Before These Crowded Streets
Before These Crowded Streets is the third studio album by the American jam band Dave Matthews Band, released on April 28, 1998, by RCA Records.[1]
Produced by Steve Lillywhite at studios in Sausalito, California, and New York City, it features contributions from guest musicians including singer Alanis Morissette, the Kronos Quartet, and jazz pianist Herbie Hancock, resulting in a 70-minute runtime blending rock, jazz, and funk elements.[2][3]
The album debuted at number one on the Billboard 200, ending the 16-week reign of the Titanic soundtrack and initiating the band's streak of consecutive chart-topping releases.[4][5]
It achieved multi-platinum certification from the RIAA, reflecting strong commercial performance driven by the band's growing fanbase and extensive touring.[6]
While praised for its ambitious and experimental scope, particularly tracks like "Don't Drink the Water" and "The Stone," the record drew some criticism for its dense, less radio-friendly arrangements compared to predecessors like Crash.[7][3]
Background and Development
Songwriting and Composition
Following the commercial success of their 1996 album Crash, which sold over seven million copies in the United States, the Dave Matthews Band pursued a songwriting approach that emphasized darker themes and experimental structures for Before These Crowded Streets.[8] This shift reflected a deliberate move away from the more accessible, radio-friendly elements of prior work toward introspective and complex compositions, influenced by the band's desire to challenge themselves creatively after mainstream acclaim.[3] The core songwriting originated from collaborative jamming sessions among Dave Matthews, bassist Stefan Lessard, and violinist Boyd Tinsley, with Matthews providing primary lyrical and melodic foundations that the group refined through improvisation.[9] These sessions, building on live performance traditions dating back to the band's early years, shaped tracks like "Don't Drink the Water," where Matthews drew from historical accounts of Native American displacement to craft lyrics addressing conquest and loss, a process he later described as one of his most potent creative outputs.[10] Similarly, "Rapunzel" emerged from extended instrumental explorations, evolving from a 1994 live jam known as "Funk In 5" into a structured piece blending rhythmic interplay and thematic obsession during late 1997 development.[11] Personal experiences and broader cultural reflections informed the lyrical directions, with Matthews incorporating motifs of isolation and redemption amid the band's intensified touring schedule post-Crash.[12] Lessard and Tinsley's rhythmic and string contributions during jams provided the foundational grooves, enabling Matthews to layer narratives that prioritized emotional depth over commercial polish, culminating in selections that captured the group's evolving cohesion by fall 1997.[9]Excluded Songs and Material
"MacHead" was an early sketch recorded during the Before These Crowded Streets sessions but ultimately excluded from the final album due to its incomplete development.[13] Producer Steve Lillywhite coined the title, describing the track as evoking "McCartney meets Radiohead" through its melodic and atmospheric elements.[13] Dave Matthews later reflected on the song as "really pretty" yet acknowledged it "got shut down nevertheless," indicating a decision to shelve it rather than refine further, prioritizing tracks that aligned with the album's cohesive experimental structure.[13] The band also considered "Help Myself," an older composition, for inclusion but opted to exclude it in favor of retaining "Halloween," which they deemed essential to the album's core.[14] Instead, "Help Myself" was submitted for the Scream 2 soundtrack, reflecting a strategic choice to avoid overextending the record's already dense 70-minute runtime and maintain focus on newly developed material.[14] Several studio jams from the sessions were similarly undeveloped and cut as full songs, appearing only as brief "commercials" or interludes on the album to preserve brevity without diluting the primary tracks' intensity.[13] These exclusions underscored the band's emphasis on curation, ensuring the final product emphasized bold, collaborative experiments over unfinished or peripheral ideas, as evidenced by the limited circulation of such material even among insiders.[15] The rarity of "MacHead," known to only a handful beyond the band until its 2024 leak, highlights how such omissions fostered mythic status among fans while sharpening the album's artistic priorities.[13]Production
Recording Sessions
The recording sessions for Before These Crowded Streets took place primarily at The Plant Studios in Sausalito, California, with supplementary work conducted at Electric Lady Studios in New York City.[16] These sessions unfolded in early 1998, enabling completion in a compressed period ahead of the album's April 28, 1998 release date, which underscored the project's urgency following the band's extensive touring schedule.[9] This tight timeline, spanning roughly two months, preserved the raw, spontaneous quality of the band's performances by minimizing extensive overdubs and revisions.[17] Producer Steve Lillywhite, returning for his third consecutive DMB studio album, prioritized methodologies that replicated the group's live improvisation and interplay, often recording core band tracks in full takes to retain organic dynamics amid the deadline pressures.[3] Lillywhite's approach involved minimal interference during initial captures, allowing the quintet's established chemistry—honed through years of road performances—to drive the sessions, though logistical hurdles arose from coordinating the band's evolving arrangements within the studio environment.[18] Band members later recalled the process as intense yet liberating, with the Sausalito facility's acoustics aiding in achieving the album's layered, unrefined sonic texture without succumbing to overproduction.[9] This emphasis on immediacy directly contributed to the record's hallmark improvisational feel, distinguishing it from more polished contemporaries.Guest Contributions and Technical Aspects
The album incorporated contributions from several guest artists, whose improvisational and instrumental additions diversified the arrangements on specific tracks. Alanis Morissette provided backing vocals on "Don't Drink the Water" and sang the outro vocal on "Spoon," her alternative rock timbre contrasting with Matthews' style to heighten emotional intensity in those sections.[19][2] Béla Fleck contributed banjo to "Don't Drink the Water," "The Last Stop" (including its reprise), "Spoon," and Interlude #2, layering acoustic picking patterns that infused bluegrass-derived rhythms and jazz improvisation into the band's grooves.[2][14] Tim Reynolds, appearing on all tracks, played electric guitar and mandolin, delivering extended solos and textural fills—such as the intricate mandolin lines on "Pantala Naga Pampa" and guitar weaves on "Crush"—that amplified the album's jam-oriented expansiveness through his signature fluid, effects-laden phrasing.[16] The Kronos Quartet supplied violin, viola, and cello on "Halloween" and "The Stone," their classical string ensemble work providing contrapuntal depth and harmonic richness, particularly in the orchestral swells of "Halloween" arranged by John D'Earth.[20][2] Additional guests included Greg Howard on Chapman stick for the bass-like ostinatos in "The Dreaming Tree," Butch Taylor on piano and organ for harmonic support in "Crush" and "Rapunzel," and background vocalists Tawatha Agee, Cindy Mizelle, and Brenda White-King on "Stay (Wasting Time)."[2] These guest inputs empirically expanded the album's palette, as Fleck's banjo introduced percussive world-music inflections audible in rhythmic interplay with Stefan Lessard's bass, while the Kronos Quartet's strings added symphonic layering absent in the band's prior, guitar-violin-sax core—effects traceable in the tracks' isolated instrumentation via audio analysis.[14][2] Production by Steve Lillywhite emphasized capturing such live-session spontaneity, with engineering by Steve Harris facilitating multi-instrument tracking during band-plus-guest takes at Haiku Gardens in Hawaii and additional overdubs to integrate elements without diluting the core ensemble's chemistry, differing from the heavier polish of 1996's Crash.[2][21] The result preserved improvisational authenticity, evident in seamless track segues like the transition from "Pantala Naga Pampa" to "Rapunzel," achieved through minimal corrective editing to retain performance variance.[22]Musical Style and Themes
Genre Influences and Instrumentation
Before These Crowded Streets fuses rock with jazz-rock, funk, and world music elements, incorporating polyrhythms in tracks like "Rapunzel" and "The Stone," where Carter Beauford's drumming creates complex, interlocking rhythms over Stefan Lessard's bass lines.[4] LeRoi Moore's reed instruments, including saxophone and flute, add improvisational jazz layers, as heard in the groove of "Stay (Wasting Time)."[23] Certain compositions draw on Middle-Eastern scales and serpentine guitar riffs from Tim Reynolds, enhancing the album's eclectic sonic palette beyond standard rock structures.[24] The album marks an evolution from the band's jam-band foundations in releases like Under the Table and Dreaming (1994), shifting toward denser, darker textures through expanded string arrangements and guest orchestration, which introduce orchestral depth not prominent in earlier works.[25] This includes Boyd Tinsley's violin providing contrapuntal melodies and textural swells, particularly in extended pieces like "The Dreaming Tree," contrasting the lighter, more acoustic-driven sound of prior albums.[26] Core instrumentation centers on Dave Matthews' acoustic guitar and vocals, Moore's multi-reed setup (alto, soprano, tenor, and baritone saxophones, plus bass clarinet and pennywhistle), Tinsley's violin and viola, Lessard's bass, and Beauford's percussion-driven grooves.[1] Guests expand experimental facets, such as Béla Fleck's banjo on "The Last Stop" for folk-jazz inflections and Butch Taylor's keyboards for harmonic support across tracks; additional horns from Branford Marsalis and background vocals further enrich polyrhythmic sections without overpowering the band's organic interplay.[1]Lyrical Content and Conceptual Depth
The lyrics of Before These Crowded Streets mark a departure from the lighter, more whimsical elements in prior Dave Matthews Band releases like Crash, adopting a darker, more introspective tone that probes personal doubts and societal ills.[27][23] Matthews' writing emphasizes human frailty and relational tensions, as seen in "The Stone," where creeping suspicions of deception give way to pleas for reassurance and forgiveness amid perceived entrapment.[28][29] Recurrent motifs of human conflict underscore causal chains of violence and displacement, exemplified in "Don't Drink the Water," which depicts the conqueror's rationalization of land seizure and cultural erasure through biblical analogies and threats of extermination, drawing parallels to historical colonialism and the subjugation of indigenous populations.[10][30] Similarly, "The Last Stop" evokes apocalyptic war and moral reckoning, portraying humanity's self-destructive tendencies as an inevitable endpoint.[26] These tracks blend direct socio-political critique with poetic imagery, avoiding abstraction to highlight greed and power as drivers of atrocity. Environmental and existential themes emerge in "The Dreaming Tree," where an elder laments the replacement of a solitary, contemplative natural site with urban sprawl, symbolizing progress's erasure of irreplaceable solace and simplicity.[31] Spirituality surfaces through questioning human limits and redemption, balancing abstract reflections on loss with grounded commentary on irreversible change, as in the album's titular reference to encroaching civilization's cost.[32]Release and Promotion
Marketing Strategy and Singles
The lead single "Don't Drink the Water" was released to radio on March 28, 1998, approximately one month prior to the album's April 28 street date, aiming to generate early buzz through targeted airplay on rock and alternative stations.[1] A accompanying music video, directed by Dean Karr, depicted indigenous figures carrying a severed, singing head of Dave Matthews to underscore the track's lyrics on colonial displacement and violence against Native Americans, aligning with the song's raw thematic intensity without softening its edge for broader appeal.[10][33] Subsequent singles followed a staggered rollout to sustain momentum: "Stay (Wasting Time)" on June 28, 1998, and "Crush" on September 8, 1998, both emphasizing the album's eclectic sound via radio promotion and limited video support.[1] RCA Records, leveraging the band's momentum from the multi-platinum Crash (1996), adopted a restrained marketing approach focused on grassroots fan engagement rather than aggressive advertising campaigns, including distribution of promotional excerpts CDs to industry insiders and retailers.[34] This strategy built on the Dave Matthews Band's practice of permitting audience taping at live shows, which organically amplified word-of-mouth promotion through bootleg circulation.[25] Promotion centered on extensive touring in summer and fall 1998, with setlists incorporating new material to foster direct audience connection and drive physical sales at venues, reflecting the band's established model of prioritizing live performance over media spectacles.[35] The rollout proceeded without notable controversies, contrasting with some peers' tabloid-driven hype, and emphasized the album's artistic risks to appeal to core listeners attuned to its experimental depth.[25]Artwork and Packaging
The cover artwork features a photograph by Ellen von Unwerth depicting a dense crowd of pedestrians on an urban street, directly illustrating the "crowded streets" motif drawn from lyrics in the album's "The Dreaming Tree."[36] Art direction and design were handled by Thane Kerner. This imagery causally ties to the album's thematic exploration of societal congestion and personal introspection, as the visual density mirrors lyrical references to overwhelming environments.[37] The inner booklet includes photographs capturing the band and guests during recording sessions at The Plant Studios in Sausalito, California, in fall 1997, providing a documentary glimpse into the collaborative process.[38] These images, distinct from the exterior's anonymous urban anonymity, emphasize the intimate, session-based origins of the tracks amid the influx of external contributors like the Kronos Quartet and Tim Reynolds.[20] Packaging follows the standard jewel case format for the 1998 CD release, but incorporates expanded liner notes that meticulously credit the extensive list of guest musicians, production personnel, and recording details—totaling over two dozen named contributors beyond the core band—deviating from the more abbreviated norms in many contemporaneous rock releases by highlighting the album's atypical ensemble scale.[20] Contemporary accounts noted the visuals' effectiveness in evoking urban disarray, aligning with fan perceptions of the artwork reinforcing the record's chaotic, populous sonic texture.[39]Critical Reception
Initial Reviews
Upon its release on April 28, 1998, Before These Crowded Streets received mixed initial reviews, with critics divided on the band's ambitious experimentation. Rolling Stone awarded it 3.5 out of 5 stars, praising the album for showcasing a "more mature, confident band" through stretching out and new sounds, though noting that "at times, it feels incoherent, as if the ambition outstrips the execution" and a "rushed feel in spots."[37] The Baltimore Sun's J.D. Considine highlighted the band's demonstrated maturity, particularly in inward-turning lyrical depth amid polyrhythmic elements.[40] AllMusic's Stephen Thomas Erlewine gave it 3 out of 5 stars, acknowledging ample tone and improvisation despite minor flaws in execution, positioning it as a product of the band's live-oriented reputation translated to studio form.[7] Aggregated critic scores from contemporaneous outlets averaged around 3 out of 5, reflecting a split where jam-band enthusiasts appreciated the darker, improvisational shifts, while some mainstream reviewers found the overambition and genre-mashing led to inconsistency.[41] Pitchfork's original 1998 assessment was harshly critical, assigning a 0.8 out of 10 and decrying the album's perceived lack of cohesion in its experimental forays.[42] Specific tracks drew praise amid the divide; Rolling Stone singled out "Rapunzel" as a "standout, blending jazzy improvisation with raw energy."[37] Orlando Weekly commended the continuation of polyrhythmic pop but noted the inward lyrical focus sometimes overshadowed accessibility.[27]Retrospective Evaluations
In later assessments, critics have positioned Before These Crowded Streets as a pinnacle of the Dave Matthews Band's creative ambition, emphasizing its experimental fusion of jazz, rock, and orchestral elements amid personal turmoil following the death of Matthews' sister in 1994. A 2018 Relix retrospective hailed it as the band's "most daring and rewarding record," arguing that its bold structures and guest contributions, including strings and horns, represented a departure from safer pop-rock trajectories, though it contended the album has been undervalued in broader canon discussions despite influencing jam-oriented acts through its emphasis on improvisational complexity and thematic introspection.[18] The 2023 vinyl reissue prompted renewed acclaim, with Pitchfork describing the album as DMB's "most experimental" effort and a historical crossroads that defied commercial expectations by prioritizing unease and narrative depth over accessibility, linking its production choices under Steve Lillywhite to a rawer, less polished sound that foreshadowed the band's live-centric evolution.[14] This view aligns with analyses crediting the record's lyrical explorations of grief and societal fragmentation—evident in tracks like "The Stone" and "Pig"—as enduring strengths that reward repeated listens, even as some observers note its role in expanding jam-rock's boundaries by integrating classical and world music influences without diluting rhythmic drive.[14] Counterbalancing this critical rehabilitation, fan-driven aggregates reveal sustained ambivalence, with RateYourMusic users assigning an average score of 3.53 out of 5 based on 1,926 ratings as of recent tallies, reflecting divides over its density versus more melodic predecessors like Crash.[43] Modern reevaluations often critique the production's dated sheen—characterized by prominent reverb and layered orchestration that can overwhelm in high-fidelity remasters—tempering praise for innovation with observations that its studio-bound ambition sometimes obscures the band's live vitality, a tension unresolved in aggregate listener data.[14]Commercial Performance
Chart Achievements
Before These Crowded Streets debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 chart dated May 16, 1998, displacing the Titanic soundtrack after its extended run at the top.[44] This marked the Dave Matthews Band's first album to reach the summit of that ranking.[45] Internationally, the album achieved a peak of number 10 on the UK Albums Chart.[46] In Australia, it reached number 44 on the ARIA Albums Chart and spent three weeks on the listing.[47] The lead single "Don't Drink the Water" peaked at number four on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart in 1998.[48] It also reached number 50 on the Billboard Hot 100 Airplay chart.[48] Follow-up single "Stay (Wasting Time)" attained number 44 on the Hot 100 Airplay chart.[48]Sales Figures and Certifications
Before These Crowded Streets achieved sales exceeding three million units in the United States, qualifying for 3× Platinum certification from the RIAA.[6][49] The album received its multiplatinum designation in September 1998, reflecting strong initial commercial momentum driven by concurrent touring activity.[6] Internationally, the album earned Platinum certification in Canada from Music Canada on January 13, 1999, denoting shipments of 100,000 units.[50] No additional certifications from other major markets, such as Australia or the United Kingdom, have been documented in official records.[51] Subsequent reissues, including vinyl editions for anniversaries, have contributed to sustained catalog sales without altering core certification levels.[4]Track Listing
Personnel
Dave Matthews Band- Dave Matthews – vocals, acoustic guitar[1]
- Carter Beauford – drums, percussion, backing vocals[1]
- Stefan Lessard – bass guitar[1]
- LeRoi Moore – alto saxophone, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone, flute, bass clarinet, pennywhistle, backing vocals[1]
- Boyd Tinsley – acoustic violin[1]
- Alanis Morissette – backing vocals (tracks 1, 12)[2]
- Béla Fleck – banjo[1][3]
- Butch Taylor – keyboards, backing vocals[1]
- Kronos Quartet (violin, viola, cello) – strings (tracks 7, 10)[2][3]
- Tim Reynolds – electric guitar[1][3]
- Greg Howard – Chapman Stick[1]
- John D'Earth – trumpet[1]
- Tawatha Agee, Cindy Myzell, Brenda White – backing vocals[1]
- Steve Lillywhite – producer, mixing[1]
- Dave Matthews Band – co-producer[1]
- Steve Harris – engineering[1]
- Mark "Spike" Stent – mixing[1]
- Ted Jensen – mastering (Sterling Sound)[1]