Onesidezero

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Onesidezero
OriginLos Angeles, California, U.S.
Genres
Years active1997–2003, 2004–present
Labels
  • Corporate Punishment
  • Maverick Records
Members
  • Jasan Radford
  • Levon Sultanian
  • Cristian Hernandez
  • Rob Basile
  • Brett Kane
Past members
  • Colin Crow
  • Travis Prentice
  • Peter Pres

Onesidezero (also depicted as OneSideZero) is an American rock band. Their style is often described as heavy melodic rock. Their songs are often very dark, with deep lyrics and slow

bass lines
.

History

Formed in 1997, the band recorded several demos before being signed by

side projects
.

The most notable side project, Abloom (previously called Mothra), featured vocalist Jasan Radford and lead guitarist Levon Sultanian. Also part of the band was Mike Doling (ex-

Marcello D. Rapp (ex-Soulfly). Shavo Odadjian of System of a Down
took the role of executive producer.

Abloom song titles included "Cover Up", "After That Quiet", "January 2nd", "What You Came For", "Shadows", and "Mama Don't Cry". Some of these are featured on their

MySpace page while others appear elsewhere on the internet. Abloom has a more classic rock feel while at times showcasing Levon Sultanian's guitar playing who is of Armenian
descent.

In late 2004, Onesidezero reunited and worked on new material. The band toured throughout 2005 and 2006 while writing and recording their album with Ulrich Wild (Taproot, Static-X) at the helm. Before writing what would become their self-titled 2007 release, the band wrote, and scrapped, almost an album and a half worth of material that comprised most of their setlist from 2002 through 2006. Song titles included "Empty", "Summertime", "Quicksand", "Chasing the Sun", "Say", "Separate", "Up From Down", "U4IA", "Oneside of the Zero", and more. On November 8, 2006, Onesidezero announced they had signed with Corporate Punishment Records. Their self-titled album Onesidezero was released on June 5, 2007. It was originally slated for a February 20 release.

According to their Facebook page, the band were in the process of writing new music for their next album for a 2012 release, however this did not appear to come to fruition.[3]

Music

Writing about the band's music for

nu-metal sans the knuckle-dragging mob mentality. This was thoughtful, intelligent hard rock".[2]

Band members

Current
  • Jasan Radford — vocals, guitar
  • Levon Sultanian — Lead guitar, backing vocals(1997–2003, 2004–2007, 2010–present)
  • Brett Kane — guitar, backing vocals (1998–2003, 2007–present)
  • Cristian Hernandez — bass, backing vocals
  • Rob Basile — drums
Former members
  • Travis Prentice — drums, backing vocals (1997–1999,)
  • Peter Pres — bass guitar, backing vocals (1997–1999,)
  • Colin Crow — guitar (2007–2009)

Discography

Studio albums

Demos

  • 1998 –
  1. Paste
  2. Brocwurst
  3. Sleep Through This
  4. Into A Million Pieces
  • 2000 –
  1. Instead Laugh
  2. Holding Cell
  3. New World Order
  4. Shed the Skin
  5. Eight
  6. Sleep Through This
  • 2003 – Summer Demo
  1. Empty
  2. Separate
  3. Summertime
  • 2003 – 2/5's Demo (contains some alternate versions)
  1. Empty
  2. Summertime
  3. Quicksand
  4. Chasing the Sun

Singles

Year Title Chart positions Album
US
Hot 100
US
Mod. Rock
US
Main. Rock
UK
UK
Rock Track
CAN
Hot 100
2001 "New World Order" Is This Room Getting Smaller
"Instead Laugh"
"Shed the Skin"
2007 "My Confession" Onesidezero
"Sleep"

Drummer Rob Basile contributed drums for singer-songwriter Colleen Grace on albums Colleen Grace (2003) and Rosetta Hotel (2006), and for the track entitled "Where He Can Hide" by Tom Wolfe on the soundtrack of the film Me, Myself & Irene starring Jim Carrey (2000).

Vocalist Jasan Radford contributed vocals to the tracks "Run Around," "Going Digital," and "Strange" on the soundtrack of Digimon: The Movie, as well as the theme song for Power Rangers Time Force.

The song "Tapwater" from Is This Room Getting Smaller was featured in the film A Walk to Remember.

Music videos

Song Album Director(s)
"Eight" Is This Room Getting Smaller (2001) Jasan Radford

References

  1. ^ "Onesidezero | Biography, Albums, Streaming Links". AllMusic.
  2. ^ a b Rogers, Paul (August 2, 2018). "Onesidezero's Return Is Part Reformation, Part Reinvention". LA Weekly. Retrieved April 2, 2020.
  3. ^ https://www.riffrelevant.com/2018/07/01/oldschool-sunday-onesidezero-new-video-2/

External links