Underoath
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Background information | ||
Origin | Ocala, Florida, USA | |
Genre(s) | Christian metal Metalcore Post-hardcore |
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Years active | 1998-present | |
Label(s) | Tooth & Nail, Solid State, Takehold, (dist. by: EMI Christian Music Group) |
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Associated acts |
This Runs Through The Almost Maylene and the Sons of Disaster |
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Website | Underoath777.com | |
Members | ||
Spencer Chamberlain Aaron Gillespie Timothy McTague Grant Brandell Christopher Dudley James Smith |
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Former members | ||
Dallas Taylor Corey Steger Matthew Clark Octavio Fernandez Billy Nottke Scott Nunn |
Underoath (sometimes stylized as Underøath, underOATH, or UnderOath) is an American rock band based in Tampa, Florida; they are currently signed to Tooth & Nail/Solid State Records.
Though their musical style has changed substantially since its inception in 1998, the band's latest work has been mostly in the vein of metalcore and post-hardcore, and considered to be screamo[1] or emo-influenced[2] by some. Underoath is also a Christian band,[3][4][5][6] though they are popular among both Christian and secular audiences.[7]
Underoath could be considered a poster child for the success of hard music in the early 21st century; despite limited airplay on radio and television outlets such as MTV and VH1, the band has achieved Gold status because of constant touring and popularity on internet sites such as MySpace and PureVolume.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Early Years
Underoath formed in 1998 in then-vocalist Dallas Taylor's bedroom in Ocala, Florida. The band was signed to Takehold Records in 1999 and that year released their debut, Act of Depression. This album was followed a year later by the five-song, forty-minute Cries of the Past; both albums are currently out of print. The band's lineup during this time changed frequently and bore little resemblance to the current band. Likewise, the band's music was far heavier in those days, dabbling in grindcore and melodic death metal, along with periodic structure and time changes and electronic elements. These first albums brought Underoath a small but devoted fanbase.
In 2001, Takehold Records was bought out by Tooth & Nail Records; Underoath was subsequently signed to Tooth & Nail's heavier subsidiary, Solid State Records. The band, which was now a sextet, worked with Cries of the Past producer James Paul Wisner (Further Seems Forever, New Found Glory) on their Solid State debut, The Changing of Times, which was released on February 26, 2002. Frequent lineup changes were the main cause of a slightly more accessible sound for the band; shorter songs and more melodic, verse-chorus oriented song structures replaced the epic twists and turns of their earlier records. Though the change in style caused some long-time fans of the band to criticize the album, The Changing of Times went on to outsell both of their previous albums combined.
In 2003, Underoath supported The Changing of Times through their first stint on the Vans Warped Tour, but their participation in the tour came to a screeching halt when lead singer Dallas Taylor controversially left the band. Reasons for Dallas leaving the band are explained in Alternative Press [#219]. Taylor was asked to leave Underoath by now bassist Grant after a disagreement within the band. Taylor is now the lead singer for Southern metalcore outfit Maylene and the Sons of Disaster.
Underoath dropped off the rest of the Warped Tour and the band's future was in considerable doubt. However, the band then went on a supporting tour with Atreyu that fall with Winter Solstice vocalist Matt Tarpey as the temporary vocalist. Then later in the year, at the CMJ Fest in New York City, the band reappeared with new lead vocalist Spencer Chamberlain, formerly of This Runs Through.
[edit] They're Only Chasing Safety
During the early months of 2004, the band hit the studio again with Wisner to record their first album with Spencer Chamberlain on vocals and their second record for Solid State. They're Only Chasing Safety proved to be a breakout success for the band, going on to sell about 350,000 copies to date. Far more melodic than past efforts, Underoath moved even further away from their metal roots; drummer Gillespie arguably made as much of an impact with his singing on the record as Chamberlain did with his screaming. "Reinventing Your Exit" and "It's Dangerous Business Walking Out Your Front Door" were the album's singles; both songs spawned music videos that received airplay on MTV2 and Fuse.
They're Only Chasing Safety debuted at #1 on the Billboard Heatseekers Chart and later charted well into the Billboard 200. Following the release of the album, the band played a number of Warped Tour dates. In the Spring of 2005 the band was asked to participate on the inaugural Taste of Chaos tour. Shortly after the tour, the band embarked on its first headlining tour. The band premièred two brand-new songs during the length of the tour.
The band landed on the cover of Alternative Press magazine for the first time in September of 2005, and in October of 2005, They're Only Chasing Safety was re-released in a two-disc set with four unreleased songs, new artwork by Converge's Jacob Bannon, and a DVD with over two hours worth of footage of the band touring in support of the album.
[edit] Define the Great Line
Underoath entered the studio in January 2006 to record their fifth album. Matt Goldman, a founding member of Blue Man Group, and Adam Dutkiewicz, guitarist for Killswitch Engage, worked with the band in producing the album, which would come to be titled Define the Great Line. The album combined the melodic tendencies of They're Only Chasing Safety with a return to the band's metalcore roots.
An unfinished version of the album was leaked onto BitTorrent websites and P2P services months before the release date. Members of the band released a statement saying that the leaked version was an unmixed & unmastered, raw copy of the album which lacked certain elements and the finished product would sound much different.
The band flew to Sweden in the spring of 2006 to make videos for the new songs "In Regards to Myself" and "Writing on the Walls"; the latter was chosen as the lead single for the album and was later nominated for the 2007 Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video. When Define the Great Line released on June 20, 2006, it sold 98,000 copies in its first week and made it's début on the Billboard 200 Chart at #2,[8] the highest debut for a Christian album since 1997.[9] In its first four weeks on the chart, it stayed in the top 50. It debuted at #1 on the Christian, Christian/Gospel, and Rock charts.
With the debut of Define the Great Line, Underoath simultaneously released a special edition version of the album featuring special artwork and a DVD that includes another behind-the-scenes movie and a "making of" video.
Define the Great Line was certified Gold by the RIAA on November 11, 2006, representing 500,000 shipped units of the album. It is the first album in Solid State history to reach that distinction.
Underoath toured extensively throughout Europe, Australia, and Asia in the fall of 2006 and is on tour with Taking Back Sunday and Armor for Sleep from February to April in 2007. The band also shot videos for the songs "You're Ever So Inviting" and "A Moment Suspended in Time" in February 2007; the former will be released in March, the latter some time later in the year. [1]
Drummer/vocalist Gillespie recorded solo material with Seattle producer Aaron Sprinkle under the name of The Almost shortly after Define the Great Line was recorded; The Almost subsequently was signed to Tooth & Nail and released its first record, Southern Weather, on April 3, 2007. Gillespie plans to tour with The Almost whenever Underoath is not on tour.
Multiple rumors have flown around by word of mouth and through the internet of Underoath breaking up, members leaving, and rehab stories. Underoath released a statement confirming none of this was true and they followed through by doing their Canadian tour followed by the 'Taste of Chaos World Tour'. It has now been confirmed that Underoath will be playing again on Warped Tour 2007 from July 24th to August 7th. As well, Underoath have also announced a tour of Australia and East Asia. This is scheduled for August 2007. They will also be performing at Cornerstone Festival in June 2007, along with many other Christian bands.Template:15
[edit] Departure from Warped Tour and alleged NOFX controversy
Underoath was scheduled to spend the summer of 2006 on the main stage of the Warped Tour, but on July 28, 2006, it was announced that Underoath was dropping off the remaining dates of the tour. A statement from the band stated that the members "felt it necessary to take some immediate time to focus on our friendship, as that’s more important than risking it for the sake of touring at this time."[10].
Rumors to the contrary, however, flew that the band had actually left because NOFX frontman Michael "Fat Mike" Burkett had made fun of Underoath and their religious beliefs on-stage. These rumors were debunked when Burkett told PunkNews.org in a statement of his own that Underoath's claim of needing a break was indeed true.[11] Burkett did admit to poking fun at the band and criticizing their stance on gay marriage, but emphasised that he befriended Underoath's band members at the start of the tour, had very civilized conversations with various members right up to the band's departure, that he had a personal policy of not making jokes on-stage about anyone he wasn't friends with or didn't like personally, and that there were never any hard feelings between himself and Underoath's band members.[11] Burkett also revealed on the August 2006 Fat Wreck Chords Podcast that internal troubles amongst the members of Underoath started after Spencer Chamberlain had indulged in a couple of cans of Bud Light with Burkett backstage a few nights prior to Underoath's sudden departure.[12]
In an Alternative Press cover story on Underoath, Burkett told the magazine that Spencer Chamberlain had confided in him that Underoath's band members had been "having a lot of arguments over their religious beliefs."[13]. In a sidebar of the same article, Burkett stated that he was "not calling Underoath homophobic, but they're against homosexual people having the same rights that straight people do. I find that to be bigoted."[14]
Tim McTague admitted that "90 percent of what [Fat Mike] believes in and thinks is wrong about our country and our government, I agree with... [my] opinion doesn't align with the conservative church or the extreme leftist liberal side, either."[14]
In a January 2007 interview with Ultimate-guitar.net, Tim McTague stated the following when asked about Fat Mike's involvement in Underoath's departure,
"That wasn’t an issue. I mean, that was an issue on the tour in the sense of like there were some things that were said that probably shouldn’t have been said by him. But it never really got to the point where it affected us. That wasn’t the breaking point really for us at all. I think he definitely played a role in making a lot of our stuff public and exaggerating a lot of our beliefs and a lot of our conversations that we had to him. So he definitely loves to stir the pot, and I’ll give him that. But beyond that, we shouldn’t have been on Warped Tour to begin with. It definitely wasn’t a Fat Mike thing." Interview with Tim McTague
[edit] Members
- Spencer Chamberlain - Vocals
- Aaron Gillespie - Drums, Vocals
- Timothy McTague - Guitar
- James Smith - Guitar
- Grant Brandell - Bass
- Christopher Dudley - Keyboard, Sampling
[edit] Former members
- Dallas Taylor-Vocals (Currently in Maylene and the Sons of Disaster)
- Ethan Goring - Vocals (currently in The Good Die Young)
- Wesley Wilson - Guitar
- Tony Allen - Guitar
- Matthew Clark - Bass (currently in Sleeping By The Riverside)
- Samm Shuffler - Guitar (currently in The Milanos)
- Octavio Fernandez - Bass/Guitar (currently in At The Wake)
- Billy Nottke - Bass
- Scott Nunn - Drums and guitar (departed before Act of Depression)
- Cory Steger - Guitar (departed after Cries of the Past)
- Matt Boyd - Drums (Currently in Jonezetta)
[edit] Trivia
- The song "You're Ever So Inviting" is featured on the video game Madden 07.
- The song "Reinventing Your Exit" is featured on the video game Greg Hastings Tournament Paintball and Flatout 2.
[edit] Discography
[edit] Singles
Year | Title | Chart Positions | Album | ||
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US Hot 100 | US Modern Rock | US Mainstream Rock | |||
2002 | "When the Sun Sleeps" | The Changing of Times | |||
2004 | "Reinventing Your Exit" | They're Only Chasing Safety | |||
2005 | "It's Dangerous Business Walking out Your Front Door" | They're Only Chasing Safety | |||
2006 | "Writing on the Walls" | Define the Great Line | |||
2006 | "In Regards to Myself" | Define the Great Line | |||
2007 | "You're Ever So Inviting" | Define the Great Line | |||
2007 | "A Moment Suspended In Time" | Define the Great Line |
[edit] Non-album tracks
"Wrapped Around Your Finger" (The Police cover) – released on Policia! - A Tribute to the Police (2005)
[edit] References and footnotes
- ^ Underoath at All Music Guide; screamo is listed as a "style," and both reviewed albums are described with the term.
- ^ Safety review at musicOMH.com.
- ^ Spencer Chamberlain. We’re a Christian band.. Hate Something Beautiful.
- ^ Chris Dudley. We’re a Christian band.. Driven Far Off.
- ^ Grant Brandell. We're a Christian heavy rock band.. Music Faith.
- ^ Spencer Chamberlain. I feel like I want people to know we’re a Christian band.. Solid State Records.
- ^ Andree Farias. (Underoath has sold) well over 350,000 copies of their 2004 breakthrough They're Only Chasing Safety … only 20,000 of those CDs were sold in the Christian marketplace.. Christian Music Today.
- ^ Billboard Artist Chart Billboard Chart History
- ^ Furtado Scores First Chart-Topping Album Billboard, June 26, 2006
- ^ Underoath drops off Warped Tour, PunkNews.org, July 29, 2006
- ^ a b Fat Mike addresses Underoath rumors, PunkNews.org, July 31, 2006.
- ^ "Bi-Costal Broadcast", Fat Wreck Chords Podcast, August 4, 2006
- ^ Staddon, Tristan. "Sometimes You Walk the Line, Sometimes the Line Walks You", Alternative Press, Issue #219, October 2006, pp.180-186.
- ^ a b Staddon, Tristan. "Cross Fire", Alternative Press, Issue #219, October 2006, p.186.
- Powell, Mark Allan (2002). "Underoath", Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music, First printing, Peabody, Massachusetts: Hendrickson Publishers, 976. ISBN 1-56563-679-1.
[edit] External links
- Official Web site
- Define The Great Line mini-site
- They're Only Chasing Safety mini-site
- MySpace Profile
- Underoath at PureVolume
- UnderOath Forum
- Unofficial Fan Site
- Interview with Spencer
- Underoath Interview - May 4th, 2006
Underøath |
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Spencer Chamberlain – Aaron Gillespie – Timothy McTague – Christopher Dudley – Grant Brandell - James Smith
Former: Dallas Taylor | Luke Morton | Corey Steger | Matthew Clark | Octavio Fernandez | Billy Nottke | Scott (Kelly) Nunn |
Discography |
Albums: Act of Depression – Cries of the Past – The Changing of Times – They're Only Chasing Safety – They're Only Chasing Safety (Special Edition) – Define the Great Line |
Label(s) |
Takehold Records | Tooth & Nail | Solid State |
Related articles |
This Runs Through | The Almost | Maylene and the Sons of Disaster |
Categories: 2000s music groups | Alternative musical groups | Christian musical groups | Florida musical groups | American heavy metal musical groups | Metalcore musical groups | Christian metal groups | Christian hardcore | Hardcore punk groups | Post-hardcore groups | Christian rock groups | Tooth and Nail Records artists