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Home: U : Underoath : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of Tooth & Nail Records)
Very rarely does a monumental record
find itself matched with the promise of commercial success.
But the strength, intensity and explosive lure of Define
the GreatLine–Underoath's
follow up to its over 350,000 selling 2004 breakthrough
They're Only Chasing Safety--is undeniable.
"We went into the studio wanting to make this record
count," says guitarist Tim McTague. "We wanted
to make it life-changing for the people who heard it. We
knew it had the potential to do well, but we weren't basing
our future on that. We feel we've written the best album
that any of us will probably ever be a part of and above
all else, we're super proud of it."
Crafted with the help of Atlanta-based
producer/drummer Matt Goldman–who helped pour the rhythmic foundation–and
Killswitch Engage guitarist Adam Dutkiewicz–who lent
his experience to help capture the guitars and vocals and
encouraged these Warped Tour veterans to use E-bows, reel
bows and experiment with delays and effects pedals–the
resulting Define the Great Line is a mind-blowing song-cycle
that resets the notion of what hardcore, screamo or whatever
you want to call it, can be.
"We didn't want to take the normal approach, with just
two guitar tracks, drum tracks, vocal tracks or whatever," McTague
explains. "We really made an effort to expand in our
minds about what Underoath could do." To which founding
kitman Aaron Gillespie adds, "We couldn't be happier.
When I look back on the time we spent on this album, I don't
think we would have done anything different."
If "A Moment Suspended In Time" is the most direct,
heartfelt musical assault since At The Drive-In's "One
Armed Scissor"–replete with explosive drumming
and the inexplicably delightful amalgam of mayhem and melody–the
Florida-based sextet's depth and ability is no doubt bolstered
by its higher calling.
"I feel like I want people to know we're a Christian
band," vocalist Spencer Chamberlain says of Underoath's
collective devotion. "But at the same time I don't like
tacking God or the fact that we're Christian onto something
to sell more records. I don't want just to be marketed as
a Christian band because I think we go beyond that. Tags
can be limiting."
"For us it's a fear of stereotype," Gillespie
explains. "Like, 'You're Christian, so you can't be
my friend.' I mean, Jesus was at lunch with whores and hookers!
Still, our Christianity defines who we are."
And for Underoath –which also counts keyboardist Chris
Dudley, bassist Grant Brandell and guitarist James Smith–there's
a purpose in the music, be it the cathartic, introspective "You're
Ever So Inviting" or the intoxicatingly forceful "In
Regards To Myself." The latter opens the album with
equal parts conviction and commotion, and boasts Spencer's
bloodcurdling inquiry, "What are you so afraid of?" only
to be countered by a stunning, turn-on-a-dime harmony.
"With this record I just wrote about myself and my
life," Chamberlain says proudly. "On They're Only
Chasing Safety, I wrote about scenarios because I had only
recently joined the band and I was still adapting to the
situation. This time there were no limitations and I'm writing
about the stuff that I know and feel strongly about. And
because I'm emotionally invested in it, I think it just feels
right." A listen to the deeply personal, "There
Could Be Nothing After This," an inventive, experimental
blast of guitars and inner searching affirms this sentiment.
"Our last record was like, ten songs on a CD," Tim
says. "And you could go and listen to each song individually
to decide what you like or you don't. But this is the first
time we composed an album. In the past it was just the ten
or so songs we wrote in a garage and recorded and eventually
some kids bought it. This time we knew we didn't want to
regurgitate anything. It had to be cohesive."
If the stakes felt high after the group
became Solid State's best selling band, the men of Underoath
kept their focus and avoided the stresses that have sabotaged
so many follow up discs. "Pressure is only there if you buy into it," Aaron
says. "As long as we were going where we wanted to go
and we were making it unique, that's all that mattered."
Or as Tim succinctly puts it, "We
don't need to pump out ten singles for an album. We're
not Fall Out Boy. Those bands are great for what they are
but that's not what we're aspiring to be at all."
"We wanted to provoke a lot of thought lyrically and
musically," McTague continues. "We didn't want
it to be a record that you put in and you're instantly hooked
because those records fall off. Catchy hooks seem cool for
about a week, but then--when you're sick of it, you realize
there is no substance. You can throw the record away. We'd
rather be a band like Refused, At The Drive-In or Glassjaw,
where you listen to it and you like it but you don't really
get it immediately. But you keep listening to it and all
the little pieces come into focus."
As for clarity regarding the disc's
title, Spencer says, "I
liked how broad it is. Define the Great Line can be interpreted
so many different ways. When we all started in our various
bands we were a bunch of 18-year-old kids. Over the last
two years I've watched us grow into the kind of men we're
going to be. To me it's the way I feel. It's the way God
has called me to be. It's just an imaginary line that I try
to balance myself on to be the best person I can be. I've
made tons of mistakes and I'm just an idiot kid sometimes
and it may take me my entire life to be the person that I
aspire to be, but that's my goal: To be the best kind of
dude I can be."
And if it's that spirit that sets Underoath's
fierce, foot-stomping metallic drive (see "Returning Empty Handed") apart
from its peers, perhaps McTague puts it best when he talks
about the real rewards of being in one of the biggest genre-
defining bands today. "For me, the kids that we meet
at shows who come up to us and tell us, 'I was going to kill
myself and then I heard this song of yours that changed my
life around spiritually.' Or even the one who said, 'I had
no one to turn to when my parents divorced, but your record
got me through it.' That's what it's all about for me. That's
what makes us more than just some crappy rock band."
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