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Banki
02-24-2009, 05:40 AM
Faber_Drive-Seven_Second_Surgery-(Retail)-2007-MTD

Faber Drive - Seven Second Surgery

ARTIST.....: Faber Drive
TITLE......: Seven Second Surgery
LABEL......: 604 Records / Univeral Records
URL........: http://faberdrive.com/

RIP DATE...: May-01-2007
STORE DATE.: May-01-2007
GENRE......: Rock
QUALITY....: VBR / 44.1Hz / Joint-Stereo
SIZE.......: 67,4 MB


Track Listing:

01 - 24 story love affair 03:37
02 - tongue tied 03:31
03 - second chance 03:42
04 - sex and love 03:01
05 - sleepless nights (never let her go) 03:26
06 - killin' me 03:25
07 - when i'm with you 03:41
08 - summer fades to fall 03:22
09 - time bomb 02:43
10 - obvious 02:59
11 - you'll make it 13:39

─────
47:06 min
Release Notes:

Much higher bitrates than the advance. Enjoy!


Bio:

Before forming Faber in 2004, Faber taught guitar and drum lessons
in Mission, British Columbia and wrote and recorded on the side.
His first drum student was Red Bull, who took instruction for
three years until he and Faber decided to form a band. "I remember
when I first started telling people, my own brother said, 'Dude,
you're crazy. He sucks,'" remembers Faber with a smirk. "And I
said, 'I know but soon thatÆll change. Just watch. He's really
consistent and a hard worker.' And now, Red's by far one of the
best drummers in Vancouver."

Around the same time as Faber started jamming with Red, the singer
hooked up with Hinder producers Brian Howes and Joey Moi, who were
blown away by Faber's acoustic demos. So, Howes asked if he could
co-write with Faber and Moi offered to start preproduction. Then,
Faber filled in the gaps in the band's lineup. Faber's brother
recommended guitarist David Hinsley, whose aggressive playing
style gives the band's tunes extra intensity. But at first, Faber
wasn't impressed by Hinsley's performance.

"We jammed for maybe 10 minutes, and I said, 'Okay, I don't think
you're really what I'm looking for,'" recalls Faber. "I walked
out, and my brother called me and said, 'Dude, what are you doing,
man? You gotta try him one more time.' So, I went over to
Hinsley's house a couple nights later, and we jammed from seven
ætil two in the morning, and it was amazing, we totally hit it
off."

Bassist Jeremy "Krikit" Liddle was last to join. Faber and Red saw
Liddle performing onstage at an Easter Sunday church service and
were impressed by his range and tone. So, Faber went up to him
after the service and gave the bassist his phone number. "He
didn't realize I was trying to get him to play bass for us," Faber
says. "He thought I was trying to get him to come back to church
more often. He was gonna stop going because he had started
drinking and didn't feel it was right to be playing bass in church
when he was partying at night. When he realized I wasn't from the
church, he was stoked."

The band jammed with Liddle three days before the band's first
gig. The bassist learned all of the songs quickly and pulled them
off without hesitation. It was an auspicious beginning. Since
then, Faber Drive toured Canada with MxPx, Hedley, Hurst and
opened for Nickelback in Victoria before an audience of 10,000.
"It was pretty amazing to play in a place that big and hear the
crowd screaming your lyrics back at you," Faber said.

Faber Drive wrote "SEVEN SECOND SURGERY" over the past three
years. Some tracks were penned in the back of a refurbished '70s
school bus they took on tour with Hedley, others were crafted with
Howes at Moi's studio. They recorded their first track with Moi,
"Cement Head," in 2004 and over the next three years, returned
numerous times to track the rest of the album. After winning the
Fox Seeds competition, they changed their name to Faber Drive to
avoid potential legal issues. One of the names they considered
before electing Faber Drive was Seven Second Surgery, but they
decided it made a better album title than band name.

"A seven second surgery is a quick fix," Faber explains. "A lot of
bands come and go so fast, so this is a sarcastic way of saying
that if you think that's what we are, fine, but we're gonna be
around for a while."

With irresistible melodies, churning rhythms and thought provoking
lyrics, songs like "Second Chance," "Sleepless (Never Let Her Go,"
and "You'll Make It" (about the world's struggle for
self-improvement) invite comparisons to some of Faber Drive's
favorite bands - U2, The Police, Def Leppard. But while some of
the musical elements are familiar, "SEVEN SECOND SURGERY" is
refreshing, expressive and life-affirming.

"Our music is everything to us," Faber says, ôand through it we
really want to make a difference and promote hope and say that we
understand that life can be hard and unfair, but you can make it
better if you so choose.ö

http://www.mediafire.com/?lt3mzekmuxm