May 2014. Shocking images of Deryck Whibley are in the news, the Sum 41 frontman looking close to death following kidney and liver failure. Admitting to hitting the bottle too hard, and for too long, Whibley was hospitalised for a month. Flash forward to 2016. Against all the odds, he and his band are celebrating the success of ‘13 Voices', a triumphant return to form. But one thing became apparent on the mammoth three-year tour that followed. Just as Whibley had got better, the world itself had seemed to get sick. It wasn't just in the United States, where the shadow of the 45th President loomed large, but across Europe too. Everywhere Sum 41 ventured, they found chaos and discord. Out of this mayhem, however, ideas began to form for album number seven.
Today, Deryck is keen to clarify that ‘Order In Decline' was never meant to be a political protest record. Instead, though, world events soon forced his hand. "I set out not to do it, and in fact, I did everything I could do not to make it political," he begins, "But in a way, it kinda just came out that way I guess. To me, I just felt it was a personal record. I'm not speaking about specific policies, or topics, or referencing exact things. It's more just about my feelings about stuff right now, and there's some anger and frustration in there."
Touring the world at such a fragmented time couldn't help but affect his state of mind, the singer having a unique perspective to see the bigger picture. "Every time we went to a new country, it's like there was chaos. All over the world, wherever we went. Usually caused by someone or something different, but it seemed to be pretty much the same thing every time. It's such a divided world, and there's a lot of hatred and racism out there."