New_Sacred_Cow

<i>New Sacred Cow</i>

New Sacred Cow

2003 studio album by Kenna


New Sacred Cow is the debut studio album by Kenna, released on June 10, 2003, by Columbia Records. The album was produced by Chad Hugo of The Neptunes and Kenna.[6] Kenna created something of an underground buzz with the release of his first single "Hell Bent" in 2001. The album was leaked to the internet over a year before its final release, as it was delayed by record company politics. "Freetime" was chosen as the single to lead off the release of the album. A video was shot, and appeared sporadically on MTV2 along with the video for "Hell Bent". "Freetime" peaked at No. 19 on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart. In late 2004, "Sunday After You" was remixed by Chad Hugo and released as a single. The single version differs greatly from the album version.

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Track listing

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Release and reception

On the CD, "Vexed and Glorious" and "A Better Control" are placed on the same track, as a hidden interlude. Tracks 8, 9, and 13 were produced by Kenna alone, and all others were with Chad Hugo.

Promo copies of "New Sacred Cow" surfaced over a year before the album's release, with a slightly different track order. The song "Siren" didn't appear until the official release of the album.

A music video to the stop motion short film More to the song of "Hell Bent" was aired on MTV2 in 2001, and the Toonami Midnight Run. It was created and directed by one of the future directors of Kung Fu Panda, Mark Osbourne.[7]

Personnel

  • Kenna – Keyboards, Vocals, Writing, Producer, Logos And Illustration
  • Chad Hugo – Keyboard, Saxophone, Writing (tracks: 1–7, 10–12)
  • Chad Hugo (as Chase Chad) – Producer (tracks: 1–7, 10–12)
  • David Davidson – Strings
  • Ethan Johns – Bass (New Scared Cow)
  • John Haynes – Engineer
  • Matt Pinfield – A&R
  • Otto Price – Bass (Red Man, War In Me)
  • Pui Tse – Logos and Illustration
  • Sean Murphy – Photography
  • Serban Ghenea – Engineer, Mixing[8]

References

  1. Love, Bret. "New Sacred Cow". Allmusic. Retrieved 10 March 2012.
  2. Umile, Dominic (5 March 2008). "Album Review: Kenna – New Sacred Cow". Prefix Magazine. Retrieved 10 March 2012.
  3. Potts, Ryan (4 September 2003). "Kenna: New Sacred Cow". PopMatters. Retrieved 10 March 2012.
  4. Cinquemani, Sal (8 June 2003). "Kenna: New Sacred Cow". Slant Magazine. Retrieved 10 March 2012.

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