The Eleventh Hour (Jars of Clay album)

The Eleventh Hour
Studio album by Jars of Clay
Released March 5, 2002
Recorded 2001–02
Genre Rock
Length 42:26
Label Essential
Producer Jars of Clay
Jars of Clay chronology
Jar of Gems
(1999)
The Eleventh Hour
(2002)
11Live: Jars of Clay in Concert
(2003)
Singles from
The Eleventh Hour
  1. "I Need You"
    Released: 2002
  2. "Fly"
    Released: 2002
  3. "Revolution"
    Released: 2002
  4. "Whatever She Wants"
    Released: 2002
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
allmusic[1]
Christianity Today[2]
Cross Rhythms[3]
Jesus Freak Hideout[4]
Pitchfork[5]

The Eleventh Hour is the fourth full-length studio album of the band Jars of Clay. It was released in 2002 by Essential Records and marked the band's first attempt at producing a full album for themselves.

Overview

When writing the group's fourth album, Jars of Clay enlisted Dennis Herring, who produced the band's If I Left the Zoo album, to produce, but due to scheduling difficulties, Herring decided to pull out of the project, leading to the band's first attempt at producing by themselves. Though not initially intending to produce the album themselves, the group took on this and many other aspects of putting the album together they had not before, such as artwork and even filming Ten:Thirty: The Making of The Eleventh Hour video.

The Eleventh Hour is considered a return to Jars of Clay's original sound, though in truth it bore stylistic similarities to all three of the albums preceding it, and continued the trend of favoring poetic lyrics over straightforwardly "Christian" lyrics (with lead single "I Need You" being a notable exception, reflecting a trend toward more direct and simplistic "worship songs" that had become popular in Christian music at around the start of the 21st century). The electric guitar was a more notable presence here than on past albums as well.

The song "Fly" had limited success at mainstream radio, but by this point, Jars of Clay was much less visible in mainstream music than they had been in the mid-nineties. The album was recorded in the band's own Sputnik Studio, and they self-produced it in addition to doing all of the photography and artwork on their own, even down to using the programs to design the cover. This was the first time that they had produced their own material since the self-titled album.

The album's tour was later recorded and released as a DVD known as 11Live, which featured the same cover artwork as The Eleventh Hour. Later, the group re-recorded many songs from the first four albums and released these studio sessions along with the live performances as Furthermore: From the Studio, From the Stage. "Something Beautiful" and "The Eleventh Hour" were the only songs from The Eleventh Hour that were included on the studio portion of the release, while "The Eleventh Hour" appeared a second time on the live performance (the only song to appear twice, on track five of each disc) and "Disappear", "I Need You", "Fly" and "Revolution". In 2007, the group parted from Essential Records and Sony BMG, Essential's parent company, decided to release a greatest hits collection as part of their The Essential series. The Essential Jars of Clay features four songs from The Eleventh Hour which are the singles "I Need You", "Fly" and "Revolution" and the album's track "Silence".

Honors

Album artwork

The album cover of The Eleventh Hour is a photograph of Seattle taken by Dan Haseltine from a hotel window looking down the Pike Place Market. All of the artwork was created jointly by the band, as the group wanted to put together an album that they had created, after being prompted to produce the album with the departure of Dennis Herring from the producer position before pre-production had begun.

Track listing

  1. "Disappear" – 3:56
  2. "Something Beautiful" – 3:46
  3. "Revolution" – 3:42
  4. "Fly" – 3:20
  5. "I Need You" – 3:40
  6. "Silence" – 5:17
  7. "Scarlet" – 3:32
  8. "Whatever She Wants" – 3:43
  9. "The Eleventh Hour" – 4:27
  10. "These Ordinary Days" – 3:04
  11. "The Edge of Water" – 3:54

Personnel

Charts

Chart (2002) Peak
position
The Billboard 200 28

References

  1. allmusic review
  2. Christianity Today review at the Wayback Machine (archived December 24, 2005)
  3. Rimmer, Mike (May 2002). "Jars of Clay - The Eleventh Hour". Cross Rhythms (68).
  4. Jesus Freak Hideout review
  5. Pitchfork review
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