Lifehouse - No Name Face [new] Site

while still a teenager, wrote much of the record as a reflection of his own life experiences and spiritual journey. Themes of Identity and Spiritual Longing The album’s title, No Name Face

Recording sessions for No Name Face were intense. Unlike the glossy, over-produced rock of the era, Aniello and Wade stripped everything down. They recorded in a converted barn in Northern California, prioritizing the "crack" in Wade’s voice over perfection. The result was an album that sounded like a whispered secret during a breakdown. Lifehouse - No Name Face

In the grand, churning wash of rock music at the turn of the millennium, the landscape was a fractured mirror. On one side, you had the lingering, adrenalized shadow of nu-metal (Korn, Limp Bizkit) and the slick, angst-polished surfaces of post-grunge (Creed, Nickelback). On the other, the raw, confessional nerve of alternative radio was being sanitized into something more palatable. Into this maelstrom of loud anger and louder silence stepped a then-unknown trio from Los Angeles—Lifehouse—with an album that felt less like a debut and more like an exhale after years of holding your breath. No Name Face , released in October 2000, wasn't a revolution. It was a revelation. It was the sound of a bruised but unbroken heart learning to beat in 4/4 time. while still a teenager, wrote much of the

: The paper tray card that sits behind the CD in a standard jewel case [18]. Other Related Items They recorded in a converted barn in Northern