Stateside (band)
Stateside | |
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Origin | Brisbane, Queensland, Australia |
Genres | |
Years active | 2014 | –2020
Past members |
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Stateside were an Australian rock band from Brisbane, formed in 2014. The band consisted of guitarist Ethan Laenen, drummer Hamish Maguire, bassist Jackson Lehane, and vocalist Erin Reus. Stateside released three independent EPs: Burning Bridges (2015), Naïve (2017) and Havøc (2020). They broke up in 2020, without ever having released a studio album.
History
[edit]Early years and Burning Bridges (2014–2016)
[edit]Stateside was officially formed on 17 March 2014[1] as a rock band in Brisbane by high school friends: Erin Reus on lead vocals, Ethan Laenen on lead guitar, Brendan Heidke on rhythm guitar, Denzil Bowen on bass guitar, and Hamish Maguire on drums. The band spent the year writing demos that would later become their debut EP Burning Bridges released on the one-year anniversary of the band's inception in 2015. Earlier that year, Stateside entered the Brisbane Battle of the Bands and were one of the top six finalists, unfortunately the band lost against Counterfeit Umbrellas.[2] The popularity of the Burning Bridges EP led to the band opening as the local support for bands; The Wonder Years, As It Is, Cute Is What We Aim For, Knuckle Puck and With Confidence. The band embarked on 3 national tours over the next year as the openers for popular local bands in support of the Burning Bridges EP.
Bowen's departure, Lehane's arrival and Naïve (2016–2018)
[edit]2016 saw the band start to restructure their sound with the help of producer Troy Brady, formerly of The Amity Affliction. Due to conflicting schedules, founding bassist Denzil Bowen left Stateside in early 2016 to focus on university study. After spending a year working on new music, the band released their new single "The Way We Were" in March 2017. The music video for the single has now gained over 1'000'000 views and took the band to new heights of popularity.[3] Bassist, Jackson Lehane joined the band shortly after in early 2017, just prior to the release of their Naïve EP which released on 25 May. The EP reached No. 9 on the Alt iTunes Charts and No. 28 on overall charts and was met with favourable reviews. The band then spent the rest of the year on tour promoting this new EP, supporting Against the Current and Stepson. The EP was praised for exploring issues on toxic relationships and emotional turmoil.[4]
On 2 February 2018, the bands second single from the EP, "Neon" was released alongside an accompanying music video,[5] just days before the bands first national headline tour. The Naïve Tour saw the band filling rooms all over the country & was supported Stuck Out.[6] The band spent the rest of 2018 on the road supporting several bands, in April they opened for Simple Plan on their Australian leg of the No Pads, No Helmets...Just Balls 15th Anniversary tour.[7] In July, they supported Belle Haven on their You, Me & Everything in Between tour alongside Casey.[8] In September, nearly 140 bands, including Stateside, performed at the annual BIGSOUND music conference in Brisbane. Stateside were part of the second lineup of over 60 other bands.[9] In December they supported Neck Deep on the Australian leg of their The Peace and the Panic tour,[10] as well as nabbing a spot on the lineup for the inaugural Good Things festival in Brisbane as a local support band.[11] Through extensive touring & promotion of the Naïve Tour in 2018 the band made a name for themselves throughout Australia & were listed by Hysteria Mag as an upcoming band to look out for.[12]
Havøc and disbandment (2019–2020)
[edit]In April 2019, the band performed at the inaugural UsFest to raise funds for Girls Rock! Sydney. The event was created by RedHook vocalist and Music Feeds journalist Emmy Mack.[13] Later in the year the band was the main support for With Confidence's Australian tour. In December, in addition to frontwoman Erin Reus appearing on stage at Good Things 2019 again to sing "Jet Lag" alongside Simple Plan, Stateside was invited to open for one of two Simple Plan sideshows in Brisbane.[7]
In March 2020, they supported Japanese rock band One Ok Rock along with US band Set It Off on the Australian leg of their Eye of the Storm world tour.[14] In August, the band announced the release of their new EP Havøc would be their final effort, its only single "Low" was released on 12 August.[15] The band disbanded following the EP's release that September. The band cited growing apart and wanting to go in different directions with their lives as the reason.[16]
Musical style
[edit]Front woman Erin Reus cited Bring Me the Horizon and PVRIS as major influences to the band's sound, especially on their 2017 EP Naïve. "As a young person learning about love, I didn’t know how else to express my feelings other than to write about them. I spent a lot of time hovering over all of the problems, and writing/recording/releasing the EP was basically closure for me......." said Reus when interviewed about her lyric writing on the Naïve EP.[17] Reus' vocal talent has been described as a mix of Jenna McDougall, from Tonight Alive, and Halsey.[12]
Members
[edit]
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Timeline
[edit]Discography
[edit]Extended plays
[edit]Title | Details | Peak chart positions |
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AUS | ||
Burning Bridges | – | |
Naïve |
|
–[A] |
Havøc | – |
Singles
[edit]Title | Year | Album |
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"Jealousy" | 2015 | Burning Bridges |
"The Way We Were" | 2017 | Naïve |
"Neon" | 2018 | |
"Low" | 2020 | Havøc |
Music videos
[edit]Year | Song | Director |
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2017 | "The Way We Were" | James Unwin |
2018 | "Neon" | Nick Hargans |
2020 | "Low" | Kez Ellis-Jones |
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Beavis, J. (26 August 2014). "Stateside Anchor Kids in Glass Houses Support". Starving Kids. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
- ^ a b Beavis, J. (17 March 2015). "Stateside Burn Bridges, Light Some Fires With New EP". Starving Kids. Retrieved 18 December 2018
- ^ "The Way We Were Music Video". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
- ^ "Stateside". Triple J Unearthed. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
- ^ Dreambound (2 February 2018). "Stateside – Neon (OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO)". Retrieved 2 July 2019 – via YouTube.
- ^ Rockpit, The (2 February 2018). "Stateside release vdeo for single 'Neon', touring with Stuck Out". The Rockpit. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
- ^ a b May, Tamara (11 November 2019). "Simple Plan's GTF Sideshows Have Announced Support Bands!". WallOfSound. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
- ^ Burch, Kel (11 July 2018). "Belle Haven: 'You, Me and Everything In Between' Tour @ The Evelyn Hotel". Depth Magazine. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
- ^ Staff Writers (25 July 2018). "BIGSOUND Reveal 60+ Acts Added To The 2018 Line-up". Scenestr. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
- ^ breevane (3 December 2018). "Neck Deep – Gig Review & Photo Gallery December 1st @ Metro Theatre, Sydney NSW". WallOfSound. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
- ^ Staff Writer (15 November 2018). "Good Things Festival Unveils Set Times & Local Supports". The Music. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
- ^ a b Ravik, Aimee (10 September 2018). "BIGSOUND 2018 // The Top Ten Heavy Artists To Watch". Hysteria Mag. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
- ^ English, Laura (8 March 2019). "Game-Changing Rock, Punk & Metal Festival UsFest Announces Kickass Inaugural Lineup". Music Feeds. Retrieved 2 July 2019.
- ^ "ONE OK ROCK EYE OF THE STORM AUSTRALIAN TOUR 2020 -Venue Changed-". ONE OK ROCK official website. 20 January 2020. Retrieved 27 March 2020.
- ^ Brown, Paul (12 August 2020). "Here's Your First Taste Of Stateside's Final Opus… 'Low'". WallOfSound. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
- ^ Brown, Paul (8 August 2020). "Stateside Announce Final EP Havøc And Bittersweet Break Up". WallOfSound. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
- ^ Davino, Bianca (14 March 2018). "Get to know Stateside, Australia's next huge pop punk export". The Brag – Don't Bore Us. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
- ^ "Naïve – Stateside". Bandcamp. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
- ^ Griffiths, Dave. "Stateside Deliver New Single Before Tour". Heavy Mag. KSP Productions. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
- ^ "Stateside: Havøc". Stateside. Retrieved 13 October 2020.