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American rock band From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Threatin is an American rock band from Los Angeles. Founded by Jered Threatin, real name Jered Eames,[4] the band gained notoriety in November 2018 for a European tour in which it played to mostly empty venues. Threatin has been labelled a "fake band" by the music press and described as a vanity project of its founder.[5][6][7][8][9] Rolling Stone also referred to Threatin as a "great heavy metal hoax".[10]
Threatin | |
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Background information | |
Origin | Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Genres | |
Years active | 2012–present |
Members |
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Website | threatin |
Jered Eames was born in Moberly, Missouri.[11] He formed the black metal band Saetith there with his older brother Scott. Following the break up of Saetith and a brief period with Abigail Williams,[11] he moved to California in 2012 and began the band Threatin as a solo project, for which he adopted the name Jered Threatin. In 2015, Threatin released a single, "Living Is Dying". In 2017, the album Breaking the World was released, with Jered Threatin performing all instruments.[4]
In November 2018, Threatin had sparse audiences on his United Kingdom tour despite saying to venues that hundreds of tickets had been purchased[12][6][12][13][14] The Camden Underworld in London had been told that 291 advance tickets had been sold, but only three people attended;[15] similarly, 180 tickets had supposedly been sold for the Exchange in Bristol but the band played to an "empty room".[16][17]
MetalSucks identified Threatin as Eames and identified fake record labels, booking companies, and management companies were registered to the same GoDaddy account, as well as 38,000 of the band's Facebook likes that had been purchased.[6] Threatin's backing guitarist Joe Prunera and drummer Dane Davis left the band midway through the tour.[18]
Threatin claimed the incident was an elaborate hoax he had orchestrated, but his brother publicly disavowed the statement.[19][20][21] Threatin claimed to have sent emails to reporters on the first day of the tour to build the controversy. This claim was later proved false by the BBC, who found the emails in question were sent after the failure of the tour.[4]
In May 2019 it was revealed that Joe Prunera, Dane Davis, and Davis's mother Debra had all sued Eames and his business partner for costs accrued during the UK tour. Neither defendant attended the hearings, as Prunera was awarded $10,000 plus $250 in court fees, Dane Davis was awarded $3,975.29, and Debra Davis was awarded $4,035.66.[22] Notices sent to Eames regarding the judgement were returned to the court, and the court had reportedly been unable to contact him.[citation needed]
Jered Threatin returned to play the Camden Underworld in London on November 1, 2019.[23] Prior to the event, manager Jon Vyner stated: "We'll probably promote it in-house. Last time there was no one to promote him—because he had no fans at the time. Now he does."[24] Threatin's return show to the Camden Underworld featured robotic mannequins dressed in T-shirts with "Fake Band" printed on them. Threatin regularly handed his microphone to one of the mannequins to "sing" his lyrics on a backing track. Other stage spectacles included Threatin pretending to be fellated by a blow-up doll wearing a BBC News T-shirt, before ending the show by smashing his guitar. A maximum of 60 people were reported to have attended, with a significant number leaving before the end of the 45-minute show.[25]
Current members
Former touring musicians
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