UNDUN
Gig Seeker Pro

UNDUN

Missoula, Montana, United States | SELF

Missoula, Montana, United States | SELF
Band Metal Rock

Calendar

This band has not uploaded any videos
This band has not uploaded any videos

Music

The best kept secret in music

Press


"Undun takes home top prize, $1,000 at the Buffalo Saloon's Battle of the Bands"

Missoula group Undun was the bigger winner at the Buffalo Saloon's Battle of the Bands Saturday night, pocketing $1,000.
Undun features Corey Hayes on lead vocals, Josh Warren on guitar and backing vocals, Cole O'Donnel on guitar, Joel Lane on bass, and Trev Rusek on drums. The group cranked out eight original songs during their 35-minute set, including "Martyr," "Slow Clean Death" and "Right Hand of God."

Hayes said the Battle of the Bands contest was a great idea.

"I think it's fabulous," he explained. "It was just a good show. It's nice to put some friendly competition in there."

Undun has been performing for about a decade and has gone through 10 members including its current membership. Warren and Rusek are original members. All the current members attended high school together in Helena. The band worked out of Butte for a few years and then moved to Seattle, where they played for three years in the early 2000s. They moved to Missoula about four years ago.

Undun performs original music exclusively during club shows that typically last about an hour.

"I'd say we've written about 20 songs," Hayes said, citing shared influence from the likes of Pantera, Slayer and Machine Head. "We're big hair metal freaks from the '80s. We also delve into the old metal, but our biggest influence now is pretty much us."

Undun finished its debut album in June. "Purification of Sin" is an eight-song project. The band is currently writing material for a second album of 10 to 12 tracks they hope to release next summer.

Hayes said the band is enjoying increasing popularity in Billings, Helena and Great Falls. He thinks metal's appeal is its therapeutic value.

"It's a release," he explained. "You gotta have those points in time where you just break down and wanna scream your head off. I think what metal music is to people is an ability to vent frustrations in a positive way."

You can hear samples of Undun's music at www.myspace.com/undun666.


- Great Falls Tribune


"Local bands Zen In Zion, ENDever are part of metal showcase at FOE"

Undun is a dark, sharp-edged rock band whose members liken the sound to a slag pile "spewing from pristine, country hillsides" near Missoula. "Like slag, Undun is the byproduct of over-processed rock, stripped of supposed worth and tossed aside by the undiscerning," the band's press statement reads. "However, they each possess value. Each speaks to the darker side of nature, evidence of man's greed and waste. … Neither can be ignored."

- Billings gazette


"project independent to draw metal bands state wide"

Undun, a Missoula band, is described by its band members as a "slag pile of the music scene - the dark, dank mounds of sharp-edged rock spewing from pristine, country hillsides, like slag.”

- Billings gazette


"Bang your Head"

The first time Undun was kicked off the stage was in 2000 at a cancer benefit show in Butte. According to guitarist Josh Warren, a promoter had invited the band to play the benefit, and the Montana Tech radio station had even advertised the show by playing some of the band's heavier death metal songs. But when the group plugged in the amps and started pounding out some grinding riffs, the promoter wasn't impressed.

"We started playing," says Warren, "and she comes over and says she doesn't like what we're playing. She wanted us to play 'Sweet Home Alabama' instead."

Clearly, she'd gotten the wrong idea.

Since then, the band counts several times it's been asked to turn down, turn off or play something else. The most recent example was at the Western Montana Fair, during a show sponsored by The Blaze. Three songs in, the sound operator told the band it would have to quiet down to appease some members of the fair committee. Warren recalls saying, "If it's too loud, you're too old," and launching into another song. But by then, the sound guy had shut off the PA.

"The grandstands were full," says frontman Corey Hayes. "There were old people in Rascal scooters, women pushing strollers. People stopped to listen. The special-needs kids were bobbing their heads. But I guess those [in charge] didn't like how loud we were."

It doesn't really faze the band members: getting the plug pulled, people misunderstanding the type of music they play—it's all par for the course with metal, says Hayes. But finding venues where they didn't have to censor themselves or quiet down or be asked to play covers was the band's main goal.

In fact, even before The Other Side closed, Hayes had his eye on the Palace. The Palace/Badlander complex on the corner of Ryman and Broadway opened in May 2007, hosting rock shows with relative success. Looking for an opportunity, Hayes volunteered to help with security during the August 2008 Total Fest.

"I kind of stuck around and started to nag [the owners] about doing metal shows there," he says. "They wanted a huge deposit because they thought we weren't going to draw a big enough crowd and, maybe, that somehow the place was going to get torn up."

Hayes persisted and ended up with a Thursday night show at the Palace called Metal Militia, just six months before The Other Side closed. He brought in big metal acts like Skeletonwitch. He hosted a benefit with Demonlily for the Watson Children's Shelter, which featured heavy rock band Royal Bliss and several local metal acts. Lazerwolfs played a tribute show to Judas Priest. Project Independent, a statewide metal competition, made its home at the Palace. And Dimestock, an annual tribute show to Pantera's late frontman Dimebag Darrel, which the Other Side used to host, spent its fourth year at the basement venue. All the while, new local metal bands sprung on the scene, including Beef Curtain, Maggedon and Doomfock, among many others.

Colin Hickey, who books shows at the Palace and Badlander, says that recent Metal Militia nights have been slow. There's a lull in metal bands touring to town, and metal DJs don't bring in the crowds.

"Metal Thursdays were great when real bands played," Hickey says, "but off nights, when there were just metal DJs, it was horrible. No one showed up."

Hickey acknowledges the void The Other Side has created for metal bands. At The Other Side, you could book a show on short notice. But for the Badlander and Palace, bands are booked three months in advance—at a minimum. And, unlike weeknights at The Other Side, he says, local metal bands are competing with indie rock, hip-hop and every touring act that comes into town.

"We love to do metal shows," says Hickey. "We're a fan of them. My issue is booking."

- Missoula Independent


Discography

EP (2005)
1. Melting Pot

Purifacation of Sin (2008)
1. Slow Clean Death
2. Beating You
3. Melting Pot
4. Right Hand of God
5. Lonely Road
6. March of Zombies
7. Hostle Youth

New album to be release Summer 2011

Radio Airplay
Missoula...The Blaze 96.3
Always streaming on the The Blaze web radio
Billings
The Rock 107.5 (R.I.P.)
The Zone 96.3

Photos

Bio

Undun are the slag pile of Montana's music scene; dark dank mounds of sharp edged rock spewing from pristine, country hillsides, Like slag. Undun are the by products of over-processed rock; stripped of supposed worth and tossed aside by the undiscerning. However they both possess value. Each speaks to the darker side of nature, evidence of man's greed and waste. Neither can be ignored. ......We are fun our fans have a good time everytime we are on stage.. It seems like there is nothing else but us and the fans for the next two hours.