INNERPARTYSYSTEM Biography



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Innerpartysystem.

Type that name into Google. Go on. We'll wait.

Not much there, right? A few shout-outs ("Innerpartysystem deftly toe a thin line between anthemic pop-rock and melodramatic electro-pop" says Spin), something about China's inner-party factional politics and a few torrent streams. Otherwise, the band seems to exist in an ether.

And that's the point.

"We don't want attention on us," says…well, one of the members of the band, who refuses to go on record--and for good reason. "There's no one leader, no frontman - this is a collective. We're not concerned about who we are outside of the music. In a way, the less people know about us, as people, the better. Hey, even on stage, we're backlit, so we just show up as silhouettes."

So, here's what we can tell you:

The origins of Innerpartysystem can be traced in 2002, when drummer Jared Piccone and vocalist Patrick Nissley attended school together in Reading, Pennsylvania, an hour outside of Philadelphia. The town's somewhat bleak, depressed nature (it remains the country's sixth most-dangerous city) eventually inspired the harsh, mechanical tones of the band's current music…although, ironically, the area's local "scene" had little to do with IPS's eventual sound. As the band puts it, "we were the only group in our area experimenting with dance sounds."

The duo started writing songs together, inspired by both by their love of electronic music (The Chemical Brothers, Daft Punk, Nine Inch Nails) and hardcore punk. Although the intensity of the band, in all its forms, has stayed consistent, the group saw its style begin to morph over time, becoming less "rock" and more digitally based.

Things got serious around 2006. IPS's music started picking up some serious hits on MySpace. Wanting to tour, Piccone and Nissley recruited some new bandmates, including Kris Barman, a former high school friend who had relocated to Florida, and Jesse Cronan, an acquaintance of the band. The addition of these two, who are more apt to play synths than guitars, veered the band further into samples and electronic direction.

Now working as a four-piece, the group all moved into a house together, where they pieced together their own bootleg studio, built a light setup out of scrapwood from Home Depot, and pretty much, as the group puts it, "disowned our rational lives and focused all our time and energy on the band."

During these initial jams, the band's collective mentality began to form. After being forced to change their name from The Takeover, the group started playing around with monikers that came closer to describing both its sound and philosophy. Innerpartysystem, the winning title, was adapted from the George Orwell book "1984" (in that dystopian novel, the Inner Party was one of three classes of people in Oceania; the Party is the highest end of the hierarchy and controls the government, and by extent, the media).

Explains IPS: "As a band, we were fascinated by that concept. It ties into the world of today, the hierarchy of celebrities that people worship." That anti-celeb swipe is most prominent in the searing "Don't Stop," which features Nissley railing against the TMZ-inspired world of fake celebrity. ("I feed the rich and fuck the poor," the frontman chastises over a harsh electro-punk beat.)

The band eventually caught the attention of Stolen Transmission, which signed the group in 2006. The band's first album was an EP entitled Download, a home recorded demo ("even the software was pirated" claims the band) that actually was never meant for release; the intent was always to put it out on MySpace and have the record go out over various peer-to-peer sites. Despite the non-traditional release pattern, the record received a substantial amount of attention, and a few of the songs ended up licensed for video games ("FIFA" and "Burnout"). Despite the record's success, it offered up only a hint of the band's sound to come.

For the new record, the band recruited a number of A-level producers and mixers, including Joel Hamilton (Book of Knots, Sparklehorse, Blue Tip), Mark Needham (The Killers, Pete Yorn), Spike Stent (Bjork, Arcade Fire), and Alan Moulder (Smashing Pumpkins, NIN, Jesus & Mary Chain, the Killers), all of whom brought new ideas on sound and instrumentation to the group.

As the band preps its first video for "Don't Stop," they also plan to spend most of the spring and summer touring, including several stops at SXSW. And, for the group it's where the true nature of the band can be found. Says Innerpartysystem: "We're keeping it DIY, doing shows wherever and whenever we can. When you see us, there's a real aggressive vibe in some ways to what we do, and then there's also this party atmosphere. It's that old 10 pm to 6 am kind of vibe. The lights never stop. It's a huge party…and it takes the spotlight off of us, and puts it on the music, where it belongs."


Before singer Patrick Nissley and drummer Jared Piccone started the dance-rock early-Killers-influenced outfit Innerpartysystem, both were in the Reading, PA-based emo band Thirteen Over Eight, which Piccone (who was then on drums) joined in 2000, a few years after their inception. Though the group enjoyed a nice local response and comparisons to bands like the Used and Thursday, things didn't really take off until the two started the electronic-inspired the Takeover, which later morphed into Innerpartysystem. With Kris Barman on keys and Jesse Cronan on guitars and keys, the group signed to Stolen Transmission (headed by Sarah Lewitinn, credited for helping bands like My Chemical Romance and the Killers reach the mainstream) in May 2007, releasing their The Download EP a few months later. Marisa Brown, All Music Guide








INNERPARTYSYSTEM lyrics and albums
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