Bursting out of Mission, British Columbia in 2004, Canadian pop punk quartet Faber Drive first got their big break as signees of Nickelback member Chad Kroegerâs label, 604 Records. Borrowing their stage name from their frontman, Dave Faber, the group were initially known by the mononym Faber, under which they released a self-titled debut EP in 2005 before modifying their moniker for legal reasons. Their first album, Seven Second Surgery, landed in 2007. It spawned three national chart hits including âTongue Tiedâ and âWhen Iâm With Youâ, both of which reached the Canadian top 20, and led the band to receive a nomination for a coveted Juno Award for Best New Group of the Year 2008. Following various changes to the four-pieceâs lineup, they returned in 2009 with a second LP entitled Canât Keep a Secret, which yielded two platinum-certified singles in Canada in the form of âG-Get Up and Danceâ and âGive Him Upâ and another minor success in âYou and I Tonightâ. By the time that the groupâs third album, Lost in Paradise, arrived in 2012, they faced dwindling chart prospects, with none of the albumâs four singles reaching the Canadian top 40. After parting ways with 604, they began to independently release new singles through a new label of their own, Tongue Tied Records. These have included multiple collaborations with Daveâs son, rapper/producer Isaiah âPowfuâ Faber, who scored an international smash of his own in 2020 with the beabadoobee-sampling âdeath bed (coffee for your head)â.
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