Gravity (Our Lady Peace album)
| Gravity | ||||
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| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | June 18, 2002 | |||
| Recorded | November 2001 – February 2002 at Plantation Mixing and Recording, Haiku, Hawaii | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 41:27 | |||
| Label | Columbia | |||
| Producer | Bob Rock | |||
| Our Lady Peace chronology | ||||
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| Singles from Gravity | ||||
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| Alternative Cover | ||||
Limited edition CD + DVD cover | ||||
Gravity is the fifth studio album by the Canadian rock band Our Lady Peace. It was released on June 18, 2002 by Columbia Records in North America. The album became a worldwide success, charting highly both in Canada and the United States with the hit singles "Somewhere Out There" and "Innocent".
Gravity was the first album to feature new guitarist Steve Mazur, who replaced founding member Mike Turner in 2002 after the latter's departure a month into recording. Despite this, Turner still appears on half the tracks on the album, having recorded parts for several songs prior to parting ways with the group. This was also their last album with supporting musician Jamie Edwards, who had performed on two prior albums and was briefly an official member, but left the band soon after the album's completion.
It was the band's first album made without the involvement of producer Arnold Lanni, who not only produced the band's previous four studio albums but helped co-write many of their songs. The band originally wanted Lanni to produce their fifth album but he was busy working with Simple Plan and the band instead chose notable hard rock producer Bob Rock, who would have a major influence on their change in musical direction. Originally conceived as a live album based on the Spiritual Machines tour that would include three new studio tracks, the band would accept Rock's offer to record a full studio album when his schedule opened up as a result of the ongoing struggles of his prior engagement, Metallica.
The album title, Gravity, was inspired by the chorus lyrics "Falling back to me, defying gravity" from the track "Somewhere Out There" and was also seen by the band as representing their return to simplicity after the heady concept of Spiritual Machines. At the time of the album's release, OLP drummer Jeremy Taggart said that Gravity was "by far [their] best album".