off the timeline), and didn't involve the other three original band members, several of whom soon found themselves banned from the official Project 86 Facebook page after voicing their displeasure on the celebration announcement post. Now, the three founding former members, Randy Torres, Steven Dail, and Alex Albert, are celebrating Drawing Black Lines 20th anniversary in the best way possible, by releasing a deluxe vinyl edition of the album.
The turn of the century saw CD's reigning supreme, as vinyl records wandered in the media format desert. With the resurgence of vinyl over the last decade, and the death of the compact disc, it only makes sense to finally release Drawing Black Lines on the venerable, oft-considered superior format. This month, the trio have released a black vinyl version, a deluxe orange vinyl version (including a bonus 7"), and a super deluxe version of Drawing Black Lines which includes both versions (I went for the deluxe orange). Check it out at the link below.
To find out what the big deal is, check out my review of the album here: Project 86 -- Drawing Black Lines
Link to buying album:

Comments

Graham Wall said…
That orange vinyl looks terrific! The scream in "Sad Machines" is right up there with 2003/2004 Skillet. Had no idea about all this drama with Andrew Schwab ... I was listening to a podcast with him last week about Aldous Huxley and science fiction, and I was impressed by his intelligent answers. Strange!
The more I think about it, I'm pretty "Sad Machines" was my favorite track from the album back when it was released. I listened to the new Skillet album, Dominion, on Spotify, and the first three tracks make it seem like they're going to get back to that 2003 sound, but then the rest of the album...does not do that.
Man, Schwab is such a well-read, engaging speaker. It's a real bummer that his legacy has become so complicated over the last few years. What podcast was it?
Graham Wall said…
Yeah, it's from the Book Collide Podcast! :) https://podtail.com/podcast/books-collide-podcast/andrew-schwab-discusses-brave-new-world-and-truthl/
Very cool! Thanks for the link. I will have to check that out. Also, I listened to Lou Rhodes--I really enjoyed some of her songs, particularly "All the Birds."

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