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Underoath Announce Headlining Fall Tour

September 20, 2009 By Bryce Jacobson Leave a Comment

Underoath will be heading out on tour this fall with August Burns Red and Emery. Check out the dates for the tour below.

November

20th – Rocketown, Nashville TN
21st – The Masquerade, Atlanta GA
22nd – Lincoln Theatre, Raleigh NC
23rd – Music Farm, Charleston SC
24th – Revolution, Ft. Lauderdale FL
25th – The Ritz, Tampa FL
28th – The 7 Venue, Douglasville GA
29th – Amo’s Southend, Charlotte NC
30th – The Norva, Norfolk VA

December

1st – Crocodile Rock, Allentown PA
2nd – Northern Lights, Clifton Park NY
3rd – House of Blues, Cleveland OH
4th – Orbit Room, Grand Rapids MI
5th – The Rave, Milwaukee WI
6th – Metro, Chicago IL
8th – Sokol Auditorium, Omaha NE
9th – Granada Theatre, Lawrence KS
10th – Cain’s Ballroom, Tulsa OK
11th – The Village, Little Rock AR
12th – New Daisy Theatre, Memphis TN
13th – House of Blues Dallas, Dallas TX
14th – Las Palmas Race Park, Mission TX
15th – La Zona Rosa, Austin TX
16th – Verizon Wireless Theatre, Houston TX
17th – House of Blues, New Orleans LA

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Underoath

Underoath Video

April 21, 2009 By Ben Minsky Leave a Comment

Check out the new music video from Underoath for Too Bright To See Too Loud To Hear.

[myspace]http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=56120115[/myspace]

Filed Under: Videos Tagged With: Underoath

Underoath Canadian Tour

January 28, 2009 By Ben Minsky Leave a Comment

Underoath will be touring Canada with Norma Jean and innerpartysystem.

Dates:

3/7 The Vogue Theatre Vancouver, BC
3/9 MacEwen Hall Calgary, AB
3/10 Edmonton Event Centre Edmonton, AB
3/11 Odeon Events Centre Saskatoon, SK
3/15 Elements Kitchener, ON
3/17 Kool Haus Toronto, ON
3/18 L’Anti Quebec City, QC
3/19 Cub Soda Montreal, QC

Filed Under: News Tagged With: innerpartysystem, Norma Jean, Tour, Underoath

Underoath Video Blogs

January 20, 2009 By Ben Minsky 2 Comments

Underoath has just put up two new video blogs from South America

Filed Under: News, Videos Tagged With: Tour, Underoath

Taking Back Sunday Heading To Europe

January 10, 2009 By Ben Minsky Leave a Comment

Taking Back Sunday have just announced a new European tour with support from Underoath, Emery, Innerpartysystem.

Below is a message from Emery

mery will be making their first trip across the Atlantic in April, hitting Germany, Austria and more to be announced.  Keep checking their MySpace page for updates!

Love,
Tooth & Nail

April 11
Koln
GERMANY
Live Music Hall
Give It A Name w/Underoath, Taking Back Sunday, Innerpartysystem
http://www.fkpscorpio.com/tickets_bestellung.asp?nummer=190745

April 12
Munich
GERMANY
Backstage
Give It A Name w/Underoath, Taking Back Sunday, Innerpartysystem
http://www.fkpscorpio.com/tickets_bestellung.asp?nummer=190746

April 14
Vienna
AUSTRIA
Vienna Arena
Give It A Name w/Underoath, Taking Back Sunday, Innerpartysystem
http://www.oeticket.com

April 16
Zurich
SWITZERLAND
Volkhaus
Give It A Name w/Underoath, Taking Back Sunday, Innerpartysystem
http://www.starticket.ch/0Numberoftix.asp?ShowID=24323&CategoryID=41633&ZoneID=&ShowDetails=1

April 18
Amsterdam
NETHERLANDS
Sugar Factory
http://www.ticketservice.nl

April 19
Hamburg
GERMANY
Logo
http://www.fkpscorpio.com/tickets_bestellung.asp?nummer=190747

April 20
Berlin
GERMANY
Kato
http://www.fkpscorpio.com/tickets_bestellung.asp?nummer=190748

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Emery, europe, Taking Back Sunday, Tour, Underoath

Underoath, Saosin & The Devil Wears Prada Photos

October 25, 2008 By Mike Duncan Leave a Comment

I have posted some new pictures of Underoath, Saosin & The Devil Wears Prada in the photos section. Head there to check them out.

Filed Under: Photos Tagged With: Saosin, The-Devil-Wears-Prada, Underoath

Underoath Interview – October 4th, 2008

October 13, 2008 By Chloe 2 Comments

 After coming off of their world tour, Underoath had every right to be exhausted and dread more interviews. This was not the case, however, and the band willingly lent the down-to-earth Christopher Dudley, keyboardist, to Driven Far Off to answer our questions. Fans from across the country were also able to submit their questions, and Christopher graciously answered a few of them at Pipeline Cafe in Honolulu, HI.

Huge thanks to Chelsi Schriver and Christopher Dudley for setting up this interview!

– How did you guys find eachother and decide to start a band?

C: In a nutshell, we were all friends from being really young. We met each other at different local shows and decided we wanted to get together, but a lot of that was different guys. We’ve gone through a lot of member changes and stuff in the past…quite a few years, but that was about 10 years ago.

 – How did the band find the name Underoath?

C: Well, the guy who thought of it was a guy who was never actually on an Underoath record. He was in the band for 8 months right when we first started. I know it came from the Bible somewhere, but no clue where. He’d be the one to ask, but I don’t think anybody knows where he is–he’s off like living in the woods somewhere. He kind of went nuts [laughs].

 – How does Lost in the Sound of Separation differ from your previous records?

C: Better, and more fun. The songs are better, so in turn they are more fun to play.

– What is the underlying message of the album?

C: I don’t know if I’d say there is one message per say. A big thing with us is like, Spencer’s lyrics are really personal to him and we try as best as we can to be really honest about what we write about and not try to write a song about something just to write a song about it. Everything that is on our record is something we’ve gone through or something Spencer’s gone through, and I think the main focus of all of that is: look, we are all people and we all go through crappy times, but with us being a Christian band we are all really adamant about being like, look, this sucks, life sucks sometimes, but God is always there and no matter how bad it gets it can always be worse. Like, there is always–a cheesy saying–a light at the end of the tunnel.

 – What is the process for writing the music and lyrics?

C: It’s different for every song. Sometimes Tim will come to the table with the guitar part and then be like, “let’s try and do something along this line.” Sometimes Spencer will come and be like, “yeah, I was thinking we should have something that sounds like this,” and just kind of like mouth it. Like today when were sound-checking and we were just riffing around, just all together messing around and stuff, and every song has a different story and a different way it came about. Different songs start with different people in it, but usually by the end of it it ends with all of us in a room like riffing on it trying to make it as good as possible. It usually just ends with all of us jamming.

 – Who have been your greatest influences?

C: For us there are a few bands that we all are able to agree on that once we heard that band we knew that we weren’t going to see music the same way again. Radiohead is a really big band for us, At the Drive-In was a band that when all of us heard it we knew things had changed, and Refused. As far as all of us collectively those are probably the only few that we can agree on. It really runs the gamut as far as all of us goes. Aaron listens to Keith Urban, Tim listens to Iron and Wine, James listens to Tom Petty and Bruce Springsteen, and I listen to Imogen Heap, Guns N’ Roses and Creedence Clearwater.

 – Does Solid State control most of your music or–

C: –none. That’s probably the biggest thing why we decided to resign with them, because a lot of major labels give you a lot of money and you get a lot of stuff but at the end of the day they have control over whether they are going to put out what you write or not. There’s a certain band that I talked to who is on a major label and they wrote an entire record and were really really stoked on it, and gave it to their label and their label said, “no, go write another one.” That’s just ridiculous. Solid state has, for a really really long time, been comfortable with saying, “who do you want to record with, where do u want to record, give us the record when you are done.” Most labels, while you are recording, will be like, “send us a song, send us three songs to see where its going,” and with Tooth and Nail we will straight up be like, “no, you’re not getting anything until we are done with it,” and they are fine with that. Which is really important to us because we just really want to focus on doing what we are doing and after everything is done show it to someone.

 – For first time listeners of Underoath, what song would you suggest they listen to and why?

C: I’d have to say Returning Empty Handed; it’s a song off of Define the Great Line. There are a lot of songs I would want them to listen to more, but I think that’s the song that encompasses what we do the most. There are a lot better songs but I don’t think there are any better songs to completely sum up what we do.

 – What is the story behind Underoath’s documentaries, like Survive, Kaleidoscope?

C: Two years ago we came to our label and were like, “hey, we want to put out an actual documentary,” like we wanted to have a film crew follow our tour, and pretty much document what it’s like on tour. Tour is awesome but a lot of times its not–there are hard times and stuff–and we really wanted to have something that was shot from a 3rd party perspective of the entire tour to show what it’s really like.

 – A lot of members have come and gone in the band. Was it difficult to adjust each time someone left?

C: I think it depends on who you are talking about. We haven’t gone through a member change in almost five years now. Some guys were harder than others, some guys came out of the blue and said, “hey, I’m going to be leaving;” others were asked to leave; so with every dude it was a different story. But I think all those things led up to where we are now and I think that’s a really important thing and I think the six of us are supposed to be here. I think every person that left was supposed to leave and we feel really comfortable with that.

 – Do you think that being a Christian-based band has been an advantage or disadvantage at all?

C: If you’re talking about in the industry per say, like if it’s helped us sell records or anything, I don’t think so at all. But if your talking about just being a person, being in a band, then you know, we wouldn’t be a band if we weren’t doing it to talk to people about what we believe. So I guess in that aspect it has helped us because we are in a band where we wouldn’t be in a band any other way.

 – Do you guys have any side projects going on?

C: Aaron has a side project going on that he’s doing and they are called The Almost, and the rest of us have small things that we are doing here and there. The thing is, like, with Aaron’s side project, he’s got a record out and he plays shows and stuff, and Underoath tours a lot, and when we’re off, like when we get to go home and actually see our wives and see our families, he’s gone on tour again. So it’s one of those things where we all play music but I don’t think any of us at the moment are willing to take it to that next level of recording and putting out a record and playing shows because we take the time that we have to actually be at home. That’s a really crucial thing because we are gone so much, like we will probably be gone nine months this year, so those three months that we actually have at home, I’m going to be sitting on the couch watching TV with my wife. I’m not going to be going into the studio and recording another record. It can be difficult, but it’s one of those things where we know that this is what God has for us and we feel very confident in that, and all of our wives/girlfriends are very supportive of that.

 – Although you have had fame for a while, was it strange getting used to the media and coverage of Underoath?

C: I don’t know, we are in a band and we’ve sold records and some people know who we are, but I don’t really see us as being famous. It’s not like I can’t just go to the supermarket or mall and just can’t get away from myself, like I’m not just reading about myself in all these different places. It’s definitely different now than it used to be, because people actually come to our shows, but I don’t see it as this burden that is just horrible. People actually watch us play where before we would go on tour and nobody would be there. Granted you get some weird people and people who are kind of off, but for the most part people are cool and they like to hang out and we like to hang out, so it works out. We’re really thankful and really blessed that people enjoy what we are doing.

Fan Q&A:

 From beginning to end, how long do you spend on an average song before it sounds like it does on the CD? -Tim, IA

C: It’s different things for different songs. There is one song on our new record that we actually wrote in one practice, from beginning to end, everything except for the lyrics was done in one practice which took us about three hours. There are other songs that take a year to two years. It just depends on the song.

 What’s the best show you’ve ever played? -Danica, CA

C: Some ones that come to mind are: we played in Birmingham, Alabama in 2006 and that was an amazing show. The London show on this tour we are on now was great. One of my personal favorite shows we’ve ever played was in South Africa on this tour. The shows itself was good, but the venue was out in the middle of nowhere, just a field with like a hut and nothing else. But these kids had made this venue and there were these big bonfire things and they had random people come and selling drinks. It felt like a New Years Eve party. It was just insane; it was a great.

 How do you feel about the illegal downloading of songs? -Jessica, MA

C: It depends on who the person is I think. I don’t think there is anything wrong with downloading per say, but when downloading makes people not buy records, I don’t like that because obviously if I like a band, I’m going to want to go and buy their record. Not saying that just because I’m a band, but I’m going to want to support what they are doing. I just never really understood the “I like that band, but I’m don’t want to support them. I’d rather just take it.”

 What are your favorite movies? -John, AZ

C: Wizard of Oz, The Shining, Psycho, Vanilla Sky, One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest, Rear Window-I’m just a movie guy. I’m a fan of movies that disturb me in general.

 How has your faith helped you get to where you are now? -Stephen, IA

C: The only reason why I am here, here in the sense of being in this band and here in the sense of where my life is in general is because of God and because He has completely pulled me out of being in a completely different place. So I guess it’s kind of cheesy to say, but I completely owe credit for everything in my life up to this point to God. So it’s not like he’s helped me out or I’m a little better because of it. No, I wouldn’t be here at all.

 Which album do you think you’ve spent the most time working on? -Kate, GA

C: The last two records we’ve spent a great deal of time on. It took us about two years to do both records, so I’d say the last two records in equal amounts.

 Do they think a band should tell their fans who they support [in the election] and encourage them to vote the same way, or just emphasize the power of voting in general? -Bryce, MN

C: If you are going to emphasize anything, you should be educated. I’m not necessarily going to tell someone that they should go out and vote if they don’t believe in what they are voting for. I definitely think it’s really important to be educated and know where different candidates stand on different things.

 What are some foods that you can’t live without on tour? -Sam, CA

C: I don’t know if there are any, honestly. We go to so many places and just have to eat whatever is around. There is a lot of stuff I’d like to have constantly though.

Filed Under: Interviews Tagged With: Christopher Dudley, Lost in the Sound of Separation, Underoath

Ask Underoath A Question!

October 2, 2008 By Chloe 6 Comments

Hey Underoath fans,

DFO has an interview with the band Saturday night and we are going to try a little Fan Q&A. Leave your questions for the band here (please include your name and state) and you may get a response to your question Saturday night!

Now’s your chance to ask the band what you have been wondering!

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Interview, Underoath

Audible Diversion Group Brings Free Music To Your Ears

September 5, 2008 By Bryce Jacobson Leave a Comment

Tim McTague (Underoath), Jay Vilardi (The Almost), and Ryan Gardner recently started a new audio/visual arts and music company called Audible Diversion Group. The company is currently running the Underoath and The Almost online stores as well as releasing free music from their newest band, Safety. For more information you can read the full press release below.

To download the Safety’s “A Season of bad Dreams” entirely free, or for more information on Safety, Verdure Studio, or any of the ADG family, visit www.audiblediversiongroup.com

Audible Diversion Group, a new audio/visual arts and music company founded by Tim McTague of Underoath, Jay Vilardi of The Almost and a Tampa Bay area based film maker Ryan Gardner, have recently been up to a lot these days. “I just wanted to start a small audio/video production collective in the beginning. The whole online/digital distribution end of things just fell into place really. I just wanted to make records and films with and help get it out,” says McTague. Audible Diversion Group recently took over the Underoath and Almost online stores mainly out of necessity. “We had so much extra merch after each tour and we would pay thousands of dollars shipping it across the country to sit on shelves and one day a light bulb went off in my head and it just made so much sense to do it ourselves. We started just selling off our tour overstock but then ended up taking over the entire stores.” says Vilardi. The company has taken on only a few select additional clients consisting of Person L (the new brain child of Starting Line front man Ken Vasoli), Verdure Studio (an arts collective out of Tampa), The Glass Ocean (an Atlanta based indie regime), and Safety (a Tampa based punk/rock band). “With our main focus on audio and film, and only so many hours in a day, we’ve really had to be selective with who we take on. We’d rather have a smaller roster and be able to go above and beyond what they would expect, rather than have dozens of artists and let things start suffering due to committing too much to too many people. I think it’s an easy trap to get caught in so we’re always aware of what our end mission is.” remarks Gardner in casual conversation about the companies intentions. Although the three members of ADG seem to downplay their recent additions and centralized success as “a small business made of artists working for other artists”, this “small” player in the game is committed to pack as big of a punch as it can handle giving. The company recently upgraded their already capable online system with a digital download feature which enables them to sell everything from films to records completely digitally and completely free of any distribution companies hold ups and stipulations. “With our new system we are essentially a one stop shop for online distribution for artists of film and audio. There’s no middle man, or corporate giant muddying the water. Anything that the artist wants within reason is possible. We have complete control!” McTague rants with excitement. The company, alongside one of their newest artists Safety, have decided to give the bands newest release “A Season of Bad Dreams” away for free digitally via their online store on www.audiblediversiongroup.com. ” We started this company to try and take back control of what we could within our respective genres and industries,” says Gardner. “We have had a lot of support in the past few months from a lot of great people who believe in what we do and the bands we work for. We felt like this would be a great way of giving back to the people who constantly give to us, as well as really put our foot forward in support of the new digital movement.” Safety recorded their 7 song EP with McTague at his home studio, and the effort was mixed by audio surgeon, Beau Burchell of Saosin. The band will be releasing a physical copy of the record in the coming months, but for now are content with spreading the gospel of Safety via the world wide web free of charge to anyone who has ears and a decent internet connection. Justin of Verdure Studio was at the drawing board for all of the art design to round out the release. ” This was as close to the ADG vision as we’ve come so far,” says Gardner. ” All of the art, web design, audio recording and distribution has been all done in house and/or with our collective family.” To download the Safety’s “A Season of bad Dreams” entirely free, or for more information on Safety, Verdure Studio, or any of the ADG family, visit www.audiblediversiongroup.com.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Audible Diversion Group, Safety, The Almost, Underoath

Underoath Premier “Desperate Times, Desperate Measures” Video

September 1, 2008 By Bryce Jacobson Leave a Comment

Underoath‘s new video for “Desperate Times, Desperate Measures” can been seen below. The song is off the bands new album, Lost In The Sound of Separation, due out tomorrow September, 2nd.

Filed Under: News, Videos Tagged With: Underoath

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