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Underoath

Underøath transforms noise, aggression, and atmosphere into weapons of survival, with spirited singalong-inducing hooks to spare. Their two gold albums and three Grammy Award nominations arrived without commercial compromise. Renowned for their unrelenting integrity and authenticity, whenever they have a chance to play it safe, this band chooses to challenge themselves instead.

Two decades after genre classics Define the Great Line and They’re Only Chasing Safety, the Underøath audience is more diverse, passionate, and devoted than ever. A testament to their resilience, longevity, and unwavering commitment to their creative vision, Spencer Chamberlain, Tim McTague, Aaron Gillespie, Chris Dudley, and Grant Brandell deliver another powerful missive of artistic courage and unmatched relevance with the band’s 10th album, The Place After This One.

Underøath reinvents the balance between chaos and harmony with every successive release. Their compositions, born from creative tension, transform into iconoclastic anthems. Even when the band nearly combusts, the crackling energy coalesces into something deeply resonant for millions.

From “Writing On The Walls” to “Generation No Surrender,” the band’s songs and performances demonstrate undeniable power, whether on tour with contemporaries like Bring Me The Horizon, Papa Roach, and Alice In Chains, headlining runs (with supporting acts like Bad Omens and Spiritbox), or at major international rock festivals. Collaborations with Bring Me The Horizon, Sleeping With Sirens, Ghostemane, and Charlotte Sands further illustrate each member’s artistic diversity.

Walking a creative tightrope between immersive access and isolationist otherness, Underøath owns the space between huge choruses and forward-thinking heaviness, both on record and onstage.

The heart of their sound, which delivers confessional vulnerability with thrilling force and cinematic grandiosity, can be heard in generations of bands that followed in their wake. Underøath refuses to stand still. 2025’s The Place After This One is a provocative and inspiring work of outsider art.

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