BLUE OCTOBER • 20 YEARS OF FOILED

Released:
Recorded:
Length:
Label:
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April 4, 2006
Early 2005
57:57
Universal
David Castell | Justin Furstenfeld | Patrick Leonard
BACKGROUND
The album was recorded during the summer of 2005. Most of the songs on the album are older Blue October songs, except for "Into the Ocean" and "Hate Me", which were written in early 2005 while Justin Furstenfeld was living in Los Angeles and recording the early demos for the album. Foiled was originally going to be titled Beyond the Sadness and was to be released October 11, 2005. During the fall of 2005, the working title was changed to Living Just to Watch It All Go By, which is a lyric from the song "It's Just Me". The eventual album title Foiled was coined by Justin Furstenfeld and Jeremy Furstenfeld's father, Dan Furstenfeld, as a tongue-in-cheek reference to the album's numerous delays. Two promotional spin-offs, Foiled Again and Foiled for the Last Time, were released in 2007. Foiled was listed at number 150 among Billboard's top 200 albums of 2007.
SINGLES
"Hate Me" was the first single from the album. A video for the song appeared on VH1, and the song peaked at number two on the Modern Rock charts. The second single, "Into the Ocean", was also successful on radio, and the video peaked at number one on VH1. The track "Congratulations" features guest vocals by Imogen Heap. The track "Into the Ocean" features guest vocals from Zayra Alvarez (best known for her appearance on Rock Star: Supernova). Other guest singers appear on the song "Overweight", but are not named in the album credits. "Drilled a Wire Through My Cheek" was also included on the Saw III soundtrack and features guest vocals by Kirk Baxley. It is the "heaviest" track on the album because of its masochistic themed lyrics.
RELEASE
The version of the album released in Europe contains the bonus tracks "Independently Happy" and "Chameleon Boy", from Consent to Treatment and History for Sale, respectively, but does not contain the hidden track "It's Just Me". Later versions of the album feature a re-recorded version of the song "Calling You" as the final track. Foiled was Blue October's final album to be released on cassette. In 2026 a red and blue marble vinyl version of Foiled was released as part of the Collected Series 2006–2011 box set along with the albums Approaching Normal, Any Man in America and Teach Your Baby Well. The Foiled album was also released on vinyl as a stand-alone double LP in four different variants: standard black, silver marble, galaxy blue, and smokey translucent deluxe edition which also includes three bonus tracks. A premium version of the album, Foiled for the Last Time, was released on September 25, 2007, which includes fourteen of the Live at Stubb's tracks as well as a new version of "Calling You" and two remixes of "X Amount of Words". Foiled remains Blue October's best-selling and most popular album, with the two hit singles "Hate Me" and "Into the Ocean" being Blue October's most popular and recognizable songs, which have become rock radio and concert staples for the band. Although Blue October had been touring and releasing albums for eleven years prior to the release of the album, Foiled put them on the map and resulted in a surge in popularity for the band. For the next ten years, each of the band's subsequent albums would chart in the top 20, and the band continues to perform sold-out tours. In 2020, Blue October's tour was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. On April 17, 2020, frontman Justin Furstenfeld performed two sold-out back-to-back online concerts on Stageit, in which he performed the Foiled album in its entirety.[7] In 2026 for the 20th anniversary of Foiled, Blue October released the album on vinyl and plan to embark on a tour of Europe and North America in which they play the album in its entirety at each concert.
FOILED 20TH ANNIVERSARY WORLD TOUR BIO
Justin Furstenfeld is certainly never one to mince words. Whether on or offstage, the Blue October singer-songwriter tells it like it is. It’s no surprise then that on a recent afternoon, Furstenfeld is nothing less than blunt in his assessment of his iconic band’s breakthrough album. “It's fucking beauty! It's gorgeous! It’s timeless!” the singer says with zero hesitation. He’s speaking to Foiled, Blue October’s epic and undeniably enduring 2006 landmark LP, a 14-track collection that temporarily sent the Houston-bred band into the stratosphere thanks to seminal singles including “Hate Me” and “Into The Ocean.”
And while on first glance it might appear the musician is lavishing praise upon his band’s most well-known project, it’s anything but hubris. Rather, Furstenfeld is speaking to the appreciation and love he’s come to feel for the project, notably the knowledge of what that specific body of work did and continues to do for him, for his band, for his overall mental well-being, for his journey to the present. Because for as much as Foiled initially sent Furstenfeld and Blue October’s life into a manic whirlwind, now, as the singer looks back on it 20 years in the rearview, and particularly as the band prepares to launch a yearlong Foiled 20th-anniversary celebration, the singer has come to realize what a true blessing his band’s most beloved body of work has been in his life.
“So now here we are,” Furstenfeld says as Blue October which includes drummer Jeremy Furstenfeld, multi-instrumentalist Ryan Delahoussaye, bassist Matt Noveskey, and lead guitarist Will Knaak prepare to hit the road this fall for a Foiled headline tour where they’ll play the classic album in its entirety. “Let’s show and remind everyone just how special and eclectic that album was,” the singer says of Foiled. “And, most importantly, how much we wore our heart on our sleeve for it.”
Written chiefly by Furstenfeld and produced by Furstenfeld and Dave Castel, the collection balances deeply confessional lyrics with soaring melodies and emotional honesty that would become Blue October’s hallmark. Foiled is a dangerous and devious album, a collection of delightfully disturbing poetic songs. It oozes with authenticity (see dark love songs including “You Make Me Smile” and “She’s My Ride Home”) and bubbles with transparency. Even when the melodies were undoubtedly irresistible, as was the case with standout single “Hate Me,” the message was forever intensely personal and heartfelt.
In many ways, Foiled was the culmination of everything Blue October had worked for. After releasing their second album while signed to Universal Records, 1999’s Consent to Treatment, the band was subsequently dropped by the label the following year. Three years later, however, off the success of “Calling You,” the first single off what would become their third full-length LP, History for Sale, the band was re-signed by Universal Republic.
It was Foiled however and the process that got the band there that changed everything for Blue October. Furstenfeld largely disappeared while writing Foiled. Feeling misunderstood, he isolated himself and wrote with a feverish obsession, as well as with the need to finally dissect the maddening beauty behind depression, addiction and mental illness – obstacles that had haunted him for his entire life to that point. With no one to watch or judge him, and without anyone to cast doubt over his creative process, he bled onto paper with a level of brutal honesty previously unseen. This album would go on to burn like wildfire connecting with millions of people around the world by giving a face and a name to the demons collectively.
This emotional experience endured while writing Foiled colors the album with a palpably raw sentiment; it’s almost hot to the touch. Blue October’s deeply committed fanbase, as well as the general public, responded to it near immediately upon release: Foiled cracked the Billboard Rock Chart Top 10, was eventually RIAA-certified platinum.
And while Foiled marked a breakthrough moment for the band, it was truly only the beginning for Blue October: the album’s deeply personal songwriting and emotionally resonant sound not only cemented the Houston-bred band as one of rock’s most distinctive voices, but the deep connection it forged with their fanbase through the album’s highly personal lyrics remains palpable today. As the band’s global presence has continually grown. Blue October’s catalog now surpasses one billion streams and continues to climb – new listeners continue to discover Foiled alongside the band’s ever-expansive catalog that followed in its wake.
At the time however, Furstenfeld readily admits he could hardly enjoy all the supposedly great things happening around him and the band: not only was the singer in the throes of a heavy drug addiction, but with the singer breaking his leg backstage during an early date on the Foiled headline tour directly coinciding with the height of mania surrounding the band and project Blue October was subsequently forced to cancel the remainder of that tour. Just as soon as everything had seemingly taken off for Blue October, it felt as if things were crashing down.
As documented in the stunning 2020 documentary, Get Back Up, the next few years for Blue October were plagued by Furstenfeld’s deepening drug addiction as well as interband turmoil. In May 2012, Furstenfeld entered rehab and he has been sober ever since. His recovery journey has transformed not only the band’s music but also his personal outlook on life. “It’s a fucking awesome life right now,” he says proudly with a smile.
To that end, now 20 years after Foiled’s release, as the band prepares to celebrate the album’s two-decade anniversary, Furstenfeld finally is able to enjoy all that the transformative 2006 LP brought into his and his band’s life. In short, he says he believes everything played out as it should.
“It did what it's supposed to do,” he says of the album in retrospect. I'm the most spiritually beautiful, calm, peaceful, amazing person and father that I never was before.”
And while on the surface the Foiled anniversary might appear to be backward-looking, for Furstenfeld, it’s a lesson and exercise in how the past can shape the present. “That's why we're doing an anniversary tour for it now. It's so cool. You gotta celebrate the fact that we made that music. And now look where we are because of it. It's such a blessing.”
FOILED MERCH
FROM THE ARCHIVES










LYRICS
YOU MAKE ME SMILE
There’s some kind of light… at the end
When touching the edge of her skin
Once so hard to speak
Now so easy to play around catching that eye you know
That eye that slaps you in the face
And calls you a puppy
Well how do you say “I was hypnotized...hypnotized”
My words they pour
Like children to the playground
Children to the playground
You make me smile
There’s some kind of light at the end
Stoned, forgetful, unthin
I’m drinking what used to be sin and touching the edge of her skin
Could you be the one
That’s not afraid to look me in the eye?
I swear I would collapse
If I would tell how I think you fell...from the sky
My words, they pour
Like children to the playground
Children to the playground
You make me smile
There’s some kind of light at the end
Stoned, forgetful, unthin
I’m drinking what used to be sin and touching the edge of her skin
It’s the feeling I get
My palms would sweat
Like some kind of daydream I’ll never forget
I’m stuck in this spin
Where does it begin?
By touching the edge of her skin
My words, they pour
Like children to the playground
Children to the playground
You make me smile
INTO THE OCEAN
I’m just a normal boy that sank when I fell overboard
My ship would leave the country but I’d rather swim ashore
Without a life-vest I’d be stuck again
Wish I was much more masculine
Maybe then I could learn to swim
Like fourteen miles away
Now floating up and down I spin colliding into sound
Like whales beneath me diving down
I’m sinking to the bottom of my
Everything that freaks me out
The lighthouse gleam has just run out
I’m cold as cold as cold... can be
I wanna swim away but don’t know how
Sometimes it feels just like I’m falling in the ocean
Let the waves up... take me down
Let the hurricane set in motion
Let the rain of what I feel right now come down
Let the rain come down
Where is the coast guard I keep looking each direction
For a spotlight give me something...I need something for protection
Maybe flotsam junk would do just fine
The jetsam sunk I’m left behind
I’m treading for my life, believe me how can I keep up this breathing?
Not knowing how to think...I scream aloud begin to sink
My legs and arms are broken down with envy for the solid ground
I’m reaching for the life within me
How can one man stop his ending
Well I thought of just your face...
Relaxed and floated into space
I wanna swim away but don’t know how
Sometimes it feels just like I’m falling in the ocean
Let the waves up...take me down
Let the hurricane set in motion
Let the rain of what I feel right now come down
Let the rain come down
Now waking to the sun I calculate what I had done
Like jumping from the bow yea
just to prove that I knew how yea
It’s midnight’s late reminder of
the loss of her the one I love
My will to quickly end it all
Sat front row in my need to fall
Into the ocean end it all
Into the ocean end it all
Into space
I thought of just your face
SHE'S MY RIDE HOME
We talked...
Together sharpening a knife
It was like killing partners for a life
We can hide the bodies on the ride home
Now here we are...
We’re licking skin to wipe us clean
Strike a match, pour gasoline
Ditch the scene and watch the city burn.
Sleep, my lap will be your pillow
Steering wheel turn
I’ll be reaching for the stars with you... honey
Who cares if no one else believes
So I set fire to everyone around but you...
I told you... I told you I’d do it
So hahaha
Yea we won
We drive...
To leave the past and clear the mind
To watch the sunset, set its time
I swear you’re fine... I’m your ride home
Now close your eyes...
It’s getting dark and the highway’s clear
No sign of light from front to rear
It’s just you my dear... on the ride home...
We’re going home
I’ll be reaching for the stars with you... honey
Who cares if no one else believes
So I set fire to everyone around but you
I told you, I told you we’d do it
So hahaha
Yea we won
We talked...
Together sharpening a knife
It was like killing partners for a life
Hey, we can hide the bodies on the ride home...
We’re going home