Artist Biography by Ryan Downey
By the Grace of God was easily the most sincere,
radical, and politically outspoken band of the straight-edge and
hardcore revival scenes of the mid-'90s. Which are two scenes that the
band would eventually distance itself from as they became increasingly
political and more highly critical of the hardcore scene's turn toward
"mainstream" thinking and mass marketing. By the Grace of God began as
little more than an excuse for vocalist Rob Pennington and guitarist
Duncan Barlow to play uplifting, politically charged, high-energy
hardcore together again. The two had cut their teeth fronting the
phenomenally emotional Louisville hardcore band Endpoint and had since
drifted off into various post-hardcore, metal, and indie-oriented
projects -- most notably Barlow with Guilt. By the Grace of God started
out playing small shows, quickly amassing a following with their
outspoken and passionate performances. The duo had assembled a veritable
who's who of the local scene that included Thommy Browne (Enkindels) on
drums, Jay Palumbo (Empathy/Elliott) on guitar, and Benny (Elliott) on
bass, all of whom would join in the sloganeering as By the Grace of God
shouted their anti-corporate local-business-supporting message at
audiences between songs. The five of them quickly inked a deal with
Chicago's Victory label, issuing the For the Love of Indie Rock EP
shortly thereafter. The title of the record was a playful jab at some
former friends of the band. The "friends" in question were members of an
Indianapolis band called Split Lip, who had seemingly abandoned their
own hardcore roots. Hardcore roots that By the Grace of God was wearing
on their sleeves. Split Lip began to favor a more indie approach after
the release of their For the Love of the Wounded LP on Endpoint's former
label, Doghouse. By the Grace of God's first record included a cover of
a Poison Idea song, in addition to the band's own sing-along ready
anthems in waiting. Their next release was the much more polished
Perspective LP, produced by Steve Evetts in his New Jersey studios.
After playing a large handful of regional shows, Palumbo and Benny left
the band to focus full-time on Elliott. They were replaced by bassist
Brian Roundtree and guitarist Robby Scott. The band then embarked upon a
national tour supporting Avail, AFI, and Good Riddance before Barlow's
increasing dissatisfaction with small but violent right-wing factions
within the national hardcore community caused him to announce his
"retiring" from the scene altogether, effectively ending By the Grace of
God for a time. The band played a couple of "final" shows in Indiana
and recorded songs intended for a final EP, though they had severed
their connections with the Victory label. After a bit of a hiatus, By
the Grace of God re-formed with an Ohio native named George replacing
Browne. They performed with this lineup for a time as their final
recordings saw release as the Three Easy Steps to a Better Democracy CD
through Louisville-based label Three Little Girls. Barlow decided to
move to Colorado so the band decided to disband again, playing another
"final" show at Krazy Fest 3 in 2000 with onetime Endpoint drummer Lee
Fitzer joining them for a couple of Endpoint covers. A few months later
By the Grace of God reunited one last time to see Pennington off to
Colorado as well, this time with the lineup of Browne, Palumbo, Scott,
and Roundtree. In 2001, Pennington returned to Louisville where he
formed the band Black Widows with Browne and members of the National
Acrobat.
Tracklist
1 | Intro | 0:07 |
2 | Remora | 1:26 |
3 | Goliath | 2:36 |
4 | Pallbearer's Hymn | 2:06 |
5 | November's Lie | 2:37 |
6 | Fissures | 2:20 |
7 | Navigator | 2:05 |
8 | Ipecac | 2:06 |
9 | Plastic Bomb | 8:25 |
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