Dead Poetic is an American
rock band formed in
Dayton, Ohio in 1997. Their most recent lineup consisted of vocalist
Brandon Rike, guitarist Zach Miles, and drummer
Jesse Sprinkle
Poor Old Lu was a pioneering Christian alternative rock band based in the American Northwest. The band experimented with a variety of sounds and genres, particularly grunge, funk and psychedelic rock. The band consisted of Scott Hunter (vocals), ...
. They released three albums and a
greatest hits album, ''
The Finest'', on
Tooth & Nail Records. The band lapsed into inactivity in 2007 due to internal strife and inability to tour, though Rike has stated that the band plans to record a fourth album.
Band history
Formation
Dead Poetic was first formed when members Zach Miles, Brandon Rike, and Chad Shellabarger were at the age of 13. Josh Shellabarger was then 15. The band formed in their local Church, and each taught themselves. Their first show was at the three teenagers' Middle School's annual "Talent Show." The band went by the name MindSet, before changing it to Ded Poetic. Later they changed the name to Dead Poetic.
1997–2002
The band first garnered attention in the underground music scene following the release of their first full-length record ''
Four Wall Blackmail
''Four Wall Blackmail'' is Dead Poetic's debut full-length album, released in 2002 through Solid State Records.
Track listing
Writing credits
All music written by Dead Poetic.
All lyrics written by Brandon Rike
;Except
*"Bliss Tearing Eyes" â ...
'', which was released by Tooth & Nail subsidiary
Solid State Records, and single "August Winterman." Their second release, 2004's ''
New Medicines
''New Medicines'' is the second album by Dead Poetic. Released April 6, 2004 through Solid State Records and Tooth & Nail Records. On June 28, 2004 it was released in the UK by Golf Records and Plastic Head Distribution.
Track listing
Writing ...
'', heightened the band's profile considerably, however. Produced by
Aaron Sprinkle (
Emery,
Acceptance
Acceptance in human psychology is a person's assent to the reality of a situation, recognizing a process or condition (often a negative or uncomfortable situation) without attempting to change it or protest it. The concept is close in meaning to ...
), the album's sales were buoyed by the title track, which became a hit on
MTV2
MTV2 (formerly M2) is an American pay television Cable television, channel owned by the Paramount Media Networks division of Paramount Global.
The channel launched initially as an all-music video service, once the original MTV had started to sh ...
and
Fuse TV. On these first two albums, music critics had a hard time classifying the band's music: genres from
emo to
post-hardcore
Post-hardcore is a punk rock music genre that maintains the aggression and intensity of hardcore punk but emphasizes a greater degree of creative expression. It was initially inspired by post-punk and noise rock. Like post-punk, the term has been ...
to
alternative rock were all tossed around with little consensus.
2002–Mid 2004
After the release of ''New Medicines'', Dead Poetic went on tour in support of
Demon Hunter in the fall of 2004 and essentially imploded shortly thereafter. Personal disagreements within the band caused bassist Chad Shellabarger, drummer Josh Shellabarger, and guitarist Todd Osborn to all depart the band, and Dead Poetic appeared to be a thing of the past. But remaining members Brandon Rike (vocals) and Zach Miles (guitar) began playing with accomplished drummer
Jesse Sprinkle
Poor Old Lu was a pioneering Christian alternative rock band based in the American Northwest. The band experimented with a variety of sounds and genres, particularly grunge, funk and psychedelic rock. The band consisted of Scott Hunter (vocals), ...
(formerly of
Poor Old Lu and Demon Hunter; also the brother of producer
Aaron Sprinkle) and their passion for music reignited.
Beloved alums Dusty Redmon (guitar) and John Brehm (bass) came on board to round out the new, revamped version of Dead Poetic.
2004–Late 2006
For their third album, ''Vices'', the band once again enlisted Aaron Sprinkle to produce the album, but this time, the band eschewed the screaming that had been one of the hallmarks of their earlier style. In an interview with ''
CCM Magazine'', Rike said, "There is no way I could get myself to scream on a song anymore. I'm just past it.".
[ Thompson, John J. "A New Lease on Life", ''CCM Magazine'', volume 29, Issue 1, July 2006, p.11.] Though originally scheduled for a July 18 release, the release date for ''Vices'' was pushed back to October 31, with "Narcotic" chosen as the lead single. Dead Poetic was scheduled to tour with
The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus in fall 2007, but backed out of those dates in mid-October 2006.
On November 25, 2006, Absolutepunk.net reported that Brandon Rike had left Dead Poetic and the remaining members had decided not to continue with the band. Though the band initially posted a message on their
MySpace page in December 2006 stating they were still active, most fans eventually assumed the band had indeed broken up because of the band's noticeable lack of touring. Guitarist
Dusty Redmon confirmed the band's disbanding on
absolutepunk.net
''AbsolutePunk'' was a website, online community, and alternative music news source founded by Jason Tate (the most recent CEO). The website mainly focused on artists who are relatively unknown to mainstream audiences, but it was known to fea ...
in September 2007: "When Brandon left the band back in October (before "Vices" came out), a lot of big stuff was going on. We had great tour plans, a batch of new songs we were in to, and just kind of a new sense of freshness about the band. Brandon had been sort of "over it" for a long time, and just sort of picked a bad time to bail. He loves doing design, and being hang-out-at-home-type of husband, which is cool. I kind of called "NOT IT" when it came to making an announcement, but I guess so did everyone else. T&N put a lot of initial money into the record, only to see the band fall apart before the release, causing them to basically drop the entire promotion campaign. Sorry to those who were led on by thinking we were still active. Jesse is recording, Brandon is designing, John is tattooing, Zach just had a new baby, and I'm playing in
The Almost."
December 2006–2015
Dead Poetic has stated that they plan to continue writing music, and to fulfill their existing contract with Tooth & Nail Records; such plans have gone unfulfilled, however. On October 30, 2007, Jesse Sprinkle posted a MySpace bulletin reiterating that the band was still indeed together. "Contrary to popular opinion and the mighty Wikipedia, Dead Poetic has not broken up. We are still a band indeed....we figured we'd post it to the public....we assure you that Dead Poetic is alive." He went on to say that the band's label, Tooth and Nail, would be releasing a "Best Of" album for Dead Poetic in the near future, and that the band hopes to start writing songs for a new record very soon. The "Best Of" album was since released, but despite all such claims of producing new music, the band has remained inactive since.
On November 16, 2007, Brandon Rike posted a blog on
MySpace that contained a long description, written by Brandon Rike himself, on why it's been so hard to keep the band together. In the blog, Rike focused on issues such as his marriage,
Dusty Redmon playing for
The Almost, tours that they missed, among other things. He also mentioned that their best-of album, ''
The Finest'' hits stores on November 20, 2007. In this blog, Rike stated that Miles, Sprinkle, and himself had plans to record a new album after ''The Finest'' without any plans of going on tour. As of November 16, 2007, this announcement could be viewed at www.deadpoetic.com underneath the banner which reads "DEAD POETIC IS NOT DEAD."
As of October 20, 2008, Dead Poetic had been removed from the artists list on the official website of Tooth & Nail Records. Inside the cover of their newest album ''The Finest'', Brandon Rike made a statement that the band would no longer be touring so he could stay home with his wife, and that the band was planning on releasing one more album. Despite these claims, the band has not released any public statements since 2008 and remained inactive. As of April 2009, the Dead Poetic website had been taken down and redirected to the band's MySpace page.
In a 2015 podcast, Brandon Rike confirmed that Dead Poetic has no intentions to reform or release any new music at this time.
Band members
;Current Members
*
Brandon Rike - lead vocalist (1997-present)
*Zach Miles - lead guitar / backing vocals (1997-present)
*
Jesse Sprinkle
Poor Old Lu was a pioneering Christian alternative rock band based in the American Northwest. The band experimented with a variety of sounds and genres, particularly grunge, funk and psychedelic rock. The band consisted of Scott Hunter (vocals), ...
- drums (former drummer of
Poor Old Lu,
Demon Hunter, Serene UK), various others. (2004-present)
;Former
*
Dusty Redmon - guitar (2005-2006) (Left to join
the Almost)
*John Brehm - bass guitar (2005-2006)
*Chad Shellabarger - bass guitar (1997-Fall 2004)
*Josh Shellabarger - drums (1997-Fall 2004)
*Todd Osborn - guitar (2001-Fall 2004)
;Timeline
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Discography
*''Invasion EP'' (1999) - Independent
*''Song EP'' (2001) - Independent
*''
Four Wall Blackmail
''Four Wall Blackmail'' is Dead Poetic's debut full-length album, released in 2002 through Solid State Records.
Track listing
Writing credits
All music written by Dead Poetic.
All lyrics written by Brandon Rike
;Except
*"Bliss Tearing Eyes" â ...
'' (2002) -
Solid State Records
*''
New Medicines
''New Medicines'' is the second album by Dead Poetic. Released April 6, 2004 through Solid State Records and Tooth & Nail Records. On June 28, 2004 it was released in the UK by Golf Records and Plastic Head Distribution.
Track listing
Writing ...
'' (2004) -
Solid State Records/
Tooth and Nail Records
*''
Vices'' (2006) -
Tooth and Nail Records
*''
The Finest Compilation'' (2007) -
Tooth and Nail Records
Music videos
* ''August Winterman'' ''(Four Wall Blackmail)'' -2002
* ''New Medicines'' ''(New Medicines)'' -2004
* ''Narcotic'' ''(Vices)'' -2006
References
External links
What to Do About YOUR LOVE FOR MUSIC by Brandon Rike
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dead Poetic
Alternative rock groups from Ohio
Christian rock groups from Ohio
Tooth & Nail Records artists
American post-hardcore musical groups
Musical groups established in 1997
Musical groups disestablished in 2007
Musical groups from Dayton, Ohio
Solid State Records artists