Fronted by a tattooed clothing designer and influenced by death metal,
grindcore, and emo, Bring Me the Horizon aren't the average deathcore
band. The group was formed in 2004 from the ashes of several
Sheffield-based outfits, with the 2003 Disney film Pirates of the
Caribbean serving as the inspiration for the band's name. Singer Oliver
Sykes, guitarists Lee Malia and Curtis Ward, bassist Matt Kean, and
drummer Matt Nicholls initially established their own label, Thirty Days
of Night, to release their debut EP, 2005's This Is What the Edge of
Your Seat Was Made For. Upon signing to the higher-profile label Visible
Noise (whose roster also included Bullet for My Valentine and
Lostprophets), they reissued the EP to a wider audience. Bring Me the
Horizon's full-length debut, Count Your Blessings, appeared in October
2006, with an American release following one year later courtesy of
Epitaph Records.
With their second album, Suicide Season, Bring Me the Horizon moved in a
more accessible direction and wound up cracking the U.K. album charts.
Not everyone approved of the new sound, though, and Ward left the band
in early 2009. His temporary replacement was Jona Weinhofen, formerly a
member of I Killed the Prom Queen. Weinhofen ended up staying with the
band as a permanent member, and the group returned to the studio with
producer Fredrik Nordström in March 2010 to begin work on a third album.
The resulting There Is a Hell, Believe Me I've Seen It, There Is a
Heaven, Let's Keep It a Secret was released during the latter half of
2010, several months after the band wrapped up its engagement with the
Warped Tour. A fourth album, the more atmospheric Sempiternal, arrived
on Epitaph in 2013. ~ Stewart Mason, Rovi
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