Symptoms of a Leveling Spirit, I think, was our...I think it was the pinnacle, it was definitely the pinnacle for us as far as our career if you just want to go by numbers. Like, the year that that came out, we were in every weekly, all of our shows were bumped up to the bigger rooms, we sold out our whole European tour, and that was about as good as it ever got for us and that was pretty cool for that to happen. Like that record was...I just have a lot of really good memories about that year personally and band-wise...everything just went really really well for us and we had a really successful year, and I still think that record, and to a lesser extent the E.P. that came before it, were where I finally kind of like, found my stride as a song-writer.[3]
Guitarist Luke Pabich stated that the album's title was inspired by a quote from U.S. President James Madison, wherein Madison used the phrase "symptoms of a leveling spirit" to express concerns over the idea of power and equitable wealth distribution benefiting "non-elite citizens" of the U.S.[4]
Rankin, a dedicated fan of the Psychedelic Furs, convinced the rest of the band members to cover one of their songs. Therefore, the album features a cover of "In My Head" by The Psychedelic Furs, a track originally from the 1991 album World Outside, as a hidden track after "Spit You Out".[4]
Reception to Symptoms of a Leveling Spirit was positive. Chris Moran of Punknews.org gave it four stars out of five, calling it "without question, the definitive GR album ... this is not the same 1,000-beats-a-minute GR you've listened to for the last several years."[7] Jo-Ann Greene of Allmusic gave the album four and a half stars out of five, saying that it "finds Good Riddance huddling ever closer to the melodic punk sound they've been moving towards over the few preceding years ... However, the increased tunefulness takes none of the bite out of Good Riddance's lyrics. And whether attacking individual imperfections or greater societal ills, the group's songwriting remains savagely on point. Always threatening greatness, the group have now produced a true classic."[5]
Track listing
All tracks are written by Russ Rankin, except where noted
No.
Title
Length
1.
"Fire Engine Red" (lyrics: Rankin; music: Luke Pabich)
2:09
2.
"Enter the Unapproachables" (lyrics: Rankin; music: Pabich)