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Tackling issues of friendship, loss, remorse, and ultimately hope, These Green Eyes evoke a far more visceral variety of emotion on their breakthrough disc Relapse To Recovery, boiling down five years of trials and tribulations as a unit, culminating with the tragic and unexpected loss of a close band friend to suicide.
The band came together some five years ago, when guitarist Greg Mauro and bassist Zach Braz met in high school and decided to try making music together. After a revolving door of members, the unit coalesced some time later, with the exception of a vocalist. Enter Colin Cunningham, the brother of a friend of the band. Accepting the invitation to play a single show (at which he made up lyrics on stage), he continued showing up for practice and the band stopped looking for a singer.
Once their lineup solidified, the band wrote and recorded a six-song demo and pursued a bona fide recording session with producer John Naclerio (Brand New, My Chemical Romance, Senses Fail). With four professionally recorded songs in hand, the band was passed up by the local labels they approached. Undaunted, they went on tour to disseminate the EP. The band's friend Pete Wasilewski (from Less Than Jake) felt the record deserved a wider audience and helped them get posted on the main page of PureVolume, where just one year after fomenting their lineup they were the second most listened to artist after Fall Out Boy.
Propelled by the exposure, more fans began showing up at shows in remote areas, fueling the boys to write and record more material for a full-length release. After six months on the road, they returned to the studio with Naclerio to record seven additional tracks, completing what would become their debut, House of Glass.
Throughout 2006, These Green Eyes became road warriors, sharing bills across the country with Fall Out Boy, New Found Glory, The Academy Is, The Higher, Less Than Jake, Hidden In Plain View, Silverstein and Gym Class Heroes.
In 2007, the band recorded two new sets of demos, one with old partner John Naclerio, and one with new friend Rob Freeman (formerly of Hidden In Plain View). The new material cemented a deal with newly-christened indie label Blackledge Music.
With Blackledge now on board, These Green Eyes secured recording time with uber-producer Brian McTernan (Thrice, Circa Survive, Senses Fail, The Explosion, Hot Water Music) at his Salad Days compound in Baltimore in the early spring of 2008.
The eleven songs that came out these sessions are driving; melodic anthems which cohere as the triumphant record, Relapse To Recovery.
Varying from a world-weary worldview (opener "At The End") to high octane vendettas (the scream-along chorus of "Sucker Punch") to ruminations on the loss of friendship (the wistful closer "Time Of Our Lives"), These Green Eyes have channeled their punk, post-hardcore, and arena rock influences into an anthemic wall of sound that's all their own.
Last night I was driving with Bree, I think it was our first time hanging out since the last show. She asked if I had TGE in my cd player, obviously I did, so we listened to it. I always clap during Self Inflicted when I drive, but as soon as I let go of the wheel I almost hit a rat or something. It ran out in front of my car from the woods; I almost had a heart attack. It was really scary and I was screaming, but after she got out of the car and confirmed I hadn't hit it, it was prob the funniest thing ever.