Ir ao conteúdo
Novo Economize até 20% em um pacote
mix-form

Mix Aumentada

Adicionar Nota

Biografia

The Quiet Science has always used music as a vehicle for their stories. Stories of loss and hopelessness,of redemption and renewal. But where do those stories end? The stories were always meant to bring the listener to this very place. A place of worship. That's why, for The Quiet Science, their third full-length album was a natural progression from “Dark Words on Dark Wings”. Where DWODW was the dark of night, "The Rekindling of the Stars" is the dawn. The main theme of the third album is restoration.

“Rekindling is a title that has different meanings for us,” says Nathan Walter, frontman for The Space Coast electro rock trio. “In one sense, I imagine that when you look at creation and understand the creator that made us made the stars, the stars become more beautiful as does the world around us. In another sense, I imagine that we are the stars and when we find the hope that we have in Him, we become brighter - that we can shine out into the dark for the world to see. We wanted to write a worship album that can be deeply personal for the individual but that can also be sung as a community.”

The Quiet Science has toured the country, sharing the road with such artists as Switchfoot, Showbread, Abandon Kansas, Sleeping At Last, Cool Hand Luke, Future of Forestry, Remedy Drive, and The City Harmonic. The Quiet Science’s first full length album, With/Without, received much attention on radio, was featured in Relevant Magazine and on E!’s Married to Rock and was chosen by several online music sites as one of the top indie albums of the year. Dark Words on Dark Wings built on the success of With/Without and was featured in Alternative Press, HM Magazine, and Substream Magazine. They were featured at the HM Magazine stage at SXSW, and their music video for “A Dying Breed” charted on RadioU.

With influences ranging from U2, Radiohead, and Depeche Mode, the band’s music lands somewhere between Chvrches and Hillsong United but with a distinctive sound that can only be called The Quiet Science.

Voltar ao topo