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It was followed by a companion piece, the Summers Kiss EP in April 2002. Later in 2002, Dashboard Confessional taped a performance for MTV's Unplugged series, which was later released as MTV Unplugged 2.0. As Dashboard Confessional was becoming a staple at radio and on MTV, the project solidified its line-up as a group: Carrabba, bassist Scott Schoenbeck, guitarist John Lefler and drummer Mike Marsh.[1] In December, Carrabba revealed the next album's title: A Mark, a Mission, a Brand, a Scar.[3]
Production
Carrabba lived in a condo with his brother and made over 40 demos using his Korg digital 8-track recorder.[4] Musically, the demos ranged from alternative country to pop in the vein of The Beach Boys.[5] Recording for A Mark, a Mission, a Brand, a Scar took place at Bogart Recording Studios in North Miami, Florida[6] in January 2003.[7]Gil Norton produced the majority of the songs, except "Ghost of a Good Thing" and "If You Can't Leave It Be, Might as Well Make It Bleed", which were credited to Carrabba.[6] Carrabba said Norton "really understood the basic importance" of the tracks and recognised how to improve them without needing to alter them.[4]
Carrabba said the final recordings sounded exactly like the demos he made, both note-for-note and structurally, with the exception of "Ghost of a Good Thing". Norton convinced Carrabba not to re-record the track, resulting in the demo version appearing on the album.[4] Additional tracking took place at Laundry Room Studios. Norton and Adrian Bushby, who also served as engineer, mixed the album at Strongroom Studios in London, UK. Bob Ludwig mastered the recordings at Gateway Mastering.[6]
Composition
Musically, A Mark, a Mission, a Brand, a Scar had been described as alternative rock,[8]emo[9] and pop rock,[10] touching on elements of soft rock and hardcore punk,[11] drawing comparison to Manic Street Preachers[12] and Sunny Day Real Estate.[13] It saw Carrabba leave the solo acoustic sound of his earlier work for full-band instrumentation,[14] though a few tracks were acoustically-driven.[15] The verses sections are sung with a whisper, while the choruses are yelled, with the bridges being a mix of the two techniques; Carrabba's vocal was compared to Third Eye Blind frontman Stephan Jenkins.[16] He came up with the album title while pondering on the meaning of Dashboard Confessional's name.[7]
Early acoustic versions of "Hands Down" appeared on the So Impossible EP[4] and the MTV Unplugged 2.0 (2002) live album.[17] The song, which was reminiscent of Jimmy Eat World,[15] talks about being in love on the happiest day of your life.[7] "Rapid Hope Loss" was written early in the writing process,[18] and credited to Carrabba and Mike Stroud.[6] The track is about not giving a second chance to an ex-lover.[18] "Carry This Picture" was written in the Soho Grand Hotel in New York City. It talks about finding love at a resort town in Florida.[4] "Ghost of a Good Thing" discusses a languishing relationship.[15] "So Beautiful" talks about heavy drinking.[19] Carrabba considered The closing track "Several Ways to Die Trying" serves as a critique of Hollywood.[10] "This Old Wound" the darkest song he's ever written, and said it was "as literal as can be. I was having a day where I was like, 'How am I ever gonna get over this stuff?'"[5]
Release
On March 25, 2003, A Mark, a Mission, a Brand, a Scar was announced for release. In May, Carrabba went on a solo tour,[20] before joining with his band for a support slot for Beck on his US tour, with dates running into June. However, they left abruptly mid-June citing "circumstances beyond our control".[21] Following this, Carrabba played a few solo shows.[22] "Hands Down" was released as a single on July 10,[23] before being released to modern rock radio five days later.[24] A music video was filmed for the track shortly afterwards in New York City with director Nzingha Stewart.[7] In early August, the band appeared on the Late Show with David Letterman and Last Call with Carson Daly.[25][26]A Mark, a Mission, a Brand, a Scar was initially planned for release in July,[20] before eventually being released on August 19 through Vagrant Records.[27] Major label Interscope Records owned a 49% percent[5]non-controlling interest in Vagrant. Label founder Rich Egan said this was to boost their marketing, and to provide his acts "the best of what a major label can offer with none of the crap."[28] Carrabba said, who had a lot of control with his marketing, renewed his contract with Vagrant after he realised the deal with Interscope allowed him the same amount of control.[29] The UK edition of the album featured "This Old Wound" and "The End of an Anchor" as bonus tracks.[6]
A Mark, a Mission, a Brand, a Scar debuted at number 2 on the Billboard 200 chart, selling 122,000 copies in its first week.[22] It has been certified gold by RIAA, meaning it has shipped over 500,000 copies in the United States. Similarly, "Hands Down" appeared on a best-of emo songs list by Vulture.[45]Alternative Press ranked "Hands Down" at number 51 on their list of the best 100 singles from the 2000s.[46]
Track listing
All songs written by Chris Carrabba, except "Morning Calls" by Carrabba and Mike Stroud.[6]