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Taking Back Sunday Beef With Brand New

Thanks to a contempo Reddit AMA, the prospect of a Taking Back Dominicus and Brand New tour riled upward the net recently and became one of the most read stories on our website. Not only would such a tour exist the tour to see, only information technology would represent the symbolic squashing of an aboriginal beef that captivated the music scene in the early-2000s. In all its glory, the Taking Back Sunday/Brand New feud would fire bright through abrupt lyrical back-and-fourths in an substitution of emo dis tracks. It may have only felt like a Long Island scene rivalry to the bands involved, but the reality is, at this point in history, the earth's eyes were fixated on that island and the music coming out of it. There's now an entire generation of BN and TBS fans who, by virtue of age (and the fact that this all took place and then long ago), were completely unaware of this feud in all its greatness. Sure, information technology was all a bit nasty, and feelings were hurt, but for the fans, it was pretty damn entertaining. The existent emotions involved churned out some astonishing tunes and kept us all heavily invested. So here we will embrace the nostalgia and remember the 10 best moments of the BN/TBS feud.

1. How it all started
Our story begins in Long Island, New York at the onset of a budding (or exploding, depending on who you ask) mail service-hardcore/emo scene around the year 2000. In line with the genre'southward lyrical themes, the great emo beef of our fourth dimension would start considering of a girl. Jesse Lacey, the frontman for Make New, (and who was in one case the bassist for Taking Back Sunday), was longtime friends with John Nolan, TBS'southward guitarist and songwriter. But then, during a house party, Nolan allegedly hooked up Lacey's then-girlfriend. Lacey promptly split up from TBS, briefly forming a ring chosen the Rookie Lot, before eventually forming Brand New. After Lacey left TBS, he was replaced past a young fellow named Adam Lazzara, who played bass but somewhen switched to atomic number 82 vocals by the time of recording the band'due south debut album, Tell All Your Friends .

2. The First Shots Fired: "Seventy Times 7"

Now in Make New, Jesse Lacey came out guns blazing and wrote the song "Seventy Times 7" (from the band'south 2001 debut Your Favorite Weapon ), the championship of which refers to the number of sins that Jesus said should exist forgiven. Lacey scorns Nolan in the rail: "So don't apologize/I hope you choke and die/Search your jail cell for something with which to hang yourself." The vocal slows down for a cursory moment of somber reflection before exploding into what is probably the almost famous Brand New verse e'er written, all presumably directed at Nolan:

Then, is that what you lot phone call a getaway?
Well tell me what yous got away with.
Crusade I've seen more spine in jellyfish.
I've seen more guts in 11-year-sometime kids.
Have another drinkable, and drive yourself home.
I hope there'due south ice on all the roads.
And you can think of me when you forget your seatbelt.
And again when your head goes through the windshield.

3. Taking Dorsum Sunday strike back: "There's No 'I' In Squad"

Taking Back Lord's day weren't only going to eat Jesse Lacey's dust and call it quits. When Tell All Your Friends came out in 2002, a strikingly direct lyrical response to Brand New'south "70 Times 7" was establish on the anthology'southward 4th rail, "There's No 'I' In Squad." Nolan and Lazzara alternate on vocals throughout the song, dishing out blows similar, "Best friends means I pulled the trigger/Best friends means yous get what y'all deserve"—a direct reference to a Brand New line in "Lxx Times 7." But, toward the stop, TBS cut out all subtlety:

I swear you take no idea.
(I hope there'due south ice on all the roads.)
The jealousy that became me thinking.
(That's right he said.)
(And you can recall of me when yous forget your seatbelt.)
That yous always had information technology way likewise easy.
(And again when your head goes through the windshield.)

4. All of the other songs involved
Though it requires a bit of speculation, in that location are a number of other songs worth diving into that are open for estimation and could've played a role in the feud: Taking Back Lord's day'southward "Timberwolves At New Bailiwick of jersey" and "…Slowdance On The Inside;" too as Brand New's "Mix Tape" and "Okay I Believe Yous, But My Tommy Gun Don't."

five. Brand New'southward dis shirt

Why non cash in on the drama that your fans are so occupied with? Make New did exactly that when they took their beef with TBS to print, in the form of an insulting band T-shirt. The shirt read, "Considering mics are for singing, non swinging," which was directed at Lazzara and his signature mic-swinging stage move. (Come across: the ring'due south Jimmy Kimmel performance). TBS made a shirt in return. Information technology read: Proudly Swinging Since 1999.

half-dozen. That time they made up onstage

It looks like at one signal in 2002, both sides had made upwardly, if only temporarily. The band's toured together all summer in 2002, along with Rufio. Lacey joined Taking Back Sunday onstage during a evidence in Bedrock, Colorado, where they performed "At that place's No 'I' In Team" together. Lazzara stated on stage, "This song is chosen '70 Times vii' and/or 'There's No 'I' In Team,' depending on which tape you bought first." Nolan also joined Make New onstage during the aforementioned show.

7. Brand New performing "In that location's No 'I' In Squad" on Warped Bout 2003

At the Camden, New Jersey, engagement of the 2003 Vans Warped Tour, Brand New performed a mash up of "Seventy Times seven" and "There's No 'I' In Squad."

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Source: https://www.altpress.com/features/the_10_best_moments_of_the_taking_back_sunday_brand_new_feud/