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Halifax (band) : ウィキペディア英語版
Halifax (band)

Halifax is a four-piece rock band from Thousand Oaks, California. They formed in 2003 and are currently unsigned. On their Myspace page the band announced that they will not be going with Drive-Thru Records on their 2009 release but are shipping the album off to other labels. They achieved notable success with their 2004 EP ''A Writer's Reference'' (selling over 34,000 copies to date)〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Halifax Takes Strange World By Storm )〕 after making a cameo appearance on MTV's ''The Real World: Austin''. The band's second full-length album, ''The Inevitability of a Strange World'', was released in May 2006. In December 2006, they won MTV2's ''Dew Circuit Breakout'' competition.
==History==
The band Halifax started in Thousand Oaks, California as a simple leisure activity. Out of boredom, Dan Locascio, Matt Locascio, Justin Chlowitz and guitarist Chris Brandt would write songs at the Locascios' house. They later recruited vocalist Mike Hunau to form a full-time touring band. The Locascios' father came up with the name for the band while setting up a hockey tournament in Halifax, Nova Scotia, in which Dan Locascio and Justin Chlowitz were to be playing later that year. After several months of occasional touring, Halifax recorded their eleven-song debut album within a week in March 2003. The self-produced and self-funded ''Start Back at Start'' was licensed and released in June 2003 by Weymouth, Massachusetts independent record label ECA Records.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Interview - Halifax )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Halifax interview )
However, it soon became obvious that Hunau and Brandt were not getting along with the other members of the band. Being the creative core of Halifax, the two decided to take a chance on a new batch of members. The band added guitarist Adam Charles, bassist Kevin Donlon and drummer. The new line-up pooled their cash to record their second album, similar to the manner in which ''Start Back at Start'' was created. The result was the yet-again self-produced EP ''A Writer's Reference'', released on January 25, 2004 by No Milk Records. While Halifax's debut was much more reminiscent of the band's pop punk influences—namely "Taking Back Sunday" and The Starting Line—their new material showcased a more distinctive style, mainly because of the line-up changes they had undergone. The quintet felt they had become a new band and accordingly retired the entire ''Start Back at Start'' catalog from their live shows. They also toyed heavily with the idea of renaming, but eventually stuck with their already established moniker.
Given the band's earlier connection with Drive-Thru Records, Halifax opened on various Drive-Thru bands' tours, before getting signed by the Thousand Oaks-based record label in July 2004. Simultaneously, bassist Donlon quit after only a year in the band to pursue his undergraduate degree in civil engineering at California State University, Northridge. While Chlowitz was initially rumored to return, the vacant position on the bass was instead filled by temporary members or Hunau. A permanent replacement was not found until Doug Peyton joined the band in late 2005. Drive-Thru re-released ''A Writer's Reference'', which had only been sporadically available in record stores, to the general public in January 2005, with new artwork and a bonus track. International tours followed, including the Dead by Dawn Tour (with From First to Last, Emanuel and He Is Legend) and the Warped Tour in the United States, as well as the Drive-Thru Invasion Tours in Europe and Japan. In between, Halifax appeared on MTV's ''The Real World: Austin'' alongside hellogoodbye in a series of episodes about the South by Southwest music festival. The band was unhappy that they had been depicted in the episodes as a group of mindless drunks, but the exposure certainly helped spread the word about the band; it resulted in over one million plays on PureVolume.〔
In May 2006, Drive-Thru Records released Halifax's third album, which marked the first time the band worked with a record producer. ''The Inevitability of a Strange World'' was produced partially by Lou Giordano and partially by Machine, who had previously worked with such renowned bands as Armor for Sleep, The Goo Goo Dolls, Lamb of God, and Sunny Day Real Estate. Thanks to them, the album featured a much rawer sound, giving a slight nod to a variety of heavy metal acts (most notably in the song "Our Revolution", which lyrically and musically pays homage to Mötley Crüe's "Kickstart My Heart"). ''The Inevitability of a Strange World'' sold close to 7,000 copies within its first week, debuting at No. 130 on the ''Billboard'' 200 and at No. 1 on the Top Heatseekers chart.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Soundscan Results: Week Ending May 28th, 2006 )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Halifax Chart Position )〕 To promote the release, the band shot a music video for "Our Revolution", toured extensively and appeared on ''Last Call with Carson Daly'' on July 19, 2006 and on ''Fearless Music'' on September 23, 2006.
In December 2006, Halifax competed in the finals of MTV2's ''Dew Circuit Breakout'', an annual TV battle of the bands sponsored by Mountain Dew, against Fallen from the Sky and Zolof the Rock & Roll Destroyer. Halifax placed first, following in the footsteps of hellogoodbye, who won the competition the year before. All the while, Payton was continuously suffering from a knee injury, which eventually forced him to leave the band in January 2007. He was replaced by a new bassist named Eric Ivener.
In 2007, the band completed tours of the United States and the United Kingdom with Madina Lake, Envy On The Coast and My American Heart. This is one of Halifax's first major tours in the UK. Their song, Nightmare, was featured in MLB 07: The Show.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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