Light Grenades is the sixth studio album by the American Rock music band Incubus, released on November 28, 2006, on Epic Records. The album sold 359,000 copies during its first week of release worldwide and debuted at number one on the Billboard 200, selling 165,000 copies in the US in its first week. It is the band's first number-one album.Katie Hasty, "Incubus' 'Grenades' Ignite At No. 1", Billboard, December 6, 2006. The album achieved Gold certification, less than the band's previous Platinum records beginning with 1999's Make Yourself.
"A Kiss to Send Us Off" and "Anna-Molly" made their live debut on VH1's Decades Rock: Live Tribute to the Pretenders on August 11, 2006, even though the songs were not featured in the program. The same two songs were also performed at Edgefest 2006 on September 30 at Tempe Beach Park, Arizona.
"Rogues" made its debut at a pair of pre album-release shows at the London Astoria and the Berlin Postbahnhof on November 14 and 16, 2006.
The songs "Punch Drunk" and "Look Alive" were recorded during the Light Grenades sessions, but were originally only available as bonus tracks on the Japanese edition of the album. Live versions have since seen release worldwide on the Look Alive live DVD. The studio versions of both songs are also on Monuments and Melodies.
Other songs showcase a new direction for the band. For example, Brandon Boyd describes the curious recording technique behind "Paper Shoes": "There's a song called 'Paper Shoes' where Mike Einziger and I mic'd our bodies with ambient mics and did the percussion tracks pounding on our chests and skulls. The galloping rhythm is us pounding on our chests. It was really funny. We were trying so hard not to laugh because we were sitting there like cavemen beating our chests!"
There's a song called that on the record and it felt like the most pertinent conceptual aspect of the album, the idea of throwing ideas at problems and the ideas explode with light and good results and intention on consciousness. So I started imagining imagery of students in different countries protesting and throwing with masks over their faces. But there's one brave student who runs up to the police line and, as opposed to throwing rocks or things that destroy, there's this concept of that one courageous, lonely student running up and throwing ideas and having them actually change things. It just seemed kind of a cool concept: the redefining of weaponry.
Jon Foreman of IGN praised the single "Dig" in his December 2006 review, but also noted, "Incubus is not limited to poppy, commercially viable tracks like this; tracks that can be (and have been) the downfall of other, less forward thinking bands. With influences from Faith No More to Ani DiFranco, the almost schizophrenic range they have established for themselves counts wholeheartedly on the fact that fans and critics alike realize that the varying genres they incorporate into their music one another with credible aplomb. In other words, they would not be able to make a track like 'Dig' work on the album without tracks like 'Pendulous Threads' or 'Light Grenades'". Mike Schiller of PopMatters wrote in January 2007, "Boyd sounds as Mike Patton-esque in his modern rock operatics as ever, and the band has perfected the transition from studio-friendly perfectionists to intentionally messy well-produced garagers". He further adds, "Incubus has never made a perfect album - no, not even S.C.I.E.N.C.E. - and Light Grenades, truth told, is far from perfect. 'A Kiss to send us off' sounds a little too much like it’s aping Foo Fighters, both 'Earth to Bella' tracks sound forced and disjoint, and there’s still a little too much in the way of faceless middle-of-the-road rock ‘n roll. Even so, there’s not a single track on Light Grenades that’s truly revolting".
Joe Crofton of MusicOMH considered it to be an improvement over A Crow Left of the Murder.... He wrote in his November 2006 review, "I wasn’t expecting much, and on the first hearing I thought my theory had been proved right. Incubus had devolved into a boring sell-out, pandering soft pop-rock to young girls. However, when I removed my sceptics glasses and opened my eyes I began to realise that there is so much more to this record. These are actual songs, in the vein of Make Yourself and the better half of Morning View. Whatever teething problems they may have been experiencing with new bassist Ben Kenney, it all seems to have been resolved." The Philippine Star said that the album "shows the group maturing into more accomplished artists."
On November 27, 2006, Jenny Eliscu of Rolling Stone awarded the album three out of five stars, claiming that Incubus were initially "written off as a rap-rock band", and that on the album they come "ever closer to becoming active-rock radio’s most sensitive, romantic and adventurous marquee act." She compared the title track to Butthole Surfers, and stated that the tracks "Oil and Water" and "Love Hurts" are "a pair of mammoth ballads the Chili Peppers might have authored." David Marchese of Spin wrote in December 2006 that, "by diverting attention from singer Brandon Boyd’s mostly inane lyrics with sun-dazed melodies and a crisp modern-rock sheen, they nail the profundo pop vibe of late-era Chili Peppers." A more negative review came from The Daily Orange's Andy McCullough, who wrote on November 27, 2006 that "Boyd leads a band that is missing a real identity" and that "Incubus has settled into a bland form of vaguely Californian alt rock, like the Red Hot Chili Peppers with a strung-out Anthony Kiedis and none of the guitar pyrotechnics of John Frusciante."
| +Weekly chart performance for Light Grenades |
| +Year-end chart performance for Light Grenades |
| Europe | 24 November 2006 |
| America | 28 November 2006 |
|
|