Monday, 23 June 2008
Death By Stereo
Artist: Death By Stereo
Genre(s):
Rock: Punk-Rock
Discography:
Day Of The Death
Year: 2001
Tracks: 11
Death by Stereo is an aggressive metal/hardcore loan-blend from Southern California, wHO took its nominate from a line in the 1987 vampire flick The Lost Boys. The band's lineup underwent numerous changes throughout its careeer, just the guys always persevered with a "ne'er sacrifice up, ne'er yield in" mantra held close. After getting together in 1996 and cathartic a demonstration and 7", Efrem Shulz (vocals), Paul Miner (bass part), Jim Miner (guitar), Keith Barney (guitar) (who'd replaced original guitarist Ian Fowles), and Jarrod Alexander (drums) debuted in spring 1999 on Indecision Records with If Looks Could Kill, I'd Watch You Die. That fall, after a summer exhausted touring behind the record book, Barney left to concentrate more time with his former bands, Throwdown and Eighteen Visions, piece Alexander at peace to engage music full-time at the Berklee School of Music. Drummer Tim Bender and erstwhile Eyelid guitar player Dan Palmer sign on in their places, as the band watched their fan base quickly maturate. Epitaph was observance to a fault and soon signed them up. Death by Stereo's soph try, Solar day of the Death, appeared in the spring of 2001; Bender exited Death by Stereo next subsequent go dates and was replaced by Todd Hennig (Heckle, Seven Years War). Into the Valley of Death followed two geezerhood by and by. By 2005's Death for Life, their third album for Epitaph, the Death by Stereo lineup had shifted to include Shulz, Palmer, Henning, guitar player Tito, and Pulley bassist Tyler Rebbe. The band didn't slow down, and in March 2007, the live album Death Alive was issued through and through Reignition Records, recorded in Anaheim during their old Into the Valley of Death circuit.