Deadsy

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Deadsy
Deadsy circa 2002
Deadsy circa 2002
Background information
Also known as
  • DÆDSY
OriginLos Angeles, California, U.S.
Genres
Years active
  • 1995–2007
  • 2017–present
Labels
SpinoffsOrgy
MembersElijah Blue Allman
Alec Puro
Carlton Bost
Craig Riker
Past membersJens Funke
Ashburn Miller
Renn Hawkey
Jay Gordon
Websitewww.deadsy.tv

Deadsy is an American rock band from Los Angeles.[8] Formed by Elijah Blue Allman in 1995, the band is characterized by analog keyboard and guitar synthesizers, Allman's baritone vocals, theatrical image and retro 1980s gothic new wave style.

The band was initially signed to Sire Records, but their self-titled debut album for the label was shelved shortly before its 1997 release. After attempting to re-work the album, the label dropped them in 1999. After signing to Jonathan Davis' Elementree Records and finally releasing the album, now known as Commencement, in 2002, Deadsy toured across the United States, most notably performing on the Family Values Tour.[9][10][11] After the release of Phantasmagore on Immortal Records/Elementree in 2006, the band went on hiatus in 2007.[12] In 2020, it was reported the band had plans for a 2021 release of its third album titled Subterfugue, ahead of its re-release of Phantasmagore.[13] The album has not yet been released. However, on February 8, 2024, the band would release their first single in 18 years, titled "(study for a portrait of) Napolean In Rags".[14]

History

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Early years and formation (1995–1996)

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Deadsy formed in the summer of 1995, when Elijah Blue Allman (son of Cher and Gregg Allman) started recording a handful of demos (including "Flowing Glower", "Dear" and a cover of Pavement's "Texas Never Whispers") with Alec Puro on drums and producer Josh Abraham. He later sent a Juno 106 keyboard to his longtime friend from prep school Renn Hawkey (Dr. Nner) as an invitation to join the band.[15] The three members evolved their sound in the studio and sought out a record deal out of, among other things, "adolescent necessity".[16][17]

Sire Records (1996–1999)

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While Deadsy shopped for its first record deal, Seymour Stein, President of Sire/Elektra Records, signed the band. Because they had no bass player at the time, Jay Gordon (of Orgy) was asked to play bass for their short self-titled album.[18] After the album was recorded and released for promotion, the band temporarily relocated to New York City. Deadsy performed an impromptu showcase at Coney Island in 1997. Deadsy's self-titled album was slated for a release in the Spring of 1997, but due to Sire Records separating from Elektra Records, Seymour Stein halted plans for the release, and the band continued recording with Abraham. They also contributed the song "Replicas" to the Gary Numan tribute album Random on Beggars Banquet Records. London Records absorbed Sire Records and folded the label, leaving Deadsy at Warner Bros.[19] They gave the band the option to leave with full ownership of their master recordings.[20][21]

In 1998, Craig Riker joined as the bassist full-time and the band would continue writing and recording songs (including "Commencement", "She Likes Big Words" and "Seagulls") for the album which would now be titled Commencement.[22][23]

Commencement (1999–2003)

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In April 2000, Deadsy signed to Elementree Records, a label owned by longtime supporter Jonathan Davis of Korn,[24] and by June 2000 the band secured the album's widespread distribution through DreamWorks Records.[25] Ashburn Miller replaced Riker on bass in January 2002. With help from friend and Limp Bizkit frontman Fred Durst, they filmed a music video for "The Key To Gramercy Park".[10][26] After multiple delays, Commencement was released on May 14, 2002, and the album debuted at number 100 of the Billboard 200 chart.[27] A second video was filmed for their second single, a cover of Sebadoh's "Brand New Love". They were invited to perform on the 2001 Family Values Tour, and the band toured throughout 2002 with bands including Korn and Mindless Self Indulgence.[28][29] The band recorded additional songs for the album with Jay Baumgardner and Josh Abraham (including a cover of Rush's "Tom Sawyer", "Winners" and the lead single "The Key to Gramercy Park").[30][31][32]

Phantasmagore (2003–2007)

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After DreamWorks Records was merged into Interscope in late 2003, Deadsy moved on from DreamWorks Records and signed with Immortal Records in 2006.[23][33] Phantasmagore was released on August 22, 2006, and featured the 5 band members on the album cover in black and white. The album debuted on the Billboard 200 chart[34] and Deadsy was asked back to appear on the Family Values Tour in 2006. Deadsy co-headlined a nationwide tour with the Deftones and also appeared at Lollapalooza that year.[35] In January 2007, Deadsy parted ways with bassist Ashburn Miller, and added Jens Funke to their tour line up.[36]

Hiatus (2007–2017)

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In February 2007, a short statement from Allman confirmed that the band was taking a hiatus. Carlton Bost then joined The Dreaming full-time. On April 16, 2007, a MySpace bulletin was posted with a statement by Alec Puro, who wrote, "As you all know we are going to be taking a short break from Deadsy so Elijah can make a solo record and I can continue scoring projects I wasn't able to do from the road". In early 2008, Elijah Blue and the Trapezoids was revealed as the name of Allman's solo project, though as of 2016, the project has yet to release anything more than three demos on its MySpace page.[37] He also was reported as following a career in visual art.[38]

In February 2010, Allman claimed, "Deadsy is sleeping at the moment".[12] Ashburn Miller and Carlton Bost joined Orgy's new line-up in September 2012.

Reformation (2018–2024)

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On November 16, 2018, Deadsy (Allman, Hawkey, Puro and Bost) played a semi-acoustic show alongside Queens of the Stone Age at San Quentin State Prison. This marked the band's first appearance since 2006.[39][40]

On July 14, 2020, Deadsy (now stylized as DÆDSY) announced on social media that their forthcoming album titled Subterfugue, was to be released in early 2021. They also announced that Phantasmagore would be remastered and returning to digital platforms and receiving a vinyl release.[41] Craig Riker rejoined the band on bass, and Phantasmagore was re-released on Deadsy's own Tran Kilo label on November 2.[42][43] The album was expected to receive a vinyl release, which never materialized after three years of pre-orders and waiting.[44] In April 2023, Hawkey announced on Instagram that he was no longer a member of Deadsy.[45] On January 9, 2024, Allman apologized to Deadsy's fanbase for the Phantasmagore vinyl reissue and took sole responsibility for the delays, saying that he had "dishonored you all, and dishonored myself by my inaction and silence".[44] On February 1, 2024, Deadsy's official Instagram page posted an announcement for their first release since 2006.[1] A single titled "(study for a portrait of) Napolean In Rags", which was released February 8, on Spotify.[46] Q said that the song title may be a reference to the Bob Dylan song "Like a Rolling Stone".[46]

Style and influences

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New Noise Magazine described Deadsy as being part of a short-lived movement in rock music which the magazine called "Undercore", a synthesis of glam, goth and synth-rock with science fiction.[47] Additionally, Deadsy has also been categorized as electronic rock,[1][48] gothic rock,[1][2][6][48] gothic metal,[3][49] industrial rock,[4][5] art rock,[5] doom metal,[6] new wave[6] and nu metal.[7]

Metro defined Deadsy by an "authentic retro sound"[6] that features analog keyboard synthesizer[47] playing described as "dramatic",[6] as well as "bristling synth guitars."[6] The Dallas Observer said that the band "turns early-'80s synth-pop into a gory prep-school horror show".[48] AllMusic described Deadsy as "bringing the flair of prog rock to the crushing grind of '90s metal and industrial".[2] The band's music incorporates "metallic glam doom and even heavy prog".[47] Elijah Blue Allman sings in a baritone vocal style[47] that has been described as "seductive" and "full of strength and sexy masculinity".[6] Deadsy was influenced by Bauhaus, Type O Negative, Gary Numan and David Bowie, as well non-musical influences: "NES-era futurism, B-movie pulp (This Island Earth), and aristocratic gloom".[47]

The band was once described as a "monied prep school secret society crossed with [a] teenage fascist group."[7] Each band member represents one element or "entity" that drives human society. Each entity is also represented by their own color and unique appearance. Blue represented International Klein Blue and academia, Puro represented green and leisure, Hawkey represented yellow and science and medicine, Bost represented grey and war, and Riker represented red and horror.[47] The band members also carry a white plastic chain accessory.[50] Blue and Hawkey, former students at Maine's Hyde School, stated being "fascinated by Skull and Bones and other secret societies and all that stuff that people are very curious about that create an air of mystique". Blue continued by saying: "I often call this band 'a perversion of privilege'."[51] The band's lyrics derive "symbolism and metaphor from the pages of literature and history, with repeated references to Urantia".[6]

Several bands have cited Deadsy as influential, including Cities Aviv,[52] Zetra,[53] and Vision Eternel.[54]

Members

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Current members

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  • Elijah Blue Allman – lead vocals, rhythm guitar, programming (1995–2007, 2017–present)
  • Alec Puro – drums, programming (1995–2007, 2017–present)
  • Carlton Bost – lead guitar, Z-Tar (1999–2007, 2017–present)
  • Craig Riker – bass (1998–2002, 2020–present)

Former members

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  • Andy Trench – bass (1997)
  • Jay Gordon – bass (1997–1999)
  • Ashburn Miller – bass (2002–2007)
  • Jens Funke – bass (2007)
  • Renn Hawkey – keyboards, synthesizer (1995–2007, 2017–2023)

Timeline <timeline> ImageSize = width:800 height:auto barincrement:18 PlotArea = left:100 bottom:80 top:0 right:10 Alignbars = justify DateFormat = mm/dd/yyyy Period = from:01/01/1995 till:05/26/2026 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal format:yyyy

Colors =

 id:vocals      value:red          legend:Lead_vocals,_rhythm_guitar,_programming
 id:guitar      value:green        legend:Lead_guitar,_Z-Tar
 id:bass        value:blue         legend:Bass
 id:keys        value:purple       legend:Keyboards,_synthesizer
 id:drums       value:orange       legend:Drums,_programming
 id:studio      value:black        legend:Studio_album
 id:bars    value:gray(0.95)

BackgroundColors = bars:bars

Legend = orientation:vertical position:bottom columns:3 ScaleMajor = increment:2 start:1995 ScaleMinor = increment:1 start:1996

LineData =

layer:back
color:studio
at:02/25/1997
at:05/14/2002
at:08/22/2006

BarData =

bar:Elijah   text:"Elijah Blue Allman"
bar:Carlton  text:"Carlton Bost"
bar:Andy     text:"Andy Trench"
bar:Jay      text:"Jay Gordon"
bar:Craig    text:"Craig Riker"
bar:Ashburn  text:"Ashburn Miller"
bar:Jens     text:"Jens Funke"
bar:Renn     text:"Renn Hawkey"
bar:Alec     text:"Alec Puro"

PlotData=

width:11 textcolor:black align:left anchor:from shift:(10,-4)
bar:Elijah   from:01/01/1995 till:04/16/2007  color:vocals
bar:Elijah   from:01/01/1995 till:01/01/1999  color:guitar width:3
bar:Elijah   from:01/01/1995 till:01/01/1997  color:bass width:7
bar:Elijah   from:11/16/2018 till:end         color:vocals
bar:Carlton  from:01/01/1999 till:04/16/2007  color:guitar
bar:Carlton  from:11/16/2018 till:end         color:guitar
bar:Andy     from:01/01/1997 till:01/20/1997  color:bass
bar:Jay      from:01/20/1997 till:03/01/1999  color:bass
bar:Craig    from:03/01/1999 till:01/20/2002  color:bass
bar:Ashburn  from:01/20/2002 till:01/20/2007  color:bass
bar:Jens     from:01/20/2007 till:04/16/2007  color:bass
bar:Craig    from:07/20/2020 till:end         color:bass
bar:Renn     from:01/01/1995 till:04/16/2007  color:keys
bar:Renn     from:11/16/2018 till:04/18/2023         color:keys
bar:Alec     from:01/01/1995 till:04/16/2007  color:drums
bar:Alec     from:11/16/2018 till:end         color:drums
</timeline>

Discography

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Studio albums

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List of studio albums, with selected chart positions
Title Album details Peak chart positions
US
[55]
US
Ind.

[56]
Deadsy
  • Unreleased
  • Label: Sire, WitcHouse
  • Formats: CD
Commencement
  • Released: May 14, 2002
  • Label: Elementree, DreamWorks
  • Formats: CD
100
Phantasmagore
  • Released: August 22, 2006
  • Label: Elementree, Immortal
  • Formats: CD, LP
176 17
Subterfugue
  • Released: TBA
  • Label: Tran Kilo
  • Formats: TBA
TBA
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory.

Singles

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List of singles, showing year released and album name
Title Year Album
"The Elements"[57] 1997 Deadsy
"The Key to Gramercy Park" / "Mansion World"[A] 2001 Commencement
"Brand New Love"[58] 2002
"Friends" 2006 Non-album single
"(study for a portrait of) Napolean In Rags" 2024 Subterfugue

Extras

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  • "Asura" (demo clip) (1:24)
  • "Asura" (demo) (3:27)
  • "Avalon" (demo) (4:49) cover song originally by Roxy Music. Track originally appeared on an early cassette demo but was not in broad circulation.
  • "Babes In Abyss" (demo) (3:23)
  • "Better Than You Know" (demo clip) (1:58)
  • "Better Than You Know" (unmastered) (6:14)
  • "Book of Black Dreams" (demo clip) (1:03)
  • "Brand New Love" (radio mix) (3:42)
  • "Carrying Over" (live) (4:24) from Family Values Tour compilation 2006
  • "Colossus" (demo) (4:25) featuring Aimee Echo made available to participants of a MySpace promotional effort
  • "Dear" (demo) (6:47)
  • "Do You Want It All?" (unreleased) (0:00) Unreleased Phantasmagore song, it is known to have been played once at the Roxy in 2004
  • "Dreamcrusher" (demo clip) (1:13)
  • "Fox on the Run" (Sweet cover) (3:24), originally to be released on Commencement (it's on the 1999 promo of the album), later released on the Whatever It Takes soundtrack
  • "Friends" (3:58) available for purchase through iTunes
  • "Girl" (live) (2:32) cover song originally by T.Rex, it is known to have been played at Vintage Vinyl Records in 2006
  • "Just Like Heaven" (demo) (6:02) cover song originally by The Cure
  • "The Thing That Should Not Be" (unreleased) (0:00) cover song originally by Metallica, it is known to have been played once at the Whisky A Go Go in 2001
  • "The Key to Gramercy Park" (demo) (3:11)
  • "The Key to Gramercy Park" (Instrumental) (3:36)
  • "Mansion World" (Deepsky remix) (7:41)
  • "My Only Friend" (3:26) cover song originally from The Magnetic Fields for Winter Passing soundtrack
  • "Replicas" (5:12) was featured on a Gary Numan tribute album in 1997
  • "Sands of Time" (demo clip) (1:17) demo clip for a track eventually known as "Time"
  • "Sleeping Angel" (unreleased) (0:00) Stevie Nicks cover song that appeared on the first demo tape, the song has yet to publicly surface
  • "Strength of Mind" (demo) (3:27) was made available by Immortal Records by mistake. Several purchases were made before it was quickly taken down
  • "Texas Never Whispers" (3:43) cover song by the band Pavement
  • "Tom Sawyer" (live) (4:11) from Family Values Tour compilation 2001

Music videos

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List of music videos, showing year released and director
Title Year Director(s)
"She Likes Big Words" 2001
"The Key to Gramercy Park" 2002 Fred Durst[10]
"Brand New Love" Deadsy Legions
"Babes in Abyss" 2005
"Razor Love" 2006

Notes

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  • A ^ For its original 2001 release in the United States, "The Key to Gramercy Park" was released as a double A-side single with "Mansion World".[59] "The Key to Gramercy Park" was re-released in 2002.[60]

References

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