In Fear and Faith was an American post-hardcore band from San Diego, California. Formed in 2006, the group was signed to Rise Records and released three studio albums and two EPs. Their debut full-length, Your World on Fire, being released nearly a year after the band's signing to Rise in 2008, peaked at No. 193 on the Billboard 200. Their second full-length album, Imperial was released the following year and failed to make that chart, but did chart on the Top Heatseekers and overall Indie chart in the US. The band has undergone many line-up changes since its formation, and does not feature any consistent original members since the departure of guitarist Ramin Niroomand and drummer Mehdi Niroomand in 2014; vocalist Scott Barnes is the only current member of the band to have performed on all of the group's studio albums, though he is not an original member; likewise, although current bassist Tyler McElhany is a founding member of the band himself, he was out of the group from 2011 to 2014 and did not contribute to their third album, In Fear and Faith.

In Fear and Faith
Sean Bell and Scott Barnes from in Fear and Faith performing in 2012
Sean Bell and Scott Barnes from in Fear and Faith performing in 2012
Background information
OriginSan Diego, California, U.S.
GenresPost-hardcore, metalcore, alternative metal
Years active2006–2017
LabelsRise
MembersJarred DeArmas
Cody Anderson
Scott Barnes
Noah Slifka
Tyler McElhaney
Sean Bell
Chase Whitney
Past membersRamin Niroomand
Mehdi Niroomand
Tyler Smith
Davey Owens
Michael Guy
Websitefacebook.com/infaf

History edit

Inception and Voyage (2006–2007) edit

In Fear and Faith was founded in 2006 by members Davey Owens, Mehdi Niroomand, Tyler McElhaney, Jarred DeArmas, Michael Guy and Ramin Niroomand while attending high school in San Diego and derived the band's name off of the Circa Survive song of the same name. The band recorded a self-titled demo during the same year formed, containing four tracks.[1]

A year after recording the demo, founding vocalist Jarred DeArmas was kicked out of the group in desire of the members seeking a singer with a higher vocal range. Tyler Smith was, at this point, employed as the band's clean vocalist along with Cody Anderson as the band's unclean vocalist. A few months after these modifications, they replaced guitarist Davey Owens with Noah Slifka while keyboardist, Michael Guy left the band completely without a member in his replacement. With this line-up, they recorded their first EP, Voyage and released it via iTunes on December 17, 2007.[2] Met with positive acclaim and achieving more than 30,000 song purchases,[3] it attracted the attention of Rise Records, which they were signed to the following year.[4]

Your World on Fire (2008–2009) edit

Clean vocalist Smith left the band in January 2008 to join Greeley Estates as bassist. He was replaced by Scott Barnes and the group released their debut album, Your World on Fire, on January 6, 2009, via Rise Records. It reached No. 193 on the Billboard 200.[5] The album's success led In Fear and Faith to inclusions on many tours and festivals. They toured with groups such as Gwen Stacy, Our Last Night, Vanna, Emarosa, the Human Abstract, Life in Your Way, Burden of a Day, Lower Definition, Confide, VersaEmerge, Here I Come Falling, Broadway, In This Moment, Agraceful and Motionless in White.[6]

Imperial, Symphonies and member changes (2010–2011) edit

On December 19, 2009, the band put an update on their Facebook profile stating that they were writing and recording a new album over those next three months.[7] During mid-April, the band completed the record after touring Europe, its title was revealed as Imperial. On May 12 at Midnight (PST) the band released three new songs off of the album; "The Solitary Life", "Counselor", and "Bones" as streaming media online prior to its release. On June 15, 2010 Imperial was released worldwide.[8]

In Fear and Faith appeared on the entire 2010 Vans Warped Tour performing on the Skullcandy Stage. Craig Owens, of Destroy Rebuild Until God Shows, performed guest vocals with the group on two of the tour dates.[9] In Fear and Faith also participated in the Band of Brothers Tour in the fall of 2010 with We Came as Romans, Confide, Upon a Burning Body and Abandon All Ships.[10]

While In Fear and Faith were included on Attack Attack!'s This Is a Family Tour, unclean vocalist, Cody Anderson was forced to not be included on their schedule due to personal reasons and his position in the group was substituted by Bryan Zimmerman, formerly of Sky Eats Airplane.[11] On December 5, 2010, it was then announced that Anderson left the band completely.[12] The reason for his leaving was never explained. With a lighter line-up, the band then took some time off from touring and recorded an EP featuring symphonic renditions of some of their songs. The EP was titled Symphonies, and was released on May 3, 2011.[13] Barnes performs both the clean and unclean vocals on the release.[14] Before its surfacing, the band once more changed its line-up. Both Tyler McElhaney and Noah Slifka were replaced by Jarred DeArmas and Sean Bell, respectively. Bell served as a touring member during the This Is A Family Tour for the group in the rhythm guitar position before his joining and DeArmas was originally the band's vocalist during its founding in high school when he was 17 in 2006.[15]

Self-titled album (2012) edit

The band teased announced their new album by releasing the lead single on November 8, 2011, for a song titled, "It All Comes Out (On the Way Down)".[16] "A Creeping Dose" was released on June 29, 2012, three days into the "Scream It Like You Mean It 2012" tour.[17] The album was released later that year on October 16, 2012, with Dave Stephens of We Came as Romans appeared as a vocalist on the track "The Calm Before Reform".[18]

Return of some old members and new music (2013–present) edit

Ramin Niroomand informally announced that he and his brother are no longer members of In Fear and Faith. Their guitarist has released a statement via Instagram stating that they will release a statement on the future of the band "once legal matters subside."[19] On May 7, 2014, the band posted a picture on their Facebook with a skull and two swords reading "06/07/14". According to posts on Facebook, Cody Anderson and Noah Slifka, are back in the band and announced via his profile picture that In Fear and Faith will perform the show as supporting band for Saosin along with Open Hand on Saturday, June 7, 2014, at Club Nokia, Los Angeles.[20] Chase Whitney (End the Century, Two from Evil) was announced as their temporary drummer.

On June 5, 2014, the band announced that they would be recording new music issuing this statement: "weren't initially planning on it. but with the ridiculous amount of support we've received in the last few weeks, we have decided to make some new music. working out the details currently."[21] However, on June 8, the band announced after opening for Saosin with original vocalist Anthony Green that this would be their final show,[22] which was later denied on the band's official Facebook page with the comment ""Scott wasn't finished talking and the song started ha. We'll probably do some more shows. You'd think sites would reach out before reporting shit."[23] As of February 14, 2015, In Fear and Faith has stated on their Facebook page they are currently working on new music. On May 14, 2015, Sean Bell posted a video on his Instagram stating that the band had officially started pre-production.

As of 2017, no further updates have been provided on the band. Members maintain that the band has not broken up, although lead vocalist Scott Barnes, and guitarist Sean Bell are in a new band, Noble. In spite of this, they state that new In Fear and Faith music will come eventually.

Musical style edit

In Fear and Faith are essentially a post-hardcore band, but perform the genre with a tied-in influence of metal and electronica.[24][25] The group is primarily influenced by alternative rock, emo, hardcore and heavy metal genres. Music journalist, Andrew Leahy documented In Fear and Faith's sound as "a blend of furious instrumentation, electronic flourishes and screamo vocals" along with mentioning embracement of heavy metal while complimenting their hybrid sound of being the case why the group "were signed so quickly" and "wasted little time" doing so.[24]

In Fear and Faith songs are usually three minutes in length, but their longer and more-known songs such as "Live Love Die" and "The Taste of Regret" lead into four minutes of length. The main songwriters have primarily always been Ramin and Mehdi Nirromand, Tyler McElhaney and Scott Barnes. Bassist, McElhaney has commented on the band's guitar tunings stating that while the tunings on Your World on Fire and Voyage would be set to the same drop throughout, Imperial features different tunings on several different songs to add "depth" regardless of the difficulty of this for live performances.[26]

Band members edit

Timeline

Discography edit

Studio albums
Year Title Label Chart positions[27]
Top 200 US Indie US Heat Hard Rock
January 6, 2009 Your World on Fire Rise 193 23 8
June 15, 2010 Imperial 32 4 18
October 16, 2012 In Fear and Faith 143 37 3 12

EPs

Demos

  • In Fear and Faith (2006, self-released)

Other songs

  • "Bite the Bullet and Pray to God" (First demo of "Silence Is Screaming" recorded in 2006)
  • "Words for Your Eulogy" (First demo of "The Taste of Regret" recorded in 2006)
  • "Gangsta's Paradise" (Coolio ft. L.V. cover, released in 2008)
  • "The End" (demo version, 2009 Myspace exclusive)
  • "It All Comes Out (On the Way Down)" (single version, released in 2011)
  • "Billie Jean" (Michael Jackson cover, released in 2012 as a tribute for the third anniversary of his death)

Videography edit

  • "Live Love Die" (Voyage, 2008)
  • "Your World on Fire" (Your World on Fire, 2009)
  • "The Road to Hell Is Paved with Good Intentions" (Your World on Fire, 2009)
  • "Bones" (Imperial, 2010)
  • "Counselor" (Imperial, 2011)
  • "Billie Jean" (Michael Jackson cover) (2012)

References edit

  1. ^ "In Fear and Faith: Information from Answers.com". Answers.com. Archived from the original on February 26, 2011. Retrieved September 17, 2010.
  2. ^ In Fear and Faith: Voyage Archived 2011-07-13 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ The Artery Foundation Summer Tour featuring IN FEAR AND FAITH with VANNA, A LOSS FOR WORDS, CLOSE TO HOME, TEN AFTER TWO, CHUNK! NO, CAPTAIN CHUNK! and ADESTRIA in the Eagle Theater Archived July 13, 2012, at the Wayback Machine The Crofoot
  4. ^ Rise Signed In Fear And Faith AbsolutePunk
  5. ^ Billboard, AllMusic
  6. ^ "A Winter to Remember". Archived from the original on September 4, 2009.
  7. ^ "Facebook - Log in or Sign Up". Facebook.
  8. ^ "Facebook - Log in or Sign Up". Facebook.
  9. ^ James, Shotwell (August 2, 2010). "Alt Press - Craig Owens to sing with in Fear And Faith at two Warped Tour dates". Alternative Press. Retrieved September 1, 2010.
  10. ^ WE CAME AS ROMANS: Add Canadian Tour Dates with In Fear and Faith, Upon a Burning Body Archived October 5, 2010, at the Wayback Machine SMN News
  11. ^ In Fear & Faith screaming vocalist Cody Anderson has left the band[usurped] Indiestar
  12. ^ Karan, Tim. "In Fear And Faith vocalist leaves band". Alternative Press. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  13. ^ "bringonmixedreviews.com". Bringonmixedreviews.com. Archived from the original on July 22, 2012. Retrieved October 2, 2020.
  14. ^ Gardner, Ryan. "In Fear And Faith - Symphonies EP". AbsolutePunk. Retrieved October 13, 2011.
  15. ^ "In Fear and Faith". Facebook.com.
  16. ^ Trimboli, Grant. "LYRIC VIDEO: In Fear And Faith – It All Comes Out (On The Way Down)". Under the Gun Review. Retrieved November 8, 2011.
  17. ^ "A Creeping Dose - Single by In Fear and Faith". Music.apple.com.
  18. ^ "In Fear and Faith". Facebook.com.
  19. ^ "Ramin Niroomand confirms break up of In Fear and Faith". Ramin Niroomand. Retrieved November 24, 2013.
  20. ^ [1] [dead link]
  21. ^ "In Fear And Faith To Record New Music". PropertyOfZack.
  22. ^ "In Fear And Faith Played Their Final Show Last Night". PropertyOfZack.
  23. ^ "In Fear And Faith Clarify Previous Comments, Will "Probably" Play More Shows | Under the Gun Review". August 8, 2014. Archived from the original on August 8, 2014. Retrieved October 2, 2020.
  24. ^ a b "In Fear & Faith". AllMusic. Retrieved January 6, 2011.
  25. ^ Angel, Justin. "In Fear and Faith - Symphonies | Metal Delirium". Metal Delirium. Archived from the original on June 19, 2011. Retrieved November 7, 2011.
  26. ^ Shotwell, James. "UTG TV: In Fear and Faith [Interview] | Under the Gun Review".
  27. ^ "In Fear & Faith Music News & Info". Retrieved November 8, 2011.