Thursday, 29 May 2008
BoySetsFire
Artist: BoySetsFire
Genre(s):
Rock
Rock: Punk-Rock
Discography:
Unreleased Live Concert
Year: 2003
Tracks: 13
Tomorrow Come Today
Year: 2003
Tracks: 12
Live For Today
Year: 2002
Tracks: 7
After The Eulogy
Year: 2001
Tracks: 13
Suckerpunch Training
Year: 2000
Tracks: 3
Coalesce Split
Year: 2000
Tracks: 2
After the Eulogy
Year: 2000
Tracks: 13
Never Give In - At Tribute To The Bad Brains
Year: 1999
Tracks: 1
Crush Em All - Boy Sets Fire - Shai Hulud - Split
Year: 1999
Tracks: 1
In Chrysalis
Year: 1998
Tracks: 5
This Crying, This Screaming, My Voice Is Being Born
Year: 1996
Tracks: 6
The Day The Sun Went Out
Year: 1996
Tracks: 12
Consider
Year: 1995
Tracks: 3
Progressive hard-core band Boy Sets Fire was formed in Delaware in 1994 by isaac M. Singer Nathan Gray, guitarists Josh Latshaw and Chad Istvan, bassist Darrell Hyde, and drummer Matt Krupanski. Self-releasing their debut individual, "Consider," in 1995, Boy Sets Fire presently resurfaced with a split freeing with Jazz Man's Needle, taking hail non only for the intensity of their live dates merely likewise the loudness of their political convictions. The band's debut full-length, The Day the Sun Went Out, followed in 1997 and a split individual with Snapcase preceded the 1999 release of In Chrysalis. Bassist Rob Avery replaced Hyde for 2000's After the Eulogy, the band's number one outlet for novel label Victory Records; This Crying, This Screaming, My Voice Is Being Born was released by and by that summer. Sucker Punch was issued in early 2001.
Male child Sets Fire left Victory for the major label Wind-Up in 2002 and quickly released the Live for Today EP as an introduction. It featured quatern novel tracks and two live recordings. Next, they entered the studio with manufacturer Dave Fortman (12 Rods, Evanescence) to record their full-length Wind-Up debut. Tomorrow Come Today arrived in April 2003 and was a onward motion toward availability. However, the new steering didn't lessen Boy Sets Fire's flaming political convictions in the least. The record album included an incitive political harangue on its inner flap, and its controversial lyrics rankled some religious groups. A modified version of Tomorrow Come Today was also released with an accompanying DVD of live material and under-the-table footage. The band toured behind Tomorrow but, before long later the record's tone ending, lost bassist Avery, whom they replaced with Rob Ehrenbrand.
Excite turned out to be a wrong outfit for Boy Sets Fire, so in summertime 2005 they signed with Equal Vision (Burning Heart in Europe), which issued Before the Eulogy that fall. Their whole and eclectic quarter uncut, Misery Index: Notes from the Plague Years, followed in March 2006. Unfortunately, however, the album turned stunned to be their last. By the end of July, the band announced they'd be calling it quits afterward some last shows via a message on their site. Soon later on the annunciation, though, Latshaw had an accident at his construction job and suffered a busted neck, collapsed lung, and two low vertebrae. Boy Sets Fire ruined up their scheduled European tour with their guitar tech pick in, merely waited on circumstance last American dates; their last designate unitedly eventually occurred in early June at Philadelphia's Trocadero Theatre.