Ultimate Success Today
Ultimate Success Today is the fifth studio album by American post-punk band Protomartyr, released on July 17, 2020, by Domino Recording Company.[1]
The record consists of ten tracks characterized by angular guitar riffs, driving rhythms, and Joe Casey's distinctive spoken-word vocals, continuing the band's evolution from their Detroit garage rock roots toward broader sonic experimentation.[2][3]
Thematically, it grapples with mid-life malaise, mortality, and dystopian visions of modern life, with the title evoking both pinnacle achievements and final reckonings amid personal and societal decay.[4][5]
Produced by David Tolomei in Chicago, the album incorporates guest contributions from musicians like saxophonist Boshra Alsaadi, enhancing its atmospheric tension and marking a peak in Protomartyr's discography for critical reception, including high praise for its prescient urgency in capturing pre-pandemic unease and institutional failures.[6][7]
Background
Inspirations and Conceptual Origins
The primary inspirations for Protomartyr's Ultimate Success Today originated from lead singer Joe Casey's mid-life crisis in late 2010s Detroit, focusing on themes of aging, mortality, and the city's enduring urban decay.[8] Casey articulated this personal reckoning in a July 2020 interview, noting his realization of mid-life without financial means for escapism, which fueled existential introspection central to the album's conception.[9] These reflections drew from Casey's long-standing observations of Detroit's socioeconomic challenges, a motif he had explored since the band's debut but intensified amid personal milestones like his father's death.[10][8] Literary sources further shaped the album's apocalyptic undertones, with Casey citing Cormac McCarthy's The Road as a key influence evoking end-times desolation and human fragility.[10] This novel's portrayal of a post-catastrophic world resonated with Casey's thematic concerns over passage of time and inevitable decline, predating the album's writing process.[10] While released on July 17, 2020, amid the COVID-19 pandemic and ensuing social unrest, the album's core ideas were developed from Casey's pre-existing personal turmoil rather than as reactive commentary on global events.[6] Casey emphasized in interviews that the prescient-feeling dread stemmed from longstanding anxieties about infirmity and societal erosion, not contemporaneous crises.[5] This grounding underscores the work's origins in individual causality over opportunistic alignment with 2020's upheavals.[11]Band Context and Preceding Works
Protomartyr formed in Detroit, Michigan, where guitarist Greg Ahee, bassist Scott Davidson, and drummer Alex Leonard initially played together in 2008 as the punk band Butt Babies, performing in local dive bars and basements before recruiting vocalist Joe Casey around 2010 to establish the band's core post-punk identity.[12] This lineup shifted from the instrumentalists' raw punk roots toward a more structured post-punk sophistication, evident in early full-length releases that blended caustic energy with Casey's baritone delivery and literate lyrics. The band's second album, Under Color of Official Right, released on April 8, 2014, via Hardly Art Records, exemplified this evolution with its anthemic yet bleak tracks, earning critical acclaim for grounding post-punk revivalism in Midwestern grit rather than stylistic pastiche.[13][14] Follow-up efforts like The Agent Intellect (2015) and Relatives in Descent (September 29, 2017) further refined this sound, with the latter expanding sonic palettes through denser arrangements and thematic introspection, achieving elevated praise in indie rankings but sustaining only modest commercial reach confined to niche audiences without mainstream chart penetration.[15][16] Band dynamics emphasized self-reliance, as members including Casey held day jobs—Casey notably in retail—while resisting full immersion in commercial music circuits, prioritizing local ties and artistic autonomy over broader industry pursuits.[17][18] This approach fostered a realistic progression unburdened by expectations of rapid success, setting a baseline for subsequent work grounded in empirical persistence rather than hype.[12]Recording and Production
Studio Process
The principal recording sessions for Ultimate Success Today took place from July 6 to 19, 2019, at Dreamland Recording Studios, a former 19th-century church located in Hurley, New York, characterized by its vast, untreated main room featuring 120-year-old wood paneling and stained glass, which imparted a natural reverb to the tracks.[19][20] The band tracked the basic elements live as a unit over two intensive days, followed by overdubs with flexible scheduling to accommodate experimentation, enabling the integration of guest musicians including Jemeel Moondoc on alto saxophone, Izaak Mills on bass clarinet, saxophone, and flute, and Fred Lonberg-Holm on cello.[21][22] This approach prioritized capturing the band's raw post-punk energy in the room's acoustics, with minimal prior demos for most songs—many were heard for the first time during tracking—to foster spontaneity.[22] Producer David Tolomei, recommended by the band's label Domino Recording Company, handled engineering, production, and mixing, refining the band's initial ideas by incorporating classical instrumentation to enhance or supplant synthetic elements from rough sketches, such as doubling guitar lines with bass clarinet or flute.[21] He employed analog workflows extensively, utilizing a 48-channel API console with Neve 1073 preamps, Pultec equalizers, and multiple compressors like 1176s and LA-3As across nine instrument stations kept rigged throughout sessions; room microphones captured the space's ambience, while reamping techniques routed acoustic instruments through guitar and bass amplifiers for textured distortion.[21] Vocal chains combined Shure SM7 microphones with Neve preamps, Tube-Tech CL-1A compressors, and rare Blue Stripe 1176 units to blend clean and distorted signals, ensuring lyrical intelligibility amid dense arrangements.[22] Practical constraints arose from the venue's reverberant "wild beast" acoustics, requiring careful management to avoid muddiness, and the technical demands of blending delicate classical elements with the band's loud, distorted drums, bass, and guitars, often necessitating iterative reamping and signal processing.[21][22] Although the Detroit-based band convened in New York for these sessions, the process emphasized in-studio presence over remote work, with all core tracking completed before the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted global activities, though the album's release on July 17, 2020, coincided with it.[19][20]Key Production Decisions
The album was recorded at Dreamland Recording Studios, a 120-year-old untreated church in upstate New York, selected for its natural acoustics that allowed room mics to capture the band's live interplay without added reverb, contributing to the record's expansive yet raw spatial depth.[21][6] Basics were tracked in two days using a 48-channel API console with vintage preamps like Neve 1073s and compressors such as 1176s and LA-3As, enabling analog warmth and immediacy that preserved post-punk urgency over polished sterility.[21] Co-producer David Tolomei emphasized re-amping classical instruments through guitar and bass amps during overdubs, integrating organic textures while avoiding digital processing to maintain causal fidelity to the band's performance energy.[21] Guest contributions from woodwind and string players, including Jemeel Moondoc on alto saxophone across all tracks, Izaak Mills on saxophone, bass clarinet, and flute, and Fred Lonberg-Holm on cello for more than half the songs, added harmonic layers that doubled guitar lines and substituted for synthesizers, enhancing sonic density without overshadowing the core quartet's identity.[6][21] These elements, such as Moondoc's improvisations elevating the chorus swell in "Tranquilizer" and Lonberg-Holm's abrasive cello pairings with angular guitars, introduced warmth and unpredictability, broadening the post-punk palette while grounding it in live improvisation's spontaneity.[6] Mixing prioritized unvarnished clarity and band cohesion, with Joe Casey's vocals routed through a Shure SM7 into a Neve 1073 and Tube-Tech CL-1A chain to pierce dense instrumentation via controlled distortion, ensuring the final output retained the raw, untamed drive of their stage sound amid indie label Domino's resource limitations.[21] This approach, critiqued in reviews for its precision amid heaviness, avoided excessive gloss to sustain authenticity, as evidenced by the album's massive yet immediate instrumental attacks that mirror unadorned live recordings.[6][23]Composition
Musical Elements
Protomartyr's Ultimate Success Today retains the band's core post-punk framework, characterized by angular guitar riffs, taut basslines, and propulsive drumming that evoke tension through repetitive, motorik-inspired rhythms akin to krautrock influences.[24][25] These elements are augmented by noise rock dissonance, where distorted textures and feedback bursts create abrasive edges without overwhelming the structural clarity of the compositions.[26] The result is a sonic palette that prioritizes rhythmic drive over melodic resolution, fostering a sense of relentless forward momentum. Building on earlier albums like Relatives in Descent (2017), the record demonstrates an evolution toward greater dynamic range, with expanded spatial arrangements that allow for breathing room amid the intensity—described by reviewers as more spacious than prior efforts.[27] Guitarist Greg Ahee's contributions reflect jazz-derived improvisation, incorporating fluid, exploratory phrasing that introduces subtle harmonic shifts and textural variation, informed by his personal influences in the genre.[28][29] This marks a refinement rather than a radical departure, enhancing the post-punk base with improvisational looseness while maintaining the band's economical songcraft.[22]Instrumentation and Arrangement
The core instrumentation of Ultimate Success Today features Joe Casey on lead vocals, Greg Ahee on guitar, Scott Davidson on bass guitar, and Alex Goldman on drums, forming the foundational post-punk quartet that drives the album's rhythmic and textural backbone.[30] [20] This lineup emphasizes organic interplay, with Ahee's reverb-drenched guitar lines providing swells and dissonance, Davidson's throbbing basslines anchoring propulsion, and Goldman's syncopated drumming maintaining taut urgency across tracks.[6] Guest musicians expand the palette without overshadowing the band's raw aesthetic, incorporating acoustic elements for added atmospheric layers: Jemeel Moondoc on alto saxophone, Izaak Mills on bass clarinet, saxophone, and flute, and Fred Lonberg-Holm on cello, alongside backing vocals from Nandi Rose and Cory Plump.[31] [32] These contributions appear selectively, such as Mills' woodwinds weaving through mid-tempo grooves to evoke unease, and Lonberg-Holm's cello adding bowed tension in quieter passages, enhancing cohesion by integrating improvisational textures rooted in free jazz influences rather than synthesized effects.[32] [33] Arrangements prioritize dynamic builds over electronic augmentation, layering Ahee's guitars for apocalyptic density—often doubling riffs with delay and distortion—while keeping percussion and bass foregrounded to preserve the quartet's live-wire post-punk essence amid contemporaneous genre trends favoring digital polish.[6] [34] This approach yields a unified sound, as evidenced by tracks like "I Am You Now," where bass arpeggios interlock with percussive patter and horn flourishes to create escalating swells without relying on programmed elements.[35]Lyrics and Themes
Personal Reflections
Joe Casey's lyrics in Ultimate Success Today explore mid-life introspection and individual struggles, foregrounding personal agency in confronting existential voids over attributions to systemic forces. In the opening track "Day Without End," he evokes unrelenting isolation with lines such as "I could not be reached / No matter how / Many times she repeats / An empty space / That's the whole of me," portraying a monotonous dread of perpetual existence.[36] Casey linked this to a 2019 summer songwriting session, where blazing sunlight induced a fear "more frightened of a forever day than a forever night," symbolizing stalled personal momentum amid aging uncertainties.[37][35] These themes draw from Casey's self-reported experiences of feeling unwell and confronting mortality during the album's gestation in 2019, as he grappled with "wondering about tomorrow" while penning verses on bodily decline and introspection.[4] He has described the record's core as navigating a midlife crisis through self-realization, eschewing material escapes like "buy[ing] the sports car" for raw acknowledgment of personal limits.[38][9] Quitting smoking emerged as a tangible personal victory around this time, which Casey tied to the album's heightened emotional directness and human scale.[8] Influenced by aging amid Detroit's entrenched urban decay—where Casey witnessed violence from childhood, including a neighbor's murder at age 12—his reflections prioritize individual endurance and self-accountability over collective grievance.[39] Lyrics across tracks like "I Am You Now" extend this by merging personal frailty with defiant forward motion, underscoring resilience as an internal imperative.[3] While bandmates Scott Davidson, Greg Ahee, and Alex Leonard shaped the sonic framework through iterative arrangements, Casey's spoken-sung narratives remain the focal point, distilling autobiographical grit into a vocal-driven lens on solitary triumphs.[22][5]Societal Critiques and Interpretations
Apocalyptic motifs recur throughout Ultimate Success Today, particularly in tracks like "Processed by the Boys," where lyrics evoke potential ends through imagery of a "wild-eyed animal," "foreign disease," or "dagger plunged from out of the shadows," reflecting disdain for various forms of catastrophe rather than endorsements of specific 2020 events such as the COVID-19 pandemic or ensuing unrest.[5] Joe Casey has emphasized that such writing captures recurring human follies—America's self-destruction from internal flaws like surveillance and masked violence, rather than external threats—stating, "I don’t think America will ever be defeated by an evil outside entity, it will be destroyed from within."[5] This universality aligns with Casey's approach of drawing from ongoing societal patterns, noting that prescient lyrics merely document "what’s happening today" to highlight cycles of decay, not isolated crises.[5] Critiques of power structures emerge through ironic lenses, as in "Processed by the Boys," which satirizes authority's self-justification—"the boys are just doing their best"—amid references to police brutality, expanded immigration enforcement roles, and patriotism obscuring harm, grounded in observations of individual and institutional moral lapses rather than systemic narratives favoring collective protest.[5] Similarly, "Michigan Hammers" laments eroded labor traditions without rallying anthems, inspired by derelict sites symbolizing lost communal resolve, prioritizing personal disillusionment over institutionalized explanations of economic decline.[5] Casey's intent avoids direct political advocacy, blending these with themes of aging and futility to underscore human frailty as the root cause, as seen in the album's title evoking an illusory American Dream of "ultimate success" dangled eternally out of reach.[4] While achieving evocative prose through wit and pathos—such as gallows humor confronting mortality in "Worm in Heaven" or systemic voices in "I Am You Now"—the lyrics draw criticism for occasional opacity, demanding contextual unpacking to reveal their bite, and a nihilistic bent in lines like "The past is full of dead men / The future is a cruelty / Resign yourself," which resigns to fate without proposing remedial paths.[29] Reviewers note this as a strength in mirroring existential resignation but a limitation in lacking constructive alternatives amid bleak acceptance of "self-doubt as a stalking fiend."[29] Casey's fusion of personal sickness and broader crisis thus prioritizes unflinching realism over redemptive arcs, aligning with long-standing motifs of endings across Protomartyr's discography.[4]Packaging and Artwork
Title Etymology
The title Ultimate Success Today derives from phrasing typical of late-night infomercials advertising self-improvement or wealth-building schemes, such as house-flipping programs, which Casey associates with the superficial allure of the American Dream.[40] In a 2020 interview, Protomartyr vocalist Joe Casey described it as a slogan evoking empty motivational rhetoric, dissecting its components—"ultimate" implying finality or apex, "success" as variably achievable or illusory, and "today" highlighting a strained emphasis on the present against nostalgic undertones for a lost era.[40] Casey elaborated that the phrase rejects notions of literal "ultimate success," which he doubts exists, instead portraying life as incremental progress toward inevitable endpoints like mortality rather than triumphant destinations.[28] This ironic lens reflects disillusionment with self-help culture's promises of mastery, positioning the title as a sardonic marker of mid-life reckoning amid personal and societal entropy.[28][40]Visual Design
The visual design for Ultimate Success Today was handled by Protomartyr's lead singer and lyricist Joe Casey, who has overseen the band's iconic cover artwork across multiple releases.[41] The cover features a stark depiction of a mule, rendered in a minimalistic style that emphasizes desolation and endurance, aligning with the post-punk genre's raw aesthetic of restraint and implication over ornamentation.[3] This imagery was developed prior to the album's July 17, 2020 release, serving as an early visual anchor for promotional materials.[2] The mule symbolizes the exploited American working class, portrayed as a beast of burden historically deployed in conflicts from the Mexican-American War through the Korean War and beyond, enduring systemic abuse without recompense.[42] Casey has described it as evoking the worker's plight in recent decades: "I feel like the worker has never been more used and abused than in the last 50 years," linking the animal's stubborn persistence to broader motifs of societal decay and unyielding labor amid collapse.[42] This reinforces the album's lyrical undercurrents of dread and futility, where personal and collective burdens mirror an inescapable grind, without resorting to overt narrative or color to dilute the austerity. The design's sparseness—favoring grayscale tones and implied barrenness—amplifies the thematic tension between nominal "success" and existential strain, distinguishing it from more illustrative punk visuals while echoing the band's Detroit-rooted industrial grit.[42]Physical and Digital Formats
Ultimate Success Today was released in standard physical formats including compact disc (CD) and 12-inch vinyl long-playing (LP) records by Domino Recording Company on July 17, 2020.[43][44] The CD edition featured a mini-gatefold packaging, while the standard LP included a download card for MP3 and WAV files, enhancing accessibility for vinyl purchasers seeking digital backups.[43][44] Limited edition vinyl variants catered to collectors, such as blue-in-red colored pressing bundled with a 20-page lyric zine and a 21x21-inch foldout poster, and indie-exclusive translucent blue vinyl with a lyric book.[1][45] A brick red variant, limited to 490 copies, was issued for Love Record Stores Day on December 18, 2020, including a poster and zine.[46] These editions reflect the indie label's strategy of balancing broad market reach with targeted appeal to enthusiasts, without an initial deluxe package that might strain production budgets for a band of Protomartyr's scale.[31] Digitally, the album was made available for purchase and streaming through platforms like Bandcamp and Domino's distribution network, allowing immediate access upon release.[2] Post-2020 reissues remained minimal, with no widespread expanded or remastered versions reported, prioritizing the original formats' longevity in an era of declining physical media sales for independent acts.[31]Release and Promotion
Singles and Pre-Release Material
The rollout for Ultimate Success Today began with the lead single "Processed by the Boys" on March 11, 2020, accompanied by a music video directed by David Allen and Nathan Faustyn, featuring surreal imagery of a performer in a hypnotic confrontation involving singing and symbolic gestures amid chaos.[47][48] This track, clocking in at over five minutes, served as the album's announcement vehicle, highlighting Protomartyr's post-punk intensity with layered instrumentation and Joe Casey's urgent vocals, strategically positioned to generate early buzz through Domino Recording Company's digital channels including YouTube and streaming platforms.[49] Subsequent pre-release singles built on this momentum. On April 28, 2020, "Worm in Heaven" was shared alongside the announcement of the album's delay from May 29 to July 17, citing external circumstances including the COVID-19 pandemic's impact on production and distribution logistics.[50][51] The track, a brooding closer with atmospheric builds, included a video emphasizing introspective visuals, aligning with the band's approach to using multimedia for thematic immersion without live performances during lockdowns.[52] The third pre-release single, "Michigan Hammers," arrived on May 28, 2020, directed by frequent collaborator Yoonha Park, whose video incorporated stark, narrative-driven footage to underscore the song's rhythmic drive and regional motifs, amassing views on YouTube as part of Domino's targeted promotion.[53][54] Pre-release hype extended to Bandcamp previews and Spotify track snippets, enabling fan engagement through digital pre-orders and limited streaming access, which Domino leveraged to sustain interest amid the postponement, resulting in over 50,000 streams for key singles in initial weeks per platform analytics.[2][55] This phased digital strategy prioritized visual and auditory teasers over physical merchandise, adapting to constrained touring capabilities.Marketing and Distribution
The album Ultimate Success Today was released on July 17, 2020, by Domino Recording Company, coinciding with the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, which compelled a pivot from conventional in-person promotional events to virtual alternatives such as online interviews and social media engagement.[2][56] This logistical adaptation prioritized digital accessibility over physical gatherings, reflecting pragmatic adjustments to global lockdowns that restricted traditional marketing tactics like album release parties. Distribution relied on Domino's established international infrastructure, facilitating availability across physical and digital formats, including limited-edition blue-in-red vinyl, standard LPs, CDs, and streaming on platforms like Bandcamp and Amazon Music.[1][57] However, pandemic-related supply chain disruptions limited physical rollout scale, particularly for indie-leaning outlets, with emphasis on U.S.-based indie retail circuits given the band's Detroit origins and primary audience demographics.[58] Initial tour plans announced in March 2020, encompassing European dates in April-May followed by North American summer shows, were curtailed by COVID-19 restrictions, postponing live performances and rescheduling select North American legs to fall 2021.[59][60] This empirical constraint on touring—a core promotional vector for post-punk acts—shifted reliance to remote visibility, underscoring commercial trade-offs between artistic live exposure and health-driven pragmatism.Associated Media and Visuals
The visual album for Ultimate Success Today premiered on Protomartyr's official YouTube channel on July 15, 2020, presenting a continuous film compiled from abstract video segments corresponding to each track.[61][62] This supplementary content enhances the listening experience by pairing sonic elements with non-narrative visuals that evoke the album's themes of introspection and societal observation, without explicit storytelling.[63] A trailer for the visual album was released concurrently, teasing the integrated format and directing viewers to the full premiere.[62] Produced by the band's creative team, these materials remain accessible via official platforms, offering fans an additional layer of immersion tied to the record's release strategy.[63]Commercial Performance
Sales and Streaming Metrics
Ultimate Success Today registered modest initial sales upon its July 17, 2020 release, constrained by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic that curtailed in-person promotion, touring, and retail access. In the United Kingdom, the album debuted at number 38 on the Official Album Sales Chart and number 39 on the Official Physical Albums Chart, reflecting limited but present physical demand primarily via vinyl, which peaked at number 13 on the Official Vinyl Albums Chart.[64] These figures align with the band's independent status and niche post-punk audience, where physical sales for similar acts typically number in the low thousands for debut weeks.[65] Digital and streaming consumption provided a counterbalance, with sustained long-tail engagement evident in the band's overall platform metrics. As of recent data, Protomartyr maintains approximately 81,200 monthly listeners on Spotify, bolstered by tracks from Ultimate Success Today contributing to their catalog's persistence despite no major viral breakthroughs.[66] This digital footprint underscores incremental growth over prior releases like The Agent Intellect (2015), where members expressed surprise at any notable record purchases, indicating evolving but non-explosive audience expansion through streaming rather than high-volume physical or download sales.[65] Overall, the album's metrics highlight a dedicated, cult following with vinyl appeal outweighing broad commercial penetration.[67]Chart Achievements
Ultimate Success Today peaked at number 19 on the Billboard Top Album Sales chart, maintaining a position on the listing for 12 weeks as of August 1, 2020.[68] In the United Kingdom, it reached number 12 on the Official Independent Albums Chart in its debut week of July 24, 2020.[69] The album did not enter the Billboard 200, underscoring its constrained mainstream visibility typical of post-punk releases from independent labels like Domino Recording Co. Internationally, the record registered no notable peaks in major European territories or Australia, aligning with benchmarks for genre contemporaries where chart success remains confined to niche indie metrics rather than broad pop crossover.[70] Its July 17, 2020 release amid the COVID-19 pandemic curtailed promotional tours and in-person retail events, factors that empirically hinder physical sales momentum and wider chart longevity for non-mainstream acts.[8]Reception and Analysis
Critical Evaluations
Ultimate Success Today received generally positive reviews from music critics, earning a Metacritic aggregate score of 82 out of 100 based on 18 reviews, indicating universal acclaim among participating outlets.[71] Pitchfork awarded it 8.0 out of 10, praising the album's expansive sound achieved through the addition of woodwind instruments like saxophone and clarinet, which complemented the band's post-punk rhythms and Joe Casey's dense, poetic lyrics addressing existential dread and societal decay.[6] The Guardian gave it four out of five stars, highlighting its rhythmic drive and prescient themes of chaos that resonated amid the 2020 global crises, though noting the lyrics' abstract pessimism as evoking a world without clear resolution.[72] Critics frequently commended the lyrical depth and propulsive energy, with Beats Per Minute scoring it 84 out of 100 for crafting "essential jams" in a well-trodden post-punk genre, emphasizing Casey's gritty, personal storytelling over polished accessibility.[7] However, some reviews pointed to weaknesses, including Casey's often unintelligible vocals—described as a "mumbling gait"—which could obscure the intricate wordplay amid the band's noisy instrumentation.[7] Thematic elements drew mixed responses; while the album's unrelenting bleakness was seen as innovative and timely, reflecting pre-written apprehensions of institutional failure and personal alienation that aligned with the COVID-19 pandemic and social unrest upon its July 17, 2020 release, others critiqued the lack of redemptive arcs, viewing it as indulgence in despair rather than constructive critique.[6] The album's critical acclaim appears amplified by its coincidental relevance to 2020's upheavals, as Casey's lyrics—penned in 2019—evoke authoritarian creep and collective disillusionment, fostering interpretations as a prophetic soundtrack despite originating from individual introspection rather than explicit social signaling.[6] Coverage was predominantly from independent and alternative media, such as Pitchfork and The Guardian, with scant attention from conservative-leaning publications, underscoring a pattern where indie outlets dominate discourse on niche post-punk releases.[72] This focus highlights the album's core merits in raw, unvarnished expression over broad appeal, though its inaccessibility may limit wider engagement.[7]Public and Fan Perspectives
Fans on platforms like Reddit's r/indieheads expressed enthusiasm for Ultimate Success Today, describing it as a "fantastic record of complex, intentional, and meaningful post-punk" that effectively blends genre conventions with innovative elements, such as clarinet accents enhancing atmospheric tracks like "June 21" and "Modern Business Hymns."[73][23] Discussions from July 2020 highlighted the album's ability to translate the band's raw live energy into recorded form, with users praising its urgency and density amid themes of dystopia and personal crisis.[73] Bandcamp user comments echoed this grassroots appreciation, focusing on the album's intense, chaotic vitality—one reviewer likened it to a "40 minute car crash," emphasizing the band's skillful execution and high-energy delivery that resonates with dedicated listeners.[2] Another fan commended the live show's "fantastic" quality and urged the band to persist, selecting tracks like "Michigan Hammers" as standouts for their visceral impact.[2] These responses underscore a core audience's loyalty to Protomartyr's post-punk niche, where the album's bleak, apocalyptic lyricism and instrumentation foster deep engagement despite its abrasive style potentially deterring casual audiences.[74] Data on listener behavior reveals a clear split: while the album sustained high retention and repeat plays within post-punk enthusiast circles—evident in sustained subreddit activity and fanbase growth over a decade—the broader mainstream audience showed limited penetration, reflecting its appeal confined to those valuing unpolished realism over accessible anthems. Some fans, particularly those skeptical of overt utopian messaging, valued the record's anti-idealistic edge, interpreting its ironic title and motifs of inevitable decline as a candid counterpoint to escapist narratives in contemporary music.[73]Accolades and Recognitions
Ultimate Success Today garnered recognition primarily within indie and alternative music publications, appearing in select year-end compilations for 2020 releases. It ranked number 43 on Stacker's list of the 100 best albums of the year, based on aggregated user and critic scores from Best Ever Albums.[75] Similarly, Under the Radar magazine placed it at number 51 in its Top 100 Albums of 2020, highlighting its post-punk intensity amid a year of global upheaval.[76] Pitchfork assigned an 8.0 rating out of 10, commending the album's thematic resonance with the COVID-19 pandemic and police brutality protests, though it did not feature in the publication's top tier year-end rankings.[6] Despite these nods from niche outlets, the album received no nominations for prestigious awards such as the Grammy Awards or the Mercury Prize, underscoring Protomartyr's entrenched position in the post-punk underground without crossover appeal to mainstream institutions. Its release on July 17, 2020, coincided with pandemic lockdowns, which concentrated media attention on introspective indie works in specialized, often ideologically aligned coverage, but failed to propel it into broader pop or rock aggregations.[6] This pattern reflects the band's consistent critical esteem in echo-chamber indie spheres, absent major label backing or viral breakthroughs.Track Listing and Credits
Standard Track Listing
The standard edition of Ultimate Success Today, released by Domino Recording Company on July 17, 2020, features ten tracks with no alternate configurations or bonus content.[2] [31] All songs are credited to the band Protomartyr (Joe Casey, Greg Ahee, Alex Leonard, and Scott Davidson), with lyrics led by vocalist Joe Casey.[3] The album's total runtime is 38 minutes and 20 seconds.[77]| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Day Without End" | 3:16 |
| 2 | "Processed by the Boys" | 5:05 |
| 3 | "I Am You Now" | 3:12 |
| 4 | "The Aphorist" | 3:43 |
| 5 | "June 21" | 4:36 |
| 6 | "Michigan Hammers" | 4:00 |
| 7 | "Tranquilizer" | 3:48 |
| 8 | "Modern Business Hymns" | 3:37 |
| 9 | "Bridge & Crown" | 4:01 |
| 10 | "Worm in Heaven" | 3:02 |