Punk rock fans
Bobby Darling and
Nic Newsham weaned themselves on melodic punk revivalists like
Lagwagon and Propagandhi until they decided to start a band together. Drafting bassist
Kirk Huffman and drummer
Dustin McGhie, the band christened themselves
Gatsbys American Dream and attempted to start a rock band. Teaming with producer
Aaron Sprinkle, the group recorded
Why We Fight in the spring of 2002 for a summer release on Rocketstar. Next progressing past simply playing fast punk,
GAD returned in July 2003 with the more multifaceted and indie rock-leaning
Ribbons and Sugar, a concept album inspired by
George Orwell's Animal Farm. Drummer
McGhie left during those sessions and was replaced by
Rudy Gajadhar (ex-
Waxwing). The EP In the Land of Lost Monsters followed in 2004 on Chicago's LLR Records.
The Gatsbys jumped to Fearless for the April 2005 effort
Volcano; another concept album, this one was based loosely around the prideful Roman city of Pompeii that was destroyed twice by volcanic activity. Fans loved the album, and much touring ensued after the release, including early 2006 dates with
the Starting Line,
Copeland, and
Cartel and a full U.S. headlining tour that spring. Keyboardist
Kyle O'Quin was also officially added to
Gatsbys' lineup while on the road. Opting out of the Warped Tour, the band took some needed time off during the summer before their searing self-titled follow-up appeared in early August. ~ Bradley Torreano & Corey Apar, All Music Guide