Death From Above 1979
Quick summary:
Why they split:
My two cents:
Incredibly sad to see this band go. I had only heard about them maybe a few months after the release of their album so I missed a shot to see them live. Thoroughly bums me out to know they aren't around as a group anymore. Probably some of the most kinetic and fuckable (Sexy Results for reference) dance / punk music in a long time.
Choice song / video clip: DFA1979 playing on Late Night w/ Conan O'Brien
Albums:
You're a Woman, I'm a Machine
Romance Bloody Romance (Remixes Album)
Head's Up (First EP)
Isis
Quick Summary:
Why they split:
My two cents:
I got into this band at around Panopticon. My best friend turned me onto them and it was just engrossing how full, melodic, beautiful and otherworldly this band pushed their music. If there were ever a metal band that could speak to even non-metal fans this would be it. Their albums suck you in and just wash over you. Highly recommended to listen to while stoned as well
, but you definitely don't need to be to enjoy their work.
Choice song / video clip: Ghost Key from the album Wavering Radiant
Albums:
Wavering Radiant
Oceanic
Panopticon
In The Absence of Truth
Red Sea (EP)
At The Drive-In
Quick Summary:
Why they split:
Possible reunion squashed:
My two cents:
Vaya was one of the greatest fucking things I have ever heard in my life. So at that point when I first started listening to the band they completely changed my idea of where I could take my own music and where things would be going. It only got better and more progressive from there. Perhaps the de-facto angst, kicking and screaming band of my times. I must have worn out Relationship of Command. That poor cd didn't know what happened to it.
Choice song / video clip: One Armed Scissor, probably the best (youtube) example of how crazy this band was.
Albums:
Relationship of Command
In Casino Out
Vaya (EP)
Acrobatic Tenement
This Station is not Operational (7 unreleased tracks/remixes)
I know there are a lot more bands you guys want to talk about, so spill 'em. There's one I left off purposefully to see who would be the first one to post it. A band extremely near and dear to my heart.

Quick summary:
Death from Above 1979 members were Jesse F. Keeler on bass, synths, backing vocals and Sebastien Grainger on vocals, drums. Without the help of a lead guitarist they played loud, heavy metal influenced, dance-punk on a bass and drums combination. They were signed to Last Gang Records in Canada, Vice Recordings in the U.S. and 679 Recordings in the UK.
On 4 August 2006 Keeler, via the band's official website, announced the duo's split.
Why they split:
I know its been forever since I wrote anything on here. I'm sure by now most of you assume the band isn't happening anymore since there are no shows, no work on a new album, etc. well. I wanted to let you know that your assumptions are correct. We decided to stop doing the band... Actually we decided that almost a year ago. We finished off our scheduled tour dates because there were good people working for us who relied on us to make a living and buy Christmas presents and pay rent etc. We couldn't just cancel everything and leave them out to dry... Plus I think we wanted to see if we would reconsider after being out on the road. Our label was really hoping that we would change our minds, so they asked us to keep quiet about the decision for at first. Well, it's been quite a while now and we are still very sure the band won't happen again, so I guess it's time to say something.
Jesse F. Keeler
On MuchMusic's television program The New Music, Keeler further explained why the band split. He claimed it was due to disagreements with bandmate Grainger on many levels, including creative differences, music style, and more.
My two cents:
Incredibly sad to see this band go. I had only heard about them maybe a few months after the release of their album so I missed a shot to see them live. Thoroughly bums me out to know they aren't around as a group anymore. Probably some of the most kinetic and fuckable (Sexy Results for reference) dance / punk music in a long time.
Choice song / video clip: DFA1979 playing on Late Night w/ Conan O'Brien
Albums:
You're a Woman, I'm a Machine
Romance Bloody Romance (Remixes Album)
Head's Up (First EP)
Isis

Quick Summary:
Isis were a Los Angeles, California-based band, founded in Boston, Massachusetts, with a career spanning from 1997 to 2010. They borrowed from and helped to evolve a sound pioneered by the likes of Neurosis and Godflesh, creating heavy music consisting of lengthy songs that focus on repetition and evolution of structure.
The band's last album, Wavering Radiant, was released on May 5, 2009. The band decided to break up after their final tour ended in late June 2010.
Why they split:
On 18 May 2010, Isis announced their decision to break up following their final tour, with their final show to be in Montreal - the location of the band's very first show - on June 23, 2010. Isis collectively stated they have "done everything we wanted to do, said everything we wanted to say," and, as part of an agreement made by the band at its formation, it did not wish to be faced with the possibility that it would "push past the point of a dignified death."
My two cents:
I got into this band at around Panopticon. My best friend turned me onto them and it was just engrossing how full, melodic, beautiful and otherworldly this band pushed their music. If there were ever a metal band that could speak to even non-metal fans this would be it. Their albums suck you in and just wash over you. Highly recommended to listen to while stoned as well
Choice song / video clip: Ghost Key from the album Wavering Radiant
Albums:
Wavering Radiant
Oceanic
Panopticon
In The Absence of Truth
Red Sea (EP)
At The Drive-In

Quick Summary:
At the Drive-In was an American post-hardcore band from El Paso, Texas, active from 1993 to 2001. They were known for their extremely energetic stage shows which hearkened back to the 1980s post-hardcore scene. They were also recognized for their blend of surrealistic lyrics, unorthodox guitar melodies and unpredictable shifts in tempo and rhythm.
Why they split:
In March 2001less than a month away from a U.S. tour set to commence on April 14at the peak of their popularity and following a world tour, At the Drive-In broke up, initially referring to the split as an "indefinite hiatus." The band played their last show at Groningen's Vera venue on February 21, 2001. A combination of excessive hype, relentless touring, artistic differences, and Rodriguez-Lopez and Bixler-Zavala's drug habits all contributed to the demise of the band. Commenting on the hiatus, guitarist Omar Rodriguez said: "After a non-stop six-year cycle of record/tour/record/tour, we are going on an indefinite hiatus. We need time to rest up and re-evaluate, just to be human beings again and to decide when we feel like playing music again."
Cedric Bixler-Zavala took responsibility for the breakup of the band, saying repeatedly in interviews that he felt almost as if At the Drive-In was holding him back, and that he didn't want his music to be confined to punk or hardcore that it should encompass many different genres and be even more progressive, alternative, and "against-the-grain." Bixler-Zavala and Rodriguez-Lopez had stated that they wanted their next album to sound like Pink Floyd's The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, while the other members of the band were intent on progressing in a more alternative rock direction.
.
Possible reunion squashed:
In an interview by skullcandyTV, Jim Ward was asked if he and Cedric were still really close he responded by saying, "We went through the not talking thing...you know when your band part ways for a while but we are all still good friends..."
Regarding the relationship between the band members, Omar Rodríguez-López stated to The Skinny in July 2009 that:
The fact of the matter is that were in our thirties now and that breakup happened ten years ago. As a human being you just dont want that kind of karma. We did a lot of shit talking, and they did a lot of shit talking, so I just called everybody up and invited them to my house and said hey, listen, were in our thirties now, Im sorry for whatever I said, Im sure you guys didnt mean what you saidyou guys were upset because I split up the band and we were upset because of whatever. Lets be friends again. But do I want to reunite and play fucking 15 year old songs? Well, it would be like asking you, do you want to get back together with your first girlfriend? You learn some amazing things together, but I just shudder at the thought. We were a band that went out on top, which is good, but its just a coincidence. We were also a band that had been together for seven years, and for six of those years played to nobody and had a great time but were also on the verge of splitting up many times before that. Its an old relationship. People would like to think of it as unfinished business because to them we went out when we were most popular, but that has nothing to do with the creative element. As far as the creative element went, it very much was finished business. Thats why I ended the band! Now, thank god, fucking ten years later, were not holding a grudge and were all cool with it. People pick up on the difference of attitude and think oh, this could mean a possible reunion, but thats just them projecting their own desires upon us.
My two cents:
Vaya was one of the greatest fucking things I have ever heard in my life. So at that point when I first started listening to the band they completely changed my idea of where I could take my own music and where things would be going. It only got better and more progressive from there. Perhaps the de-facto angst, kicking and screaming band of my times. I must have worn out Relationship of Command. That poor cd didn't know what happened to it.
Choice song / video clip: One Armed Scissor, probably the best (youtube) example of how crazy this band was.
Albums:
Relationship of Command
In Casino Out
Vaya (EP)
Acrobatic Tenement
This Station is not Operational (7 unreleased tracks/remixes)
I know there are a lot more bands you guys want to talk about, so spill 'em. There's one I left off purposefully to see who would be the first one to post it. A band extremely near and dear to my heart.