House Of Heroes

Cold Hard Want

House Of Heroes

13 SONGS • 46 MINUTES • JUL 10 2012

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
A Man Who's Not Afraid
01:03
2
Out My Way
03:37
3
Dance (Blow It All Away)
03:34
4
Remember the Empire
04:28
5
We Were Giants
03:47
6
The Cop
03:07
7
Comfort Trap
04:20
8
Touch This Light
04:23
9
Angels of Night
05:08
10
Stay
03:58
11
Suspect
04:03
12
Curtains
00:40
13
I Am a Symbol
04:48
℗© 2014 Gotee Records

Artist bios

Based out of Columbus, Ohio, the guys of Christian rock trio House of Heroes originally came together as a punk-pop band called No Tagbacks. Comprising A.J. Babcock (bass/vocals), Colin Rigsby (drums/vocals), and Tim Skipper (vocals/guitar), the group built up a respectable grassroots following through constant touring. However, when various setbacks took place (problems with their record label and otherwise), the bandmembers took a step back and realized their punk-pop sound just didn't fit who they were anymore. The difficulties ultimately sparked a change in the guys, which led to a refined vision for their music and the band itself.

Changing the band's moniker to the more mature House of Heroes, the trio re-emerged to its fans with a more focused pop/rock sound that took influence from bands like Weezer and Jimmy Eat World. Recording some demos and hitting the road, House of Heroes independently released their debut album, What You Want Is Now, in 2003. The record brought House of Heroes to the attention of Gotee Records, but issues with their previous label caused eight months to pass before officially joining Gotee's roster. Making the most of a frustrating period, they used the down time to write their label debut, a self-titled effort that was issued in May 2005. They supported the record as openers on a subsequent tour with MxPx and Relient K. The album was repackaged, retitled, and reissued a year later on Gotee's sister label, Mono vs. Stereo; Say No More included two new songs and came enhanced with bonus multimedia material.

House of Heroes continued touring through the summer of 2006. The critically acclaimed End Is Not the End, the band's much anticipated third full-length outing, dropped in 2008, and proved to be their most epic and successful release to date. A trio of EPs arrived in 2009, one of which, House of Heroes Meets the Beatles, saw the group tackling a handful of Fab Four songs. The following year saw the release of the Mark Lee Townsend-produced Suburba, which debuted at number 48 on the Billboard 200 and earned the group a Dove Award nomination. The band's fifth studio long-player, Cold Hard Want, arrived in 2012, with the Gotee Records contract-fulfilling The Knock-Down Drag-Outs compilation EP hitting the streets just one year later. Arriving in 2014, the Smoke EP would be the band's first independent release since 2003, and 2015's crowdfunded Colors found House of Heroes delivering their first concept album. ~ Corey Apar

Read more
Customer Reviews
5 star
75%
4 star
22%
3 star
3%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

How are ratings calculated?