Philadelphia-based
East Hundred play melodic pop/rock with layers of guitars and synths, a sound that fits somewhere near that of
Death Cab for Cutie if
the Cardigans'
Nina Persson were handling the singing. The group began as a trio in 2004 when brothers
Brooke and
Will Blair (guitars and drums, respectively) asked
Brooke's girlfriend at the time, Drexel University film student Beril Guceri -- who had previously asked the brothers to score a film project of hers -- to sing on some tracks they'd laid down. She agreed, and so
East Hundred formally began, taking their name from a small piece of land owned by
the Blairs' grandparents in rural Virginia. It was more of a basement recording project than a live band at first, but as Guceri got over her terrible stage fright, they started to play shows. A few rough demos eventually became the group's first EPs: a self-titled one released in April 2005 and another,
Copper Street Performer, issued in 2007. The band began touring, and two close friends -- keyboardist Susan Grager and bassist
David Sunderland (who had actually moved to Philly with
Brooke and
Will before
East Hundred formed) -- came on board along the way to flesh out their live sound; both wound up staying on full-time and cemented
East Hundred as a quintet. In 2007, the group started sessions for its next album, but it wasn't long after that Beril and
Brooke's romantic relationship fizzled, officially making things awkward. But instead of stopping the group in its tracks, the unease and hurt feelings were used to write more new material, and soon the breakup had fueled enough songs for a full album instead of the originally planned EP. After
East Hundred won the annual Philly Sound Clash battle of the bands in 2008, the resulting album,
Passenger, appeared in January 2009. ~ Corey Apar, All Music Guide