Divisive (album)

2022 studio album by Disturbed From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Divisive (album)

Divisive is the eighth studio album by American heavy metal band Disturbed. Produced by Drew Fulk, it was released on November 18, 2022, via Reprise Records.[4]

Quick Facts Studio album by Disturbed, Released ...
Divisive
Thumb
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 18, 2022
Recorded2022
Studio
Genre
Length37:55
Label
ProducerDrew Fulk
Disturbed chronology
Evolution
(2018)
Divisive
(2022)
Singles from Divisive
  1. "Hey You"
    Released: July 14, 2022
  2. "Bad Man"
    Released: November 15, 2022[1]
  3. "Unstoppable"
    Released: April 25, 2023[2]
  4. "Don't Tell Me"
    Released: November 7, 2023[3]
Close

The first single from the album was "Hey You", which was released on July 14, 2022. In regards to the sound of the single, it is said to be similar to the band's earlier albums such as The Sickness and Ten Thousand Fists.[5] A promotional single called "Unstoppable" was released on September 23, 2022, along with the details for their upcoming album.[6] With a run time of 37 minutes and 55 seconds, It is the shortest Disturbed album to date. It is the final Disturbed album to be released through Reprise Records.

Background and recording

Summarize
Perspective

As early as October 2020, frontman David Draiman stated that he wanted new Disturbed music to be "blisteringly angry", considering everything going on in the world with the COVID-19 pandemic.[7]

Back in April 2022, Draiman took to his Instagram page to a share a photo of a whiteboard to his fans and followers suggesting that the album has been completed, in that photo, which has now been deleted, a list of approximately ten songs can be seen, all marked with an "X" symbol, which had initially led to speculation by fans that the album is a covers album.[8]

Ann Wilson of Heart appears on the album on the song titled "Don't Tell Me". According to Dan Donegan, Ann is David's favorite female hard rock singer. After Ann sent out a tweet saying she was "inspired" by the band's cover of "The Sound of Silence", David reached out to Ann to thank her and they developed an online friendship. After the demo of "Don't Tell Me" had been recorded the band felt like it needed a female voice, and they thought Ann would be perfect. David reached out to her to ask if she would appear on the record, and the band was delighted when she said yes. In many interviews band members have stated they are "humbled" to have such rock royalty appear on the album.[9]

"Hey You" topped the Mainstream Rock Airplay chart.[10] A song titled "Bad Man" began radio play on Octane by November 15, and the song's meaning was inspired by the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[11]

At 37 minutes and 55 seconds, Divisive is the shortest studio album to be released by the band.

Reception

More information Review scores, Source ...
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Blabbermouth.net8.5/10[12]
Heavy Magazine(Positive)[13]
Metal Hammer[14]
Wall of Sound7/10[15]
Sputnikmusic[16]
Kerrang![17]
Allmusic[18]
Close

Divisive received mixed to positive reviews from critics. In a review published on Wall of Sound, reviewer Ricky Aarons wrote: "Overall, Disturbed's new album is a pretty good record. Is it great? That decision may be divisive." He went on to praise the heavier approach on the album.[19]

Another review came from Kris Peters from Heavy Magazine: "Yes, Disturbed will always continue to do what they want musically, but don't ever think that means they are going soft. A welcome, if not completely triumphant, return!"[20]

Joe Daly of Metal Hammer gave the album a rating of 4 out of 5 stars in a review published on Louder Sound. He said, "Polarising or not, Disturbed have reasserted their claim to the modern metal throne and Divisive will surely delight their existing fans, while picking up a few more along the way."[21]

Blabbermouth.net gave the album a rating of 8.5/10.[22]

Track listing

All songs written by Disturbed, except where noted. "Don't Tell Me" appears as the first track on the Spotify release of the album.

More information No., Title ...
Divisive track listing
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Hey You" 4:28
2."Bad Man"
3:22
3."Divisive" 3:58
4."Unstoppable" 3:58
5."Love to Hate" 3:36
6."Feeding the Fire"
  • Disturbed
  • Fulk
4:19
7."Don't Tell Me" (featuring Ann Wilson)
  • Disturbed
  • Fulk
4:31
8."Take Back Your Life"
  • Disturbed
  • Fulk
2:58
9."Part of Me" 3:53
10."Won't Back Down" 2:52
Total length:37:55
Close

Personnel

Disturbed

Additional musicians

Additional personnel

  • Drew Fulk – production, mixing, engineering
  • Ted Jensen – mastering
  • Jeff Dunne – mixing
  • Trent Woodman – mixing and engineering assistance
  • Jace Mann – additional engineering (on track 7)
  • Paul Murphy – additional engineering (on track 7)

Charts

More information Chart (2022), Peak position ...
Weekly chart performance for Divisive
Chart (2022) Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[23] 5
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[24]11
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[25]57
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[26]152
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[27]9
Croatian International Albums (HDU)[28] 7
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[29]78
Greek Albums (IFPI)[30]51
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[31]15
French Albums (SNEP)[32]150
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[33]9
Hungarian Albums (MAHASZ)[34]12
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[35] 7
Polish Albums (ZPAV)[36]37
Scottish Albums (OCC)[37]13
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[38]11
UK Albums (OCC)[39]17
UK Album Downloads (OCC)[40]4
UK Rock & Metal Albums (OCC)[41]2
US Billboard 200[42]13
US Top Alternative Albums (Billboard)[43]1
US Digital Albums (Billboard)[44]1
US Top Hard Rock Albums (Billboard)[45]1
US Top Rock Albums (Billboard)[46]3
Close

Singles

More information Year, Song ...
Year Song US
Main.

[47]
US
Rock

[48]
US
Hard
Rock
Digital

[49]
CAN
Rock

[50]
CZE
Rock

[51]
FIN
[52]
NZ
Hot

[53]
2022 "Hey You" 1 6 2 32 2 97 33
"Bad Man" 2 7 10 32 38
2023 "Unstoppable" 1 7 1 29
"Don't Tell Me" 2 1
Close

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.