Fever to Tell
Fever to Tell is the debut studio album by American indie rock band Yeah Yeah Yeahs, released in April 2003 by Interscope. It was co-produced by David Andrew Sitek, his first of many production credits for the group, and recorded at Headgear Studio in New York City. To maintain creative control, the band financed the album themselves before signing with Interscope for distribution. Building on the garage rock sound of their 2001 debut EP, the band incorporated elements of art punk and dance-punk, while lead singer and songwriter Karen O was inspired by her experiences in New York with intimacy and sexuality.
Fever to Tell received acclaim from music critics and marked the band's commercial breakthrough, reaching number 55 on the Billboard 200 and the top 20 of charts in Ireland, Scotland, and the United Kingdom. It was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music Album and the Shortlist Music Prize. It has sold over one million copies worldwide, and was certified gold in the United States and United Kingdom.
Fever to Tell is widely considered a seminal work of the 2000s indie and garage rock movements, as well as Yeah Yeah Yeahs's magnum opus. The album features in several publications' lists of the decade's best albums, and in multiple rankings of the greatest albums of all time.
Background and recording
In 2000, singer/songwriter Karen O—then known as Karen Orzolek—and guitarist Nick Zinner founded the duo Unitard, before changing the name to Yeah Yeah Yeahs and adding drummer Brian Chase to form a trio. They embraced a "trashy, punky, grimy" style inspired by the college music scene Karen O saw in Ohio.During the next two years, Yeah Yeah Yeahs earned positive reviews for their live shows and their self-titled debut EP, released in 2001. These efforts led to offers from major record labels to finance their debut studio album; however, the band chose to independently finance the project "to do it on our turf, on our terms".
Yeah Yeah Yeahs conceived Fever to Tell in 2002, cancelling a performance at that year's Reading Festival in order to focus on recording the album. They chose to record at the low-budget Headgear Studio in Brooklyn, where they jointly produced it with David Andrew Sitek, then a member of TV on the Radio. The band hired him because they "felt immediately like we were family" and "we didn't know anyone else." The album was mixed by Zinner and sound engineer Alan Moulder in London. Afterwards, they signed with Interscope Records to distribute the record.
Music and lyrics
Fever to Tell has been described as art punk, garage rock, alternative rock, and indie rock. The album also uses elements of dance-punk and new wave, among others. Critics have likened its sound to the bands Siouxsie and the Banshees, Led Zeppelin and the Velvet Underground, and the musicians Lydia Lunch and PJ Harvey.The musical style of Fever to Tell built on what the band had previously produced. Its lyrics were written by lead vocalist Karen O and explore female sexuality, heartbreak and intimacy. Karen O explained the album's content in an interview for The Believer:
Release and promotion
Yeah Yeah Yeahs began promoting Fever to Tell in November 2002, releasing the EP Machine—consisting of three songs from the album's recording—to moderate success. Interscope then released Fever to Tell on May 3, 2003. "Date with the Night" was the first single released from the album in April 2003, which became the band's first entry on the UK singles chart at number 16. "Pin" followed in June, which peaked at 29 in the UK and 34 on the Scottish Singles Chart. "Maps" was released in September 2003 as the album's third single, and became their first appearance in February 2004 on the US Billboard Hot 100 at number 87. Its music video became a hit on MTV and rock radio and helped triple sales of the album. "Y Control" was the final single produced from Fever to Tell, released in June 2004. Experiencing similar success to "Pin", it gained attention for its controversial music video.Critical reception
Fever to Tell received universal acclaim from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 85, based on 27 reviews. Rolling StoneAndrew Perry from The Daily Telegraph called it an "exhilarating dose of lo-fi garage-rock". In The Village Voice, Robert Christgau observed "a striking sound" that is "both big and punk, never a natural combo", and highlighted by Zinner's "dangerous riffs". He had reservations about the subject matter, however; while noting "two human-scale songs toward the end", Christgau said "to care about this band you have to find Karen O's fuck-me persona provocative if not seductive, and since I've never been one for the sex-is-combat thing, I find it silly or obnoxious depending on who's taking it seriously."
Fever to Tell was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music Album and was certified gold in both the United States and the United Kingdom. The video for "Maps" received nominations for MTV [Video Music Award for Best Art Direction|Best Art Direction], MTV Video [Music Award for Best Cinematography|Best Cinematography], Best Editing, and the MTV2 Award at the 2004 [MTV Video Music Awards]. The New York Times chose Fever to Tell as the best album of 2003.
Commercial performance
Fever to Tell debuted at number 67 on the Billboard 200 on May 17, 2003. It remained there for 28 weeks, exiting the chart on April 3, 2004. It is tied with the band's third album, It's Blitz!, for most weeks spent on the chart. In March 2009, Fever to Tell reached sales of more than one million copies worldwide. As of March 2013, the album had sold 640,000 copies in United States.Legacy
Fever to Tell has impacted several genres, especially within NYC's early-'00s rock resurgence. In 2018, it was deemed "one of few enduring albums" by Steve Foxe of Paste. The site rated it #15 out of the 50 all-time greatest garage rock albums. Within indie rock, Fever has left "an indelible mark". In 2022, NMEs Erica Campbell wrote that it paved the way for the genre's future "devil may care frontwomn and an abundance of rule-breaking by those seeking post-punk creativity." In 2023, uDiscover Music's Laura Stavropoulos wrote that dance-rock, NYC's next wave, was put "into motion" through the "groove-laden" album. Within the era's "quickly calcifying" garage rock revival, Stavropoulos wrote that it provided "a sense of fun and urgency" to the scene.Fevers 2017 reissue garnered critical acclaim. The Line of Best Fits Joe Goggins wrote that it was "still masterpiece" and dubbed it "a chaotic symphony in sex, debauchery and bottomless anxiety," positively comparing it to PJ Harvey's 1993 album Rid of Me. Uncuts Michael Bonner praised that it stayed "as visceral, as exciting, as confounding as ever."
In June 2005, the album was ranked number 89 on Spin magazine's list of the 100 Greatest Albums, 1985–2005. Featuring in the 2010 book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die, Fever to Tell was hailed as "the coolest and cleverest record of 2003". In 2009, the album was named by NME, Pitchfork, and Rolling Stone the fifth, 24th, and 28th best album of the 2000s decade, respectively. In 2019, the album was ranked 38th on The Guardian's 100 Best Albums of the 21st Century list. In 2020, it was ranked number 377 on Rolling Stone's Top 500 Albums of All-Time.
Track listing
Original release
All tracks written by Yeah Yeah Yeahs. Releases in the United Kingdom and Japan feature the bonus tracks "Yeah! New York" and a CD-ROM video of "Date with the Night".2017 deluxe re-release
In 2017, Fever to Tell was remastered and reissued digitally and with a limited edition box set, both of which feature expanded track listings and bonus content. These include "Poor Song" and other unused tracks, as well as demos and recordings of live performances.Personnel
Credits adapted from the liner notes of Fever to Tell.Yeah Yeah Yeahs
- Brian Chase – drums
- Karen O – vocals
- Nick Zinner – guitars, drum machine
- David Andrew Sitek – production ; mixing
- Yeah Yeah Yeahs – production
- Paul Mahajan – engineering
- Alan Moulder – mixing
- Nick Zinner – mixing
- Rick Levy – mixing assistance
- Chris Coady – post-production
- Howie Weinberg – mastering
- Roger Lian – track editing
- Cody Critcheloe – artwork