Originally forming as
Pilate in the early 2000s, the Toronto-based rock quartet
Pilot Speed changed their name to such in mid-2006 to avoid possible lawsuits as their music spread internationally from their native Canada, especially due to the "litigious nature of the United States" (as taken from a message on the band's website).
Pilate were born in 2000 after vocalist and New Zealand native Todd Clark left the music program at the University of Western Ontario where he'd been studying and placed an ad online for potential bandmates. Bassist
Ruby Bumrah, a graduate of the Ontario College of Art and Design, answered the call, bringing with him fellow alums
Chris Greenough (guitar) and
Bill Keeley (drums). Citing influences like
Crowded House,
Radiohead, and
U2 for
Pilate's especially sweeping brand of melodic rock -- not so dissimilar to acts like
Keane,
Coldplay, and
Snow Patrol -- they released the six-song EP For All That's Given, Wasted in the summer of 2001. It quickly sold out its initial pressing and established the guys as players in the Canadian music scene.
They then landed opening slots on shows for
Broken Social Scene,
DFA 1979, and
Hot Hot Heat, and received the honor of Best Unsigned Band at the 2002 North by Northeast music conference (Canada's version of SXSW in the U.S.). Soon after,
Pilate inked a deal with indie MapleMusic Recordings, which then released their full-length debut,
Caught by the Window, in 2003 (later released in the U.S. in March 2006). The album produced two hits on national radio and MuchMusic, as the guys toured North America, Australia, and Japan. Their follow-up, Sell Control for Life's Speed, appeared back at home in mid-2006, after which the band changed its name to
Pilot Speed. The quartet had signed with Wind-Up earlier that same year following the completion of its third album overall (and first as
Pilot Speed),
Into the West; the label released the record that September. ~ Corey Apar