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Follow up singles "Shelf In The Room" and "Downtown" were also top forty hits. Days Of The New's breakout success culminated in a tour with Metallica and Jerry Cantrell in the summer of 1998. But by the end of the year the impact of DOTN's trajectory had shaken the band irreconcilably, and the four men split ways. Meeks returned to his Distillery Studios in Louisville to complete DOTN's follow up to the Orange album, while Vest, Whitener, and Taul went on to pursue their own muses, eventually forming Tantric with vocalist Hugo Ferreira. Days Of The New's Green album was released in August of 1999. Compared to visionary works by Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, and The Doors, the album was nothing if not epic and highly personal. Showcasing a musical scope barely hinted at on the Orange album, the Green album met with mild commercial acceptance even as critics recognized it as a "progress report from an artist in the midst of a head-spinning transition." (Rolling Stone)
The first year of the millennium was anything but slow. Bassist Mike Huettig joined in the spring, making the band three strong. In June DOTN contributed "Rough Day" to the Heavy Metal F.A.A.K.K.2000 soundtrack and toured for the last half of the year. Shows with Creed, Def Leppard, Three Doors Down, and headlining dates featuring support from American Pearl, Diffuser, and Tidewater Grain took the band through the New Year. In November, Meeks came full circle with his roots, performing "The End" with the surviving members of the Doors for a VH1 storytellers special. The show celebrated the release of "Stoned Immaculate", a tribute album that includes a studio recording of the Doors and Travis performing Meeks' arrangement of Morrison's Oedipal opus. Days Of The New also contributed a reworking of "L.A. Woman" for the album that features Robbie Krieger on guitar. By June of 2001, recording for Days Of The New's Red album was completed in Louisville. Producer Ron Aniello (Lifehouse) came to Distillery Studios to put what had been a year's worth of recording Fast forwarding to 2004…the past several years have been both challenging and turbulent for Travis, experiencing a lack of support from his former record label, Interscope, and battling with personal demons. However, during this time, The next album, known as Purple, is well on its way – several dozen tracks have been recorded in pre-production with just Travis and his guitar, highlighting the maturity of his playing style and evolution of the DOTN sound. The task of signing with a new record label still remains, as well as choosing which songs will be on the album. |