What type of genre is thousand foot krutch




















It was their first album released entirely independently. Continuing the upward chart trajectory with each subsequent release, The End debuted at number 14 on the Billboard , and claimed the top spots on both the hard rock and Christian charts. In late , the band released Made in Canada: The Collection , which included two new tracks. Thousand Foot Krutch remained independent into , relying on crowd-sourcing for the release of the energetic Oxygen: Inhale , the first part of a pair of hard rock chart-topping LPs.

AllMusic relies heavily on JavaScript. Please enable JavaScript in your browser to use the site fully. Blues Classical Country. Electronic Folk International. Jazz Latin New Age. The End Is Where We Begin was not only the start of a new chapter for the band, but one of those rare albums that delivered exactly what the fans wanted, and something that would be difficult to top.

In an era where even the nightly news can be auto-tuned, the band rejected all the studio trickery that has come to define much of modern music, rock and roll included, and relied instead on solid performances.

It has the raw and organic feel of something being performed in the same room. The band is stripped down to the bare bones, the core elements of guitar, bass, drums, and vocals. Even fans that have followed the group since day one will be hearing a new side of them. Trevor helped with recordings of Three Days Grace's demo album.

He is also featured on their song "This Movie" from this album. Smith was replaced with Myke Harrison, who departed about a year later. Though something of a departure from the rap-heavy sound of Set it Off , Phenomenon still relied on McNevan's rhythmic vocals, albeit with a solid modern metal sound. Phenomenon was well received, and spawned 4 popular radio singles, including the anthemic " Rawkfist.

Now touring majorly, the band needed a guitarist for live shows; because Myke Harrison had not been replaced and Trevor had recorded lead guitars on Phenomenon. So the trio enlisted Jamie Aplin, a member of a fellow Canadian band h eadspace who had played drums, as fill in guitarist.

Jamie never recorded any records with TFK, making his releationship with the band heavily debated with fans. This album makes almost a complete break from the nu metal sound of Phenomenon, focusing more on heavy elements. The record also features short guitar solos, which is the first TFK album to do so. The Art of Breaking was received well from fans, although some criticized the album's change of style. Other popular singles include the debut song "Absolute", another fan favourite and Breathe You In, which was released to alternative radio and is the bands first lighter, slower single.

The album is called by fans to defining as Phenomenon and The Art of Breaking were so different, this album made clear the bands genre and features the singles "Falls Apart", "What do we Know?

Net Top 30 Chart. Also on Purevolume. In , Trevor became involved with TobyMac and helped him write the music for the song "Ignition" found on Toby's album "Portable Sounds". The tour was such a success that Toby asked them to do the fall tour as well. The next tour was in the spring of when the band toured with Skillet and Decyfer Down.



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