* En anglais uniquement
Based out of suburban Chicago, emo-inflected alt-rockers
Sleeping at Last formed in 1999 around the talents of guitarist/vocalist
Ryan O'Neal, drumming sibling
Chad O'Neal, and bass player
Dan Perdue. The trio began to build a local following, playing wherever possible and doing the occasional support gig. After sparking the interest of
Billy Corgan with their self-released full-length, Capture, the erstwhile
Smashing Pumpkin aided the group in securing a record deal with Interscope, who signed the band in late 2002.
Ghosts, their official debut, appeared in October 2003, followed by a national tour opening for
Switchfoot. The independently released
Keep No Score arrived in 2006, followed in 2009 by
Storyboards, the latter of which featured orchestral arrangements by
Van Dyke Parks.
By this time,
Sleeping at Last had become a solo vehicle for
Ryan O'Neal, who was reaping the rewards of a burgeoning composing career, landing songs on popular television shows like Grey's Anatomy, Bones, Criminal Minds, Believe, and So You Think You Can Dance; the
Sleeping at Last song "Turning Page" appeared in two versions of the original motion picture soundtrack for
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn as well.
O'Neal is also the composer for the Rainn Wilson-produced children's program Kid President: Declaration of Awesome on the HUB network. In 2011, under the
Sleeping at Last moniker,
O'Neal began releasing three songs a month for the ambitious, subscription-based Yearbook project. The long-form conceptual Atlas enterprise followed the same format in 2013, with its first installment, Atlas: Year One (30 Songs), reaching completion the following year. Commissioned by the ABC network (for Grey's Anatomy), Covers, Vol. 1 arrived that same year, while 2016 saw the release of the original motion picture soundtracks for the films Many Beautiful Things and The Spring. Covers, Vol. 2 was also released in 2016, and Atlas: Space arrived the following year. ~ James Christopher Monger