SEARCH FOR A BAND
WORLD
Last Update:

15 October 2006

Sudden Epidemic
Bandmembers
3PLAY LIVE ON STAGE!
2CONFIRM YOUR CONCERT DATE
1SIGN UP TO PLAY THE FESTIVAL
RECENT MEDIA
  • VIDEO
  • AUDIO
  • PHOTO
24/02/2025 16:35:17

Thalia

11/02/2025 14:43:52

KYÖKU







CURRENT AND NEXT GIGS
Country

City

    THE NEXT BANDS ON STAGE
    Signed up 17 April 2025 at 3:00 AM

    Witchkiller

    Metal
    Canada
    Signed up 25 February 2025 at 8:32 PM

    Yellowait

    Folk rock
    Canada
    Signed up 27 January 2025 at 5:37 AM

    Tradivarius

    Folk rock
    Canada
    Next bands around the globe
    Signed up 07 May 2025 at 2:28 PM

    Blackened Path

    Thrash Metal
    Suède
    Signed up 05 May 2025 at 3:24 PM

    Sat'n Shot

    Other...
    Espagne
    TOP STORIES
    In breaking news, local rockers Sudden Epidemic are ratcheting the Denver music scene up a notch this spring with their unique, full-frontal rock/indie/folk/punk sound. Formerly residents of Los Alamos (It’s What We Deserve), New Mexico, band members Jordan Daniel, Alex Marble, Kyle Pilon, and Tyler Goodman relocated to the Front Range last October, following a successful regional tour of the West Coast.

    Sudden Epidemic got its start six years ago in a middle school talent show as a duo with a 15-watt amp, a really bad PA system, and a gym full of screaming fans. It’s all been uphill from there. The band recorded its full-length debut album, "The Broadview Life", at Santa Fe Soundworks in December 2004 and has since shared stages across the southwest with national acts including Tera Melos, The Capricorns, Barefoot Bride, and Finest Hour. Sudden Epidemic is currently working on a new album for release later this year and is planning a full West Coast/Midwest tour for the summer.

    Since their move to Denver, the band’s line-up has changed somewhat with the departure of guitarist Tyler Goodman and the addition of classically trained violinist and vocalist Elise Alde, who has added a whole new dimension to the Sudden Epidemic experience. The band continues to push electronic boundaries with nods to musical influences Cursive, The Hush Sound, Straylight Run, Death Cab for Cutie, and Mae and their high-energy live shows still have fans screaming on their feet. Catch Sudden Epidemic in Denver or on the road and you’ll never know what you’re going to get: random episodes of tap dancing and voltage-bending violin solos have been known to break out on stage, not to mention the ever-present but as yet unverified danger of spontaneous combustion.
    Kyle Pilon    15 October 2006 09:26