Twice Removed is the second album by Canadian rock band Sloan, released on Geffen Records in 1994. The album took seven weeks and cost $120,000 to record.[5] More melodic than their previous album, Smeared, Geffen gave the record little promotion because it defied the label's commercially dominant grunge rock style of the time. The band and Geffen parted ways after Twice Removed's release.[6] After the band's trouble with the label, they took time off from touring and writing and were broken up for a brief period.
Commercial performance
Twice Removed peaked at No. 25 on the RPMCanadian Albums Chart.[7] By February 1997, the album had sold 58,000 units in Canada.[5] The album was certified Gold in Canada on October 20, 1998.[8] In the United States, the album has sold 14,000 units to date according to Nielsen Soundscan.
Legacy
In 1996, the music magazine Chart conducted a reader poll to determine the best Canadian albums of all time. Twice Removed topped that poll.[9] When the magazine conducted a follow-up poll in 2000, Twice Removed lost the top spot to Joni Mitchell's Blue, but still placed third. In the third poll, in 2005, Twice Removed reclaimed the top spot.[10]
In 2012, the album received a deluxe reissue on vinyl. This edition includes another three discs: one containing demo versions of the Twice Removed songs; another containing B-sides that were originally intended for the album but left off; and a 7-inch, 45 RPM disc containing songs that, in the words of guitarist Jay Ferguson, "didn't really fit anywhere else in the package". The release also includes a 12x12, 32-page colour booklet containing photos, interviews and other stories from the band's members. The reissue was made available exclusively via the band's website.[6]
In 2015, the album was named the winner in the 1990s category of the inaugural Slaight Family Polaris Heritage Prize, an annual Canadian music award for classic albums released prior to the creation of the Polaris Music Prize.[11]
The Outtakes (2012 Deluxe Reissue Box Set)[12][13]
No.
Title
Length
26.
"Guidance Counselor" (31 Clayton Park Dr demo)
2:20
27.
"Ill Placed Trust" (31 Clayton Park Dr demo)
2:58
28.
"Autobiography" (Laura’s Apartment demo)
3:16
29.
"Consider It Lumped" (Deep Space Nine demo)
4:31
30.
"Sing Your Little Heart Out" (31 Clayton Park Dr demo)
2:44
31.
"Stood Up" (Deep Space Nine demo)
2:48
32.
"Same Old Flame" (31 Clayton Park Dr demo)
3:14
33.
"Every Needle Has An Eye" (Deep Space Nine demo)
3:25
34.
"Girl In Case" (Pier 21 demo)
2:32
35.
"One Professional Care" (Sound Market Studios demo)
2:34
36.
"Kinetic And Content" (31 Clayton Park Dr demo)
3:15
37.
"Sing Your Little Heart Out" (Pier 21 demo (Bandcamp Exclusive)
2:38
38.
"D Is For Driver" (Pier 21 demo (Bandcamp Exclusive)
2:50
39.
"Every Needle Has An Eye" (31 Clayton Park Dr demo (Bandcamp Exclusive)
3:48
7" Single (2012 Deluxe Reissue Box Set)
No.
Title
Length
40.
"I Hate My Generation (Chris Demo)" (Deep Space Nine demo)
3:08
41.
"I Can Feel It (Alternate Chords Demo)" (Deep Space Nine demo)
1:58
B-Sides
"Coax Me (Icks Nay on the Evie Stay Micks)" (Coax Me 7")
"One Professional Care" (Coax Me 7")
"I Can Feel It (demo)" (Promotional 7")
Trivia
Jennifer Pierce from Jale appears once again as a backup singer on "I Can Feel It".
Lyrics for the first track on the album, "Penpals", were taken from broken English fan letters to Kurt Cobain, which the band rummaged through when they were signed to Geffen in the early ’90s.[6][14]
"Penpals" is referenced in the graphic novel Lost at Sea by Bryan Lee O'Malley when one character sings the lyrics from it.