* En anglais uniquement
A long-running American metalcore outfit, Boston's
Bury Your Dead emerged in 2003 with
You Had Me at Hello, which introduced a brutalist take on the genre, pairing Gatling gun riffs, seismic rhythms, and punishing deathcore vocals. Myriad lineup changes aided in the evolution of the group's sound, with 2009's
It's Nothing Personal adding big hooky choruses to the equation. The band returned to their hardcore roots on 2011's hard-hitting
Mosh 'N Roll, before going on a long studio hiatus that ended with the release of the 5-track EP We Are Bury Your Dead in 2019.
Growing tired of their metalcore band,
Hamartia, guitarist Slim (aka Brendan MacDonald) and drummer
Mark Castillo began
Bury Your Dead as a side project in late 2001. Drawing influence from
Sevendust and
Crowbar, the band was used as a vehicle for the pair to focus more on mosh-worthy hardcore rather than the technical nature of
Hamartia. Recruiting bassist
Rich Casey (ex-Groundzero) and vocalist Joe Krewko, the Massachusetts group -- priding itself on blending ferocity with fun -- soon became a full-time gig as the guys began playing around New England. The brutal intensity and destructive energy of
Bury Your Dead's live show started gaining them attention in various East Coast hardcore scenes, eventually coming to the attention of Alveran/Eulogy Recordings. Their debut,
You Had Me at Hello, was issued in March 2003 on Germany-based Alveran, but the band imploded about a month prior to the album's release. It was still issued, though the guys went their separate ways:
Castillo went to play with North Carolina's
Between the Buried and Me;
Casey turned to screen-printing, and Slim played with
Blood Has Been Shed.
A few months later, however,
Casey randomly got in touch with Slim to see about getting the band back together. Though they were the only two to initially sign back on, some touring members got together and the band started playing again. Down in Florida at the Gainesville Fest, the guys ran into
Castillo (who was on tour with
BTBAM) and asked him to rejoin, which he did. The rest of
Bury Your Dead was eventually rounded out by vocalist
Mat Bruso and second guitarist Eric Ellis (ex-
Reflux). Re-formed and re-energized, the quintet toured briefly, including stints at 2002's Hellfest and Metalfest. Following an especially intense Hellfest set, Chicago hardcore powerhouse Victory Records approached them; the label formally announced the band joining their roster in April 2004.
Bury Your Dead entered the studio that June with
Matthew Ellard (
Converge,
BTBAM) to begin recording their label debut. The resulting
Cover Your Tracks, whose song titles all weirdly boasted the names of Tom Cruise movies, surfaced in October. Eulogy reissued the band's debut in May 2005, making it widely available in the U.S. for the first time. The CD/DVD
Alive followed in July, while the band spent the summer on the second stage at Ozzfest. Aaron Patrick (aka Bubble) replaced
Casey on bass. Produced by
Jason Suecof (
Trivium,
God Forbid),
Bury Your Dead's most focused effort to date -- entitled
Beauty and the Breakdown (all song titles this time were fairy tale allusions) -- appeared in July 2006. Around the same time, the quintet could be found on artist Derek Hess' nationwide Strhess Tour, alongside acts like
Shadows Fall,
Poison the Well, and
Throwdown.
Bruso left the band in the early days of 2007, forcing
Bury Your Dead to drop off a European tour with
Killswitch Engage to search for his replacement, eventually found in ex-
I Killed the Prom Queen vocalist
Michael Crafter. It was back to the drawing board a few months later, however, when
Crafter made his exit to return to his native Australia. After
Cassius lead vocalist
Myke Terry was brought in as a replacement,
Bury Your Dead released a self-titled album in March 2008, followed by the decidedly more melody-driven
It's Nothing Personal in 2009.
Terry and
Castillo both left the band (though the latter had recorded his drum parts for the forthcoming album
Mosh 'N Roll), and the group signed to Mediaskare Records.
Bruso returned as vocalist, and
Castillo was replaced by drummer
Dustin Schoenhofer, formerly of
Walls of Jericho.
Mosh 'N Roll, which marked a return to the pugilist hardcore of the band's early days, appeared in the summer of 2011. In early 2019, after a long hiatus that saw multiple lineup shifts, the band announced that they had inked a deal with Stay Sick Recordings. Their first outing for the label, a five-track EP titled We Are Bury Your Dead, arrived later that year. ~ Corey Apar