EyeHateGod, "the quintessential Southern sludge band" (Pitchfork) that Rolling Stone dubbed one of "America's great live bands," return to Century Media Records for the release of the band's first album in seven years: A History of Nomadic Behavior. The album is introduced with "High Risk Trigger" a taste of what's to come on the 12-song album. Lyrically, the song is cryptic and abstract, but it touches on the all-pervasive fears bred by an invisible germ storm sweeping through the nation and a society sickened by police brutality: "Infection is the way, disruptive crowd takes aim/Burn down the rail yard house, destroy the U.S.A."
Singer Mike IX Williams said of the songs on the album, "We're not a political band, but it was hard not to be affected by the news from the past year. During this recording, I thought a lot about how stupid humanity has become and how America is now completely divided with these people who don't believe in science and blindly follow liars and nonsensical ideologies. Some of those feelings may have found their way into these songs, but it is mostly subliminal."
A History of Nomadic Behavior follows a period that saw the New Orleans based band on the road for three years, preceded by Williams suffering liver failure and a transplant. "We toured our asses off for three years and that's where A History of Nomadic Behavior basically comes from," adds Williams before touching on his health challenge: "Death is a part of life, it's a roll of the dice. Sometimes you take life as it comes, other times you fight to stay alive." The album was produced by Eyehategod, Sanford Parker (Yob, Voivod) and James Whitten (Thou, High on Fire), with mixing by Whitten. The band recorded at HighTower Recording and Hypercube studios.
- Built Beneath the Lies
- The Outer Banks
- Fake What's Yours
- Three Black Eyes
- Current Situation
- High Risk Trigger
- Anemic Robotic
- The Day Felt Wrong
- The Trial of Johnny Cancer
- Smoker's Place
- Circle of Nerves
- Every Thing, Every Day