Melodic metalcore outfit
Misery Signals blend math rock tropes like tricky time-signature shifts and knotty guitar parts with the raw aggression of post-hardcore and the seismic world-building of post-rock, creating a sound with more emotional heft than the former yet that is also less monochromatic than the latter. Since debuting in 2004 with the
Devin Townsend-produced
Of Malice and the Magnum Heart, the band have issued a string of versatile and acclaimed long-players like
Controller (2008) and Ultraviolet (2020) that have helped establish them as one of the more original and influential acts of the genre.
Misery Signals formed in Wisconsin in 2003, featuring members of a number of regional hardcore and emo bands. Singer Jesse Zaraska had the highest profile, having worked with
7 Angels 7 Plagues, and the Canadian hardcore act Compromise, who had broken up in 2002 following the death of two of their members in a car accident. Guitarist Jeff Aust had been in
Hamartia, while guitarist
Ryan Morgan, bassist
Kyle Johnson, and drummer Branden Morgan (
Ryan's brother) filled out the lineup. Following the band's self-titled six-track EP, released in 2003, Aust was replaced by new guitarist
Stuart Ross. The revised lineup signed with the New Jersey indie Ferret Records and released the
Townsend-produced
Of Malice and the Magnum Heart in June 2004.
After a lengthy tour in support of their debut full-length, Zaraska chose to leave the group to return to his hometown of Edmonton, Alberta, and join the acoustic post-rock band Sleeping Girl with other former Compromise members. In the post-millennial equivalent of those bands who used MTV to advertise for new members back in the '80s, the remaining members of
Misery Signals posted an instrumental song on their social media site, inviting fans to send in their lyrics and vocals. New singer
Karl Schubach won the challenge and joined the band. He made his studio debut on the group's 2006 sophomore effort,
Mirrors. Working once again with
Devin Townsend behind the board, the group released
Controller two years later, which became their most successful outing to date.
The following year, after touring nonstop in support of the LP,
Misery Signals elected to go on hiatus, allowing the bandmembers some space to explore other musical pursuits.
Schubach started a one-man D.I.Y. project under the moniker Solace, while
Ryan Morgan and
Kyle Johnson teamed up with members of
Fall Out Boy for the hardcore punk project Burning Empires, and Branden Morgan and
Stuart Ross joined members of
Comeback Kid in the punk/post-hardcore band
Lowtalker. In 2010,
Ross and
Johnson officially put
Misery Signals in the rearview mirror, with the former taking the frontman position with Vancouver pop-punkers Living with Lions.
The group re-emerged in 2011 with a cover of
Pink Floyd's "Us and Them," which appeared on the soundtrack for the video game Homefront. They hit the road with a new lineup but reconvened most of the original crew (
Schubach,
Johnson, the Morgan brothers, and new guitarist Greg Thomas) for their fourth studio effort,
Absent Light, which was released in 2013.
Schubach parted ways with the band a few years later, making room for the return of original vocalist Jesse Zaraska, who along with
Stu Ross appeared on
Misery Signals' fifth long-player, Ultraviolet. ~ James Christopher Monger & Stewart Mason