The Maybe Man

2023 studio album by AJR From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Maybe Man is the fifth studio album by the American pop trio AJR. It was released on November 10, 2023, following their previous studio album OK Orchestra (2021). It is the band's first album released as part of its deal with Mercury/Republic Records.[1]

ReleasedNovember 10, 2023 (2023-11-10)
Recorded2022–2023
Length44:12
Quick facts Studio album by AJR, Released ...
The Maybe Man
A drawing of the three members of AJR swimming in a vast ocean, with one in the middle reaching up toward a village of colorful houses flying above them.
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 10, 2023 (2023-11-10)
Recorded2022–2023
GenrePop
Length44:12
Label
ProducerRyan Met
AJR chronology
OK Orchestra
(2021)
The Maybe Man
(2023)
What No One's Thinking
(2025)
Singles from The Maybe Man
  1. "I Won't"
    Released: July 29, 2022
  2. "The DJ Is Crying for Help"
    Released: November 18, 2022
  3. "The Dumb Song"
    Released: April 21, 2023
  4. "God Is Really Real"
    Released: July 5, 2023
  5. "Yes I'm a Mess"
    Released: September 29, 2023
  6. "Inertia"
    Released: May 24, 2024
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Promotion and release

In 2022, AJR embarked on a world tour in support of their fourth studio album OK Orchestra. On the tour, they performed their then-unreleased song "I Won't" as a surprise addition to the set, before releasing it as the lead single for their upcoming fifth studio album on July 29, 2022.[2][3] On November 12, 2022, AJR revealed the album title's abbreviation of "TMM", fitting into the pattern "T** M**** M**". Fans immediately started posting speculative potential titles on the internet; popular theories included "The Music Men", "Ten Meter Men", and "The Manly Men".[4] The band released the album's second single "The DJ Is Crying for Help" on November 18.[5] The third single "The Dumb Song" was released on April 21, 2023. Its music video was released the same day, detailing the song's year-and-a-half-long creation process.[6]

The fourth single, "God Is Really Real", was surprise-released as a music video on YouTube on July 3, 2023, along with a lyric video. While the song was originally set to be released along with the album, it was released much earlier than originally scheduled, in order to commemorate the life of their terminally ill father Gary. He died later that day.[7][8] The single had an official release on July 5, 2023.[9]

On August 27, 2023, they posted the message "Enormous news tomorrow. maybe." to their social media accounts along with a previously unveiled logo featuring the "TMM" acronym.[10] The album's full title and release date were announced the next day in a teaser video featuring the ending of the animated music video for the album's first track, "Maybe Man". The band revealed the track list and album cover on September 11.[10]

The fifth and final single, "Yes I'm a Mess", was released on September 29, 2023.[11] A comedic music video, shot in Times Square, was released on October 25.[12] On October 11, AJR announced that The Maybe Man would be delayed exactly one week from its original release date, due to "exciting opportunities" relating to the album release.[13] The album was then released on November 10 alongside a music video for "Maybe Man".[14][15] On November 29, a music video for "Inertia", the 5th song on the album, was released.[16] On January 23, 2024, a music video for "Touchy Feely Fool", the 2nd song on the album, was released.[17]

Songs and track listing

"Maybe Man", the album's first track, described by the band as a "table of contents" for the remaining songs, is a melancholy song with lyrics that interpolates with other songs, such as the line "I wish I was big, as big as my house..." interpolates with "Don't you like it bigger, better but you do what'cha can?" from "Inertia". "Touchy Feely Fool" is an upbeat yet reflective track that touches on the awkwardness and vulnerability of emotions, describing a rough breakup.

The album was supposed to have a thirteenth track, but it didn't make the album due to the song supposedly not fitting in with the rest of the album's theme. The brothers deemed the track too upbeat and positive for it to fit in perfectly with the rest of the songs. The track was originally supposed to be officially released with a deluxe version of The Maybe Man, however with the unveiling of the What No One's Thinking EP (2025), the band has confirmed that the album's planned deluxe edition has since been scrapped and the follow-up EP's track "The Big Goodbye" was originally intended as the thirteenth track.[18]

More information No., Title ...
The Maybe Man track list
No.TitleLength
1."Maybe Man"3:40
2."Touchy Feely Fool"3:35
3."Yes I'm a Mess"2:44
4."The Dumb Song"3:45
5."Inertia"3:40
6."Turning Out Pt. iii"3:50
7."Hole in the Bottom of My Brain"3:07
8."The DJ Is Crying for Help"3:39
9."I Won't"2:48
10."Steve's Going to London"4:47
11."God Is Really Real"2:59
12."2085"5:31
Total length:44:12
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The Maybe Man Tour

Quick facts Location, Associated album ...
The Maybe Man Tour
Tour by AJR
LocationUnited States & Asia
Associated albumThe Maybe Man
Start dateApril 3, 2024[a]
End dateAugust 20, 2024
Legs2
No. of shows51
Supporting act
Attendance450,000+[19]
Box office$33.6 million[20]
AJR concert chronology
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On November 9, 2023, AJR announced their first arena tour to promote the album,[21] most notably including two stops at Madison Square Garden (MSG) in New York City.[22] Tickets for the tour went on sale on November 17.[23] A second show for MSG was announced on November 14 due to the first show being sold out on the first day of presale.[24]

On February 13, 2024, the band announced that the supporting acts for the tour would be Mxmtoon, Dean Lewis and Almost Monday.[25] On April 1, AJR canceled the tour's first show due to the Norfolk Scope venue being too small to accommodate the show,[26] announcing on April 11 that it was rescheduled to June 23.[27]

Due to high demand, Idaho Central Arena announced on their Instagram account on April 2 that the Boise show would take place at ExtraMile Arena. The previously purchased tickets for Idaho Central Arena were shifted towards the newer venue, ensuring that the tickets were still valid.[28]

On July 8, the concert scheduled to take place at Toyota Center the next day was canceled due to the safety concerns surrounding Hurricane Beryl.[29]

On August 8, Adam Met announced that he would not be performing with the band for the Asia shows to attend the 2024 Democratic National Convention in Chicago.[30]

As of August 2024, the tour has reportedly sold over 500,000 tickets.[citation needed]

Tour dates

More information Date (2024), City ...
The Maybe Man Tour dates
Date (2024) City Country Venue Attendance Revenue Opening act(s)
North America
April 2 Norfolk United States Norfolk Scope Rescheduled[b]
April 3 Philadelphia Wells Fargo Center 12,500/13,000 TBD Dean Lewis
April 4 Boston TD Garden 14,000/15,000 TBD
April 6 Hartford XL Center 10,000/13,282 TBD
April 7 Baltimore CFG Bank Arena TBD TBD
April 9 Raleigh PNC Arena TBD TBD
April 10 Charlotte Spectrum Center 9,000/13,376 TBD
April 12 Indianapolis Gainbridge Fieldhouse ~11,000/12,000[31] TBD
April 13 Louisville KFC Yum! Center TBD TBD
April 14 Grand Rapids Van Andel Arena 10,000/10,000 TBD
April 16 Des Moines Wells Fargo Arena 4,500/6,000 TBD Andrew Hoyt[c]
April 17 St. Paul Xcel Energy Center 12,000/13000[32] TBD Dean Lewis
April 19 Kansas City T-Mobile Center TBD TBD
April 23 Boise ExtraMile Arena 5,000/6,795 TBD
April 24 Portland Moda Center 10,000/15,000 TBD
April 26 Seattle Climate Pledge Arena 13,000+[33] TBD
April 29 San Francisco Chase Center 11,000 / 11,000[34] TBD
May 1 San Diego Pechanga Arena 7,000/8,900 TBD
May 4 Oklahoma City Paycom Center 8,100 / 16,591[35] TBD
May 7 Austin Moody Center 9,000/10,000 TBD
May 9 Tampa Amalie Arena TBD TBD
May 10 Orlando Kia Center TBD TBD
May 12 Jacksonville VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena 6,000/8,000 TBD
May 14 Hollywood Hard Rock Live 4,000/7,000 TBD
June 23 Norfolk Norfolk Scope 7,000/8,000 TBD Almost Monday
June 25 Pittsburgh PPG Paints Arena ~11,000/13,380[36] TBD mxmtoon and Almost Monday
June 27 Cleveland Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse ~10,000 TBD
June 28 Columbus Nationwide Arena TBD TBD
June 29 Chicago Allstate Arena 11,000/12,000 TBD
June 30 Detroit Little Caesars Arena 13,000/15,000 TBD
July 3 Chicago Allstate Arena 11,000/12,000 TBD
July 4[d] Milwaukee American Family Insurance Amphitheater 12,500/23,037 TBD mxmtoon and Carly Rae Jepsen
July 6 St. Louis Enterprise Center 11,000+/12,000 TBD mxmtoon and Almost Monday
July 9 Houston Toyota Center Cancelled Cancelled Cancelled[37]
July 10 Fort Worth Dickies Arena 11,000 TBD mxmtoon and Almost Monday
July 12 Phoenix Footprint Center 11,000/12,565 TBD
July 14 Los Angeles Kia Forum 12,000/17,500 TBD
July 16 Salt Lake City Delta Center 11,500/12,000 TBD
July 17 Salt Lake City Delta Center 11,500/12,000 TBD
July 18 Denver Ball Arena 11,500/13,000 TBD
July 20 Denver Ball Arena 11,500/13,000 TBD
July 21 Omaha CHI Health Center Omaha 10,000+/13,000 TBD
July 23 Cincinnati Heritage Bank Center TBD TBD
July 25 Philadelphia Wells Fargo Center 12,500/13,000 TBD
July 26 New York City Madison Square Garden 11,500 TBD
July 27 New York City Madison Square Garden 11,500 TBD
July 30 Atlanta State Farm Arena 12,000 TBD
July 31 Nashville Bridgestone Arena TBD TBD
August 2 Washington, D.C. Capital One Arena TBD TBD
August 3 Boston TD Garden 14,000/15,000 TBD
Asia
August 20 Seoul South Korea Jamsil Arena 8,000 / 8,000 TBD None
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Festivals

More information Festival Shows, Date (2024 - 2025) ...
Festival Shows
Date (2024 - 2025) City Country Venue Attendance Revenue Opening Act of performance
Asia
August 17[e][38] Osaka Japan Osaka Sonic Stage TBD None
August 18[e][39] Chiba Japan Tokyo Sonic Stage
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Set list

  1. "Maybe Man"
  2. "Sober Up"
  3. "Yes I'm a Mess"
  4. "I Won't" / "Birthday Party"
  5. "The DJ Is Crying For Help"
  6. "God Is Really Real"
  7. "The Good Part"
  8. "Bang!"
  9. "Inertia"
  10. "Touchy Feely Fool"
  11. "Karma"
  12. "Turning Out" / "Turning Out Pt. ii" / "Turning Out Pt. iii"
  13. "World's Smallest Violin"
  14. "Steve's Going To London"
  15. "Burn The House Down"
  16. How We Made / "Way Less Sad"
  17. "Don't Throw Out My Legos" (The Dumb Song for certain shows in the second leg and venues where they played twice)
  18. "100 Bad Days"

Encore

  1. "Weak" / "2085"

Alterations

  • Due to Adam not being present at the Asia shows and other reasons, the beginning of "The Maybe Man", "God Is Really Real", and "2085" were cut. "Bang!", with the How We Made intro, was moved to prior "Weak", which had a marching band outro. and "The Dumb Song" was played.
  • At the Japan shows, covers of "All Star" and "I've Got No Strings" were played.

Notes

  1. The original date was April 2, 2024, but was cancelled due to the scope of the show being too much for the venue
  2. Rescheduled to June 23, 2024
  3. Hoyt replaced Dean Lewis, who did not perform after suffering a concussion.

Reception

More information Review scores, Source ...
The Maybe Man ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Spectrum CultureStarHalf star[40]
AllMusicStarStarStarHalf star[41]
The OrcaleStarStarStarStarHalf star[42]
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Much like the band's previous albums, The Maybe Man was released to mixed reviews. Spectrum Culture's Thomas Stremfel criticized the album's lyricism, saying the album "barely scratch[es] the surface of the emotional depth their songs could achieve while insisting their music is nothing to take seriously."[40] Writing for AllMusic, Matt Collar praised the album, writing, "With The Maybe Man, AJR continue to turn their personal pain and anxieties into universally relatable pop anthems."[43] Exclaim! listed the album cover as 17th worst of the year, writing: "You've entered a wormhole to 2008 — your only tools for survival are a moustache finger tattoo, a copy of Amélie, a voucher for free puppetry lessons and this album cover. Good luck."[44]

Personnel

AJR

  • Adam Met – bass guitar, vocals
  • Jack Met – lead vocals (1–5, 7–12), guitar (tracks 2, 7, 10–12), drums (4 & 5), vocals
  • Ryan Met – lead vocals (6), vocals, production, programming

Technical

  • Dale Becker – mastering engineer (1–3, 5–7, 9–12)
  • Chris Gehringer – mastering engineer (4, 8)
  • Joe Zook – mixing engineer (1–3, 5–10, 12)
  • Rob Piccione – engineer (1, 3, 5, 7, 9–12)
  • Katie Harvey – assistant mastering engineer (1–3, 5–7, 9–12)
  • Noah McCorkle – assistant mastering engineer (1–3, 5–7, 9–12)
  • Brandon Hernandez – assistant mastering engineer (1, 2, 5–7, 9–12)

Additional musicians

  • Rob Piccione – additional vocals (1), backing vocals (3, 8, 10), vocals (4, 5, 7, 9, 12), guitar (6)
  • Ruth Kornblatt-Stier – cello (1, 5–7, 10–12)
  • Emelia Suljic – violin (1, 5–7, 10–12)
  • Arnetta Johnson – trumpet (1, 4, 10, 12)
  • Chris Berry – vocals (1), drums (4), backing vocals (8), cello (12)
  • Dane Hagen – vocals (1, 5), guitar (5), backing vocals (8)
  • Ezra Donellan – vocals (1, 5), backing vocals (3, 8, 10)
  • Austin Roa – vocals (1, 5, 12)
  • Josh Plotner – woodwinds (1)
  • The Beu Sisters – backing vocals (3)
  • Kent Lucas – backing vocals (3), vocals (7)
  • Ryan Chernin – backing vocals (3, 10)
  • Chloe Brettholtz – additional vocals (4)
  • Andrew Sobelsohn – guitar, vocals (4); backing vocals (8)
  • Martin Lieberman – vocals (4), backing vocals (8)
  • Cat Capps – vocals (4), additional vocals (5), backing vocals (8)
  • Alba Avoricani – vocals (4), backing vocals (8)
  • Honore Balan – vocals (4)
  • Nell Balan – vocals (4)
  • Ariel Gendler – vocals (5), backing vocals (8)
  • Jabari Golding – vocals (5, 12)
  • Zachary Murphy – vocals (7, 9)
  • Benjamin Hostetler – vocals (7, 9)
  • Eugene Mahlstadt – vocals (7)
  • Katrina Udle – vocals (7)
  • Natasha Bermudez – vocals (7)
  • Adam Tomlinson – backing vocals, vocals (10)
  • Amanda Wierbowski – backing vocals (10)
  • Eric Holloway – vocals (10)
  • Naia Lika – additional vocals (12)
  • Daniel Cruz – vocals (12)
  • Robert Hanley – vocals (12)
  • Kevin Grammer – vocals (12)
  • Jiliane Russo – vocals (12)
  • Sarah Piccione – vocals (12)
  • Kevin Urban – Intro Announcer (12)

Charts

More information Chart (2023), Peak position ...
Chart performance for The Maybe Man
Chart (2023) Peak
position
Australian Hitseekers Albums (ARIA)[45] 2
UK Album Downloads (OCC)[46]41
US Billboard 200[47]28
US Top Album Sales (Billboard)[48]9
US Top Alternative Albums (Billboard)[49]4
US Indie Store Album Sales (Billboard)[50]8
US Vinyl Albums (Billboard)[51]9
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References

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