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Here
is the story…the whole truth in its entirety.
The Chicago scene, in all of it’s incestuous
nature, has offered all types of music and collaborations
for as long as music has existed in this Windy City,
and rather than honing in on the sonic traditions that
have been oh so prominent among a vast array of punk
rock and hardcore groups, Break the Silence has ideas
of their own to express. Substituting tradition and
repetition with reinvention, the band has been most
commonly accepted as an embodiment of originality.
Forming from the ashes of a handful of Chicago bands
such as 88 Fingers Louie, SKG, All Else Fails, Mike,
and Every Light Red, the members have all had different
ideas to bring to the creative table and help shape
the unique sound that Break the Silence has continued
to deliver.
I guess it really started with All Else Fails recruiting
Dan Precision as guitarist. (Mr. Precision had worked
with AEF frontman Andy Lareau before in a melodic hardcore
group called Nice Guys Finish Last)
Shortly after Precision was recruited, Lareau decided
to leave the band. Brian Phee, Jay Gronwick, Mike Ford,
and Dan Precision were all left back at square one.
Taking everything as opportunity rather than failure,
the boys decided to form a new group, under a new name,
with a new sound. They decided to name the project Break
the Silence, and began extensively writing music…still
in search of a voice to tie everything together.
Meanwhile, 19-year-old Dan Wintercorn had musical wheels
turning as well. He had been writing songs on his own
for a solo project, which was later to expand into melodocore
group Every Light Red. Later, while attending Warped
Tour ’02, Wintercorn came across a flyer for vocal auditions
for BTS. Since options with ELR were quite limited,
he decided to pass along an early demo of some of the
ELR songs to them, and immediately caught their interest.
At that exact moment, Wintercorn had spent every free
minute writing lyrics to the demo that was given to
him by Gronwick, and completed 3 songs (which were later
to be named ‘Close My Eyes’, ‘Forgiven, Not Forgotten’,
and ‘Iris’) to audition with.
When the audition took place, the band was taken aback
by the fact that Wintercorn was laying these intense
screams of this pristine melodic hardcore, yet accompanied
it with melodic vocals all at the same time. This fashion
has been commonplace for Wintercorn’s style, but seemed
relatively foreign to the BTS boys, so needless to say,
at first the band as a whole were quite indifferent,
but still quite impressed.
After 3 auditions and 2 demo sessions with BTS, Wintercorn
was asked to be the vocalist of Break the Silence, and
the band as a whole was born. Now began the intense
writing, until about 1 month later, when they finally
put together enough music to perform on November 7th,
2002 with Fall Out Boy, Much the Same, Belvedere, and
Near Miss. The band was received with seemingly open
arms, but realized that they were still a work in progress.
As time went on, BTS stayed in creative mode for the
next few months, playing a few sporadic Chicago area
shows in between, and made plans to begin recording
their debut “Near Life Experience” in early February
2003. During the final steps of the recording process,
BTS was invited by Hopeless/SubCity Records to fill
an open slot in the highly anticipated SXSW (South by
Southwest) Music Festival that takes place every year
in Austin, TX. Without hesitation, the band seized the
opportunity immediately and put recoding on hold for
that weekend. This would prove to be the best career
move the band has made to this day.
BTS immmediatley clicked with the good people at Hopeless/SubCity,
impressed them with a heartfelt and intense performance
for SXSW, and stayed in contact. About 3 weeks later,
they were offered to join the Hopeless roster.
Since then, the band has been up and coming worldwide,
due to the hard work of the people at Hopeless and the
bandmates themselves. The band took the golden opportunity
to perform on the first week of the Vans Warped Tour
’03 over the summer, shared the stage back home at Metro
with melodic hardcore giants Rise Against (in which
Precision was a founding member until 2001) and in Autumn
were featured on the Vans Off the Wall tour with hardcore
legends Sick Of it All, Boston street punk veterans
The Unseen, the mighty Avenged Sevenfold, and other
great bands such as Western Waste and Sworn Enemy. Since
then, the band has been hitting the Chicago area, gearing
up for the release of Near Life Experience, out on Feb.
10th 2004, making plans for nationwide touring, and
hitting up the Chicago area, everywhere from ice arenas
to the House of Blues.
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