digipak analysis: the long road - nickelback

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Nickelback: The Long Road. Digipak Analysis. Sarah Byard.

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An analysis of the digipak for The Long Road by Nickelback.

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Page 1: Digipak Analysis: The Long Road - Nickelback

Nickelback: The Long Road.

Digipak Analysis.Sarah Byard.

Page 2: Digipak Analysis: The Long Road - Nickelback

Here is what the digipak looks like:

Page 3: Digipak Analysis: The Long Road - Nickelback

Colours

Page 4: Digipak Analysis: The Long Road - Nickelback

The deep purple gives the album a more serious and more melancholy feel. This is because the album has a more mellow feel to it. Silver Side Up (the previous album) had a heavier feel to it but The Long Road is a bit mellower.

Page 5: Digipak Analysis: The Long Road - Nickelback

There is a lot of black on the digipak. The band wears black, this image is black, some of the font is black. Nickelback are an ‘alternative’ band and a stereotype of their genre is to have a lot of black.

Page 6: Digipak Analysis: The Long Road - Nickelback

Fonts

Page 7: Digipak Analysis: The Long Road - Nickelback

This font is the band logo. It stands out, because it is in block capitals and contrasts the background. The band would want it to stand out so that it is easily recognisable, so that people will know they have a new album out and buy it.

Page 8: Digipak Analysis: The Long Road - Nickelback

This font looks like a scribble that Chad Kroeger would have made when he was writing the lyrics. This makes the album seem more personal and the band more human, because it shows that the album progressed from scribbles to what you see in the digipak, and was the work of a person.

Page 9: Digipak Analysis: The Long Road - Nickelback

Images

Page 10: Digipak Analysis: The Long Road - Nickelback

There are two images of the band on the digipak. Because Nickelback had only recently gained fame, they would still want to get their faces out there so that people would recognise them.

Page 11: Digipak Analysis: The Long Road - Nickelback

This bridge stretches a long way, across “the long road”.

The “long road” could represent touring and the hardships of it, as lyrics to Feeling Way Too Damn Good feature this theme.

It looks like a sunrise in the sky, possibly symbolising the new era or “new day” for Nickelback following their chart success with Silver Side Up.

Page 12: Digipak Analysis: The Long Road - Nickelback

These paintpots could represent the band starting afresh with this album. The paint is black, so they could be symbolically blacking out their other albums so they can start something new.