Artist's albums
Behind The Devil's Back
2015 · album
Behind The Devil's Back
2015 · single
Overdrive
2015 · single
Sink With The Snakes
2015 · single
Sharpe Tongue
2015 · single
Animal
2015 · single
Never Change
2009 · single
Be Human
2009 · album
Mercury Summer
2009 · single
The English Way
2008 · single
Alternate Endings
2008 · album
I Am The Message
2008 · single
I Am The Message / Waitin' For A Superman
2008 · single
Floods
2008 · single
Floods (Instrumental)
2008 · single
Floods (Radio Mix)
2008 · single
Deathcar
2007 · single
One Day Son, This Will All Be Yours
2007 · album
We Apologise For Nothing
2007 · single
Grand Unification
2006 · album
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Biography
London-based post-hardcore outfit Fightstar came to life in the mid-2000s when guitarist/vocalist Charlie Simpson was actually still a member of the U.K. pop trio Busted. Itching to tap more fully into his rock side, a random jam at a party soon turned into Simpson writing and playing songs on the side with guitarist Al Westaway and drummer Omar Abdid. Realizing they needed a bass player to enter the studio, a schoolmate of Westaway's, Dan Haigh, soon joined Fightstar's ranks. Rehearsing and playing as often as Simpson's Busted schedule would allow, things quickly got more serious and it became apparent that a decision regarding the band's future had to be made. Simpson ultimately left Busted -- the group officially called it quits in early 2005 -- and he looked eagerly ahead to life with Fightstar. The guys began making a name for themselves around England, both playing the Reading and Leeds Festival and releasing their Island debut EP, They Liked You Better When You Were Dead, in summer 2005. Signing with U.S.-based indie Deep Elm in September, the label re-released their EP stateside the following April as their full-length, Grand Unification, dropped back at home. The album, produced by Colin Richardson (Funeral for a Friend, Machine Head), expanded on their prior effort while exploring darker themes. Fightstar supported Funeral for a Friend that spring and early summer in Australia and the U.K. A slot at the 2006 Download Festival followed in June, as the guys raised some controversy when their video for the single "Paint Your Target" got banned in the U.K. and U.S. for depicting schoolchildren engaged in a fake war. Regardless, Fightstar pressed on and signed to Trustkill Records in early 2007 with plans to release Grand Unification in North America that spring. ~ Corey Apar, Rovi