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"If I wasn't in this band," says bassist Caleb "Bart" Barton, "I'd buy their CD, and go to every show." And he's not alone, the rest of the line-up, guitarists Paul Lutskovsky and Michael Palomar, drummer Nicole "Nico" Palomar, and front man Boris "El Bobo" Lutskovsky are just as excited about the "greatest band that no-one has heard of" from Hillsboro, Oregon. Well on track to having enough material for their first CD, the band continues to write frantically and at an ever-increasing pace. "I just don't know where some of this stuff comes from," muses Boris, "we'll have at times two or three songs that are in different stages of writing, and more ideas are still pouring in." It all started in May of 2005 when Boris, Bart and Paul began consolidating their individual styles to sculpt a unique progressive hardcore sound. Within weeks, and despite the lack of a drummer, a name, funds, time or equipment, the union yielded its first big result – an unnamed song that fed on every one's frustration with their own inability to commit to creating music. Eventually titled "seven years," the song gave the band the courage to continue. The band took on the name "incomplete" as a mockery of their lack of drummer, and kept it to represent their burning desire for more. Eventually God provided a drummer to the band - Nicole "Nico" Palomar - "the biggest little drummer we ever met". Now fully staffed but still working around every one's full schedule, incomplete recorded "Completely LIVE" while performing at THE CALL Youth Rally in Portland, and then slipped into Aloha Court Studios for a quick two-song demo with the two defining songs for the band at the time - the hard-edged "Good Intentions," a last word to all the hypocrites in the church, and the acoustically-driven "Immortal," a personal reflection on the times God felt so far away, but only because of one's own actions. incomplete quickly gained a solid fan base following the performance at "the Call" and also added a band member - Michael Palomar on guitar. Now a five piece, incomplete plays whenever possible and writes regularly in anticipation of going back to the studio to record a full length CD. ... |
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