Whys the album called No Deliverance?
It’s the name of one track, and that song just sums up the vibe of the record. It’s about diving back into it on many levels—the commitment, the apprehension and whatever else goes along with such a large endeavor. How has the landscape of the business changed? The infrastructure is what’s changing. To me, it seems that everything else is staying the same. You’ve got your different trends that come and go. They seem to repeat themselves every few years. Watching the infrastructure struggle really makes me a little happy [Laughs]. I just can’t wait to see how it all washes out. We went with an indie label for this record because we didn’t want to get stuck with a label that suddenly filed bankruptcy out of the middle of nowhere and couldn’t do anything—our record would just be gone at that point. Who knows what the likelihood of that happening was, but we’re very hands-on and active with our label. So a lot of things that couldn’t happen otherwise are happening now. For example, when I