View All Artists

All Time Low
Angels and Airwaves
Brand New
Colbie Caillat
Family Force 5
Flobots
Flyleaf
Good Charlotte
Hawthorne Heights
Katy Perry
Minus the Bear
Motion City Soundtrack
Relient K
Safetysuit
Sara Bareilles
Saving Abel
Say Anything
The Academy Is
The Cab
We the Kings
Taveren

Breaking Benjamin
Cassidy
Jack's Mannequin
Lil Wayne
Ludacris
Lupe Fiasco
New Found Glory
Ok Go
Paramore
Plain White T's
Sick Puppies
T. Pain
T.I.
Talib Kweli
The Roots

All-American Rejects
American Hi-Fi
Anthony Hamilton
The Ataris
Ani DiFranco
Black Violin
Blackalicious
Black Eyed Peas
Bobby Valentino
Bowling For Soup
Boys Like Girls
Buckcherry
Busta Rhymes
Chrisette Michele
Common
Crossfade
David Banner
Dog Men Poets
Dropkick Murphys
Finger Eleven
Five For Fighting
Fuel
Hellogoodbye
Hoobastank
J. Holiday
Jadakiss
John Legend
Jimmy Eat World
Juvenile
Keyshia Cole
Less Than Jake
Letoya Luckett
Lifehouse
Lil Scrappy
Lit
Lyfe Jennings
Medeski, Martin and Wood
Mike Jones
Mos Def
Motion City Soundtrack
Musiq
Ne-Yo
Nothing More
O.A.R.
Paul Wall
Rick Ross
Robin Thicke
Rude Buddah
Sugarcult
Sum 41
Taking Back Sunday
Three Days Grace
Thursday
Tonex
Tonic
Trapt
Trey Songz
Trina
Uncle Kracker
Vertical Horizon
Yellowcard
Ying Yang Twins
Young Jeezy
Yung Joc

 

BACK

CROSSFADE BIO

Hard rock/heavy metal band Crossfade is based in Columbia, SC, where its members reside. The group came together in the late '90s with the merging of singer/guitarist Ed Sloan with bassist/backup singer Mitch James and drummer Brian Geiger as the power trio the Nothing. Sloan, a Columbia native, had begun taking piano lessons at eight and been attracted to grunge and heavy metal music, joining his first band, Darkchilde, in the eighth grade. By the time he began attending the University of South Carolina and majoring in computer science, however, he was looking for new musicians to play with. Geiger, also a native of Columbia, had played drums since his childhood and was a member of another local band, Celestian Slant. For James, who took up the bass after becoming enamored of the instrument at a David Lee Roth concert, the Nothing was his first band. The group added singer and club DJ Tony Byroads, who had grown up in Buffalo, NY, playing in a band called Final Wave in high school, then moved to Columbia after graduation.

The resulting quartet renamed itself Sugardaddy Superstar. While building up a local following, the band recorded in its own Sugarstar Studio. It first gained recognition beyond its region when it attracted the interest of the Los Angeles A&R company Taxi and Los Angeles promoter Chris Long (who took over as manager), leading to an L.A. showcase in March 2002. That, in turn, led to a signing to the Earshot subsidiary of Columbia Records early the next year. The band then retooled its self-released album, Cold, under the auspices of mixer/engineer Randy Staub and renamed itself Crossfade. The revised album was released by Columbia as Crossfade in April 2004; the same year James Branham replaced Geiger behind the drum kit. Its first single, "Cold," did extremely well on modern rock radio (spending a staggering 65 weeks on the Active Rock chart) and, by August 2005, the album was certified platinum. By that time, the group was back to being a trio after the departure of a newly married Byroads. They continued touring in support of the record, including several overseas gigs the following spring for active personnel at various military bases. "Invincible" hit the airwaves in June 2006 to usher in the release of Crossfade's follow-up effort, Falling Away, released in late August.

   
 
  office 877.218.2231 fax: 610.872.5038
all rights reserved copyright 2003 © sphinx management group