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After experimenting with band names, such as [[Childish Intentions]] and Stricken, they decided on Evanescence, which means "disappearance" or "fading away" (from the word evanesce, which means "to disappear").<ref name=washingtonpost2003 /> They released two EPs (''[[Evanescence EP]]'' and ''[[Sound Asleep EP]]'') in 1998 and 1999, respectively. Very few copies of these CDs were made. Both EPs were credited as distributed by [[Bigwig Enterprises]].<ref name="eps" />
After experimenting with band names, such as [[Childish Intentions]] and Stricken, they decided on Evanescence, which means "disappearance" or "fading away" (from the word evanesce, which means "to disappear").<ref name=washingtonpost2003 /> They released two EPs (''[[Evanescence EP]]'' and ''[[Sound Asleep EP]]'') in 1998 and 1999, respectively. Very few copies of these CDs were made. Both EPs were credited as distributed by [[Bigwig Enterprises]].<ref name="eps" />


[[Image:Ev 1999.jpg|thumb|250px|Evanescence in 2000: [[Ben Moody]], [[David Hodges]] and [[Amy Lee]].]]  
[[Image:Ev 1999.jpg|thumb|250px|Evanescence in 2000: (from left to right) [[Ben Moody]], [[David Hodges]] and [[Amy Lee]].]]  


Since its start, Evanescence was the duo of Amy and Ben making the songs. They hired other musicians to perform live and perform on some of their recordings.<ref name=sydneyherald2004/> Amy said, "It was more because that's what we did and how we worked rather than not wanting any other input", and Ben said, "Amy and I just wanted to write all the time and we didn't want to bring a full band in because we didn't want to write with them, basically. We just wanted it to be the two of us and so we'd play once or twice a year."<ref name=sydneyherald2004/><ref name=powerplay/>  
Since its start, Evanescence was the duo of Amy and Ben making the songs. They hired other musicians to perform live and perform on some of their recordings.<ref name=sydneyherald2004/> Amy said, "It was more because that's what we did and how we worked rather than not wanting any other input", and Ben said, "Amy and I just wanted to write all the time and we didn't want to bring a full band in because we didn't want to write with them, basically. We just wanted it to be the two of us and so we'd play once or twice a year."<ref name=sydneyherald2004/><ref name=powerplay/>  
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===Session Musicians===
===Session Musicians===
*[[Francesco DiCosmo]] – bass (2002; appears on ''Fallen'')
*[[Francesco DiCosmo]] – bass (2002; plays on ''Fallen'')
*[[Josh Freese]] – drums, percussion (2002; appears on ''Fallen'')
*[[Josh Freese]] – drums (2002; plays on ''Fallen'')
*[[Will "Science" Hunt]] - drums, percussion, programming (2010; scrapped [[Evanescence (album)#The_Lillywhite_sessions_.282010.29|Lillywhite sessions]] for ''Evanescence'')
*[[Will "Science" Hunt]] - percussion, programming (2010 and 2017; scrapped [[Evanescence (album)#The_Lillywhite_sessions_.282010.29|Lillywhite sessions]] for ''Evanescence''; appears on ''Synthesis'')


==External Links==
==External Links==

Latest revision as of 17:54, 14 July 2024

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  1. Disappearance like a vapor.
  2. The name that Amy Lee and Ben Moody decided to call their project as teens after looking in a dictionary and finding the word's definition.
  3. The name of the EP of the very first collection of Evanescence songs released by Amy Lee and Ben Moody in 1998. It features early versions of the songs "Where Will You Go", "Imaginary", and the outtake "My Immortal". 100 copies of the EP were made and sold at an early performance.
  4. The title of the band's third studio album, released on October 7, 2011 and produced by Nick Raskulinecz.
  5. The name of a lesser-known album by a band called Scorn.


Biography

1995–2001: In the beginning...

Evanescence was founded by Amy Lee and former lead guitarist Ben Moody. Ben said in interviews that the two met at a youth camp in Arkansas, where he heard Amy playing Meat Loaf's "I'd Do Anything For Love (But I Won't Do That)" on the piano,[1][2] but Amy later stated during a 2006 interview that they met after she played on the piano Bach, Beethoven, Mozart and two measures of a Meatloaf song, and the bit of the Meatloaf song was what Ben recognized and told the media she played.[3] Some of their first songs together were "Solitude" and "Give Unto Me", both solely written by Lee, and "Whisper", "Understanding", and "My Immortal", written by Lee and Moody. Five of Lee and Moody's songs were played on local Little Rock radio station ("Give Unto Me", "Understanding", "Even in Death", "Lies" and "Whisper"), raising local awareness of them and public demand for a concert.[2] They eventually performed live, and became one of the most popular acts in the area.

After experimenting with band names, such as Childish Intentions and Stricken, they decided on Evanescence, which means "disappearance" or "fading away" (from the word evanesce, which means "to disappear").[4] They released two EPs (Evanescence EP and Sound Asleep EP) in 1998 and 1999, respectively. Very few copies of these CDs were made. Both EPs were credited as distributed by Bigwig Enterprises.[5]

Evanescence in 2000: (from left to right) Ben Moody, David Hodges and Amy Lee.

Since its start, Evanescence was the duo of Amy and Ben making the songs. They hired other musicians to perform live and perform on some of their recordings.[6] Amy said, "It was more because that's what we did and how we worked rather than not wanting any other input", and Ben said, "Amy and I just wanted to write all the time and we didn't want to bring a full band in because we didn't want to write with them, basically. We just wanted it to be the two of us and so we'd play once or twice a year."[6][7]

They released a demo album Origin on November 4, 2000,[8][9][10] which included demos of songs Amy and Ben had written and recorded in the '90s, some of which were on their 1998 and 1999 EPs. The writing of the demos on Origin was credited to Amy, Ben, and David Hodges. Origin was packaged to shop record labels.[7][10][11][12] 2500 copies of it were also made and sold on the Bigwig Enterprises website.[13][11] Amy and Ben encouraged fans to download the old demos instead of buying them online.[14] Origin was mastered at Ardent Studios,[4] where the producer Pete Matthews heard it and offered to send the demos to his friend Diana Meltzer, from Wind-up Records.[15][16][17]

In 2003, Amy said of their early pre-Fallen music:

Vin1.jpg We didn't have the means to make it sound like we wanted. In our heads, we wanted strings and choirs and all this dramatic, cinematic stuff that we couldn't have because we were just two kids in a basement. [...] some of the songs on Fallen we wrote at 15 and 16, so that vision's been there since the first year when we started being really creative about what we wanted."[4] Vin2.jpg

She said that their early years "was nothing more than a lot of song-writing and home recording. ... we were still finding ourselves- learning how to write. I've always felt that our music has grown and improved tremendously since then and want to keep doing better and better than before, instead of looking back. To be honest, it's hard to listen to the really old stuff without laughing at myself a little. But of course those songs will always be special to me, and remind me of a time in my life that was both wonderful and terrible."[9] She said she and Ben were recording artists in the early years, adding "it was more like an electronic duo, and then pulling in band elements was always like, “Who will do a show with us?” And we’d gather up a drummer, and a bass player, and another guitar player, and promise them pizza and play a show."[18]

Ben said in 2003:

Vin1.jpg "What we had in our head was Fallen, although it was a long time ago and we didn't have the technology, so a lot of our early recordings were just shit. We did them in our home and they sounded like shit [...] The [old demo] songs are not available. A lot of that stuff is on Fallen and the EPs were really just a means... like I'd burn off on my computer CDs we could sell ourselves at our shows so we could go out and buy pizza. They really weren't official releases. I don't remember how many we put out."[7] Vin2.jpg


2001–2005: Fallen era

Evanescence was signed by Wind-up in 2001.[19][20] The label flew them to New York, and then to Los Angeles, where they worked on the album for two years.[12][4] Dave Fortman was brought in to produce it.[17] David Hodges was fired from the band for unknown reasons in December of 2002, four months before Fallen was released. It was thought that it was because he wanted them to be in the Christian music scene, which Ben and Amy did not want.[21][22] Ben said in 2003:

Vin1.jpg We just ended up going in different directions. We worked well together for a while and then it was like... he's probably going to release solo stuff next year. If you can get a hold of that, you'll understand and you'll see how drastically different it is. We were just going in different directions so we chose to split ways before we built the whole image of the band based on somebody that wasn't going to be there.[12] Vin2.jpg


Evanescence in 2003 (with the touring lineup): Rocky Gray, Amy Lee, Will Boyd, Ben Moody and John LeCompt.

In January of 2003, the Mystary EP was sold during a concert as a "Fallen Sampler". The Daredevil movie soundtrack was released on February 4, 2003, featuring Evanescence's "Bring Me to Life" and "My Immortal". Fallen was released on March 4, 2003 by Wind-up. "Bring Me to Life", the first single off Fallen, was a global hit for the band and reached #5 on the US Billboard Hot 100. Fallen spent 43 weeks on the Billboard Top 10, was certified 7x Platinum in the United States and sold more than 17 million copies worldwide; the album was listed for 104 weeks on the Billboard 200, and it was one of eight albums in the history of the chart to spend at least a year on the Billboard Top 50.

Wind-up Records originally wanted the band to hire a full-time male co-vocalist and feature him on eight out of the eleven songs on Fallen.[23][24] Record label executives initially refused to release the album unless the band would agree to do this.[25] The band refused to do it, and later agreed to add a male vocal on only one song: "Bring Me to Life."[23] Amy said she was told by "someone in the [music] industry" that their music wasn't "marketable" if they didn't hire a rock rapper in the band and that the best part of "Bring Me to Life" was the male rapper.[24]

The label's president Ed Vetri revealed that when the label first introduced the song to radio, radio programmers rejected it, saying, "A chick and a piano? Are you kidding? On rock radio?"[26] Some program directors would hear the female voice and piano at the start of the song and turn it off without listening to the rest of the song.[12][27] A female voice on rock radio was a rarity, and the song was considered for airplay only after there was a male vocal on it.[4] After the song was released on the Daredevil soundtrack, listeners began requesting airplay for it, compelling radio stations to reconsider the band.[27]

On October 22, 2003, Moody left the band in the middle of the European tour, reportedly because of creative differences.[28][29][30] In 2004, Amy Lee said: "It's actually been a relief, I don't mean that as a negative toward Ben, but we've all been through a lot and we were at breaking point. And the thing is, we'd gotten to a point that if something didn't change, we wouldn't have been able to make a second record."[6] In 2006, she stated that "It just got to the point where he hated the band, he hated being on tour and his negativity made everyone around him miserable. He was trying to pull the whole ship down with him."[31]

In 2005, Moody said that part of the reason he left was because of creative differences.[32] In 2010, he commented again in an "open letter" post he published. In 2011, Lee was asked if she responded to his letter and if she and him have ever talked since 2003, and she said: "we don’t talk. We don't have a relationship. ... I don’t want to say why, but no, I didn’t respond. I think we’re probably both better off not being in each others’ lives."[33]

Terry Balsamo, former guitarist from Cold, joined the band replacing Moody.[34]

The three other singles released from Fallen during 2003 and 2004 are "Going Under", "Everybody's Fool" and "My Immortal", which later became one of the most popular Evanescence songs.

In 2004, Evanescence released a live album + DVD set: Anywhere but Home was released November 22, 2004, and consists of a concert at the Zenith in Paris on May 25, a behind-the-scenes footage and the music videos off Fallen. Also on the CD are the live songs "Breathe No More" (from the Elektra movie soundtrack, released in 2005), "Farther Away", and the band's cover of Korn's "Thoughtless", along with the studio version of the B-side "Missing".

2006–2009: The Open Door era

A spokesperson for the band's label confirmed on July 14, 2006 that Will Boyd had left Evanescence on good terms in late June for "not wanting to do another big tour" and wanting "to be close to his family", after the recording of The Open Door was completed.[35][36] In an interview with MTV, posted on their website on August 10, 2006, Lee announced he would have been replaced by Tim McCord.[37]

Evanescence circa 2006-2007: Rocky Gray, Tim McCord, Amy Lee, Terry Balsamo and John LeCompt.

The album progressed slowly for several reasons, including Amy Lee's desire to maximize the creative process and not rush production,[38] other band members' side projects, guitarist Terry Balsamo's stroke, and the loss of their former manager.[39][38] The album was almost scrapped by the label, but eventually Amy fought them over and was given the green-light to move forward with the album.[40] The Open Door is Evanescence's second official album and third album overall; it was released on September 25, 2006. The album was recorded at The Record Plant in Hollywood, California, and mixed at Ocean Way Studios in March of 2006.[41][42] It debuted at #1 in the US, Australia, Germany, Greece, Japan, and Switzerland and was in the Top 5 in Austria, Canada, France, Holland, Hong Kong, Italy, New Zealand, Sweden, UK, Ireland, Korea, Norway, and Denmark. The album was preceded by the single "Call Me When You're Sober", the music video for the song, based on a Little Riding Hood concept, was released on September 25. The tour for The Open Door began on October 5, 2006, in Toronto and included locations in Canada, the U.S. and Europe during that year. This first tour continued on January 5, 2007 and included stops in Canada (alongside band Stone Sour), Japan and Australia (alongside band Shihad) and then returned to the U.S. for a second tour in the spring (alongside bands Chevelle and Finger Eleven). They also co-headlined on the Family Values Tour 2007 along with Korn and other bands.

John was officially "fired" from Evanescence on May 4th, 2007.[43] Rocky officially left Evanescence on May 4th, 2007,[43] some people believe he did it in order to protest over John getting fired, but this wasn't the reason. Rocky had already decided to leave Evanescence in January. His contract with Wind-up said that he had to finish the tour first. He wasn't allowed to say anything about his plans about leaving either. When John was fired, he defied Wind-up and told the fans anyway. Wind-up issued a press release on May 17, 2007, stating that Will Hunt (drums) and Troy McLawhorn (guitar) from Dark New Day would go on tour with Evanescence as guest members until the end of the Family Values Tour in September 2007,[44] but both continued to play with the band through The Open Door Tour. Amy revealed on EvThreads that the reason John was fired is because "they were very vocal about the fact that they didn't really care about Evanescence at all, and just stayed around for the money. I knowingly let this negative energy grow within my band for a very long time because I was afraid of the appearance of falling apart, when in reality, trying to hold on to these guys is what was holding us back. I treated both John and Rocky with nothing but kindness and respect, and I got nothing but jealousy and resentment in return. They were miserable. They are no longer playing with us because I love this band too much to see it driven into the ground."[45] The Open Door Tour ended on December 9, 2007.[46]

2009–2012: Evanescence era

In a news posting to the Evanescence website in June 2009, Amy Lee wrote that the band was in the process of writing new material for a new album scheduled for release in 2010. She stated that the music would be an evolution of previous works and be "better, stronger, and more interesting".[47] On September 1, 2009, Amy Lee announced Evanescence's headline appearance at the Maquinária Festival in São Paulo, Brazil, which took place on November 8.[48] On November 4 Evanescence played a "warm-up show" in New York, Manhattan Center Grand Ballroom.[49] "Together Again", an outtake from The Open Door, was released as a digital download on January 22, 2010, to benefit the United Nations Foundation for their Haiti earthquake recovery efforts. The download was free with a 5$ minimum donation.[50] It later received wide release as a digital download on February 23, 2010.

Evanescence circa 2011-2015: Tim McCord, Terry Balsamo, Amy Lee, Troy McLawhorn and Will Hunt.

As announced on January 8 through Twitter, Evanescence entered the studio for the third album on February 22 to begin recording.[51] Will "Science" Hunt joined the band as primary drummer and programmer, while Will Hunt returned as secondary drummer. David Campbell, who previously worked on The Open Door, was brought back to handle string arrangements, and the album was to be produced by Steve Lillywhite.[52] The sound of the new album was described as "synthetic and atmospheric" quoting influences like Portishead, Massive Attack and Björk.[52][53] The album was intended to be released during Fall 2010,[53][54]; however, on June 21, 2010, it was announced that Evanescence had temporarily left the studio to work further on the album in April that year[55] and "get our heads into the right creative space" and indicated that Wind-up Records was going through "uncertain times", which may further delay release of the album.[56] It was later revealed that the label scrapped the album produced by Lillywhite,[57][58] stating it "didn't sound like Evanescence".[59] Only three songs from the original project ended up on the final album.[57]

On Amy's birthday on December 13, 2010, Amy posted on EvThreads that she had "high hopes for 2011" and she was in Northern California writing music with Terry and Tim,[60] and finally on February 2, 2011, Amy announced on EvThreads that the band is starting pre-production on the album,[61] but it was revealed that the band switched producers to Nick Raskulinecz.[62] Amy later revealed on Twitter that the album will be released on October 4, 2011 and Troy McLawhorn joined the band again.[63] Later, on July 11, 2011 it was reported by MTV News that the release date for the album had been pushed back to October 11, and that the first single from the album will be "What You Want".[64] The album was released on October 7, 2011 in Australia, Germany and Ireland, October 10, 2011 in the United Kingdom and Poland, and October 11, 2011 in the United States. The tour to support the album began on August 17, 2011.[65] The band paused their tour to take part in the Carnival of Madness Tour alongside Halestorm, Cavo, New Medicine and Chevelle. This tour began on July 31, 2012, in Springfield, Illinois, and ran through September 2, 2012, ending in Buffalo, New York. The tour wrapped with a series of shows in the UK, ending on November 9, 2012, in London's Wembley Arena. In an interview with NME in September 2012 when asked if the band would be writing a fourth album, Amy said, "I'm thinking we'll take a break first. I'm really not sure what I'll do next. At the end of any really long tour you need to get your head in order. I think at the end of the run we'll go on a break for a while and figure things out." And she also said in the interview that she doesn't know how long the break will be, although she doesn't want it to take another five years, she "can't put a timeline on it either."[66]

2012–2018: Hiatus, Live Return, The Ultimate Collection and Synthesis era

After finishing touring their third album, Evanescence were on hiatus, and with that, the band members began working on other projects.

In October 2013, it was announced that The Bicycle Music Company bought Wind-Up's back catalog, including Evanescence's master catalog from 2003 to 2011.[67]

Amy announced on March 18, 2014 that she is free from her record deal with Wind-Up Records after suing them for unpaid royalties.[68][69] She confirmed that she is "free do to anything, Evanescence included".[70]

In August 2014, whilst Amy was promoting her solo soundtrack album, Aftermath, she said in a Rolling Stone interview that "for the foreseeable future, [she] don't have any plans to do anything with the band",[71] which made fans think that Evanescence had disbanded. Because of this speculation, Amy posted to Facebook that "[she] never said Evanescence was over" and that "[she] has a completely open mind for the future".[72]

On April 26, 2015, Evanescence announced that they will be playing at Ozzfest Japan on November 21st.[73] Then in July, three more dates were confirmed for Nashville, Dallas and Los Angeles prior to Ozzfest.[74]

Evanescence circa 2015-2022: Jen Majura, Tim McCord, Amy Lee, Troy McLawhorn and Will Hunt.

On August 7th, Evanescence announced that Terry Balsamo had parted ways with the band, and their new guitarist is German musician, Jen Majura. It's unknown publicly why Terry left, but it's clear that it was not on bad terms.[75]

Evanescence played their first live show in three years at the Marathon Music Works in Nashville, Tennessee on November 13th. After they concluded their 2015 mini-tour, Amy expressed interest in playing live again next year if they are given opportunities. In February 2016, more live show announcements were made for SunFest and three headline shows in Florida.[76][77]

On August 22nd, Rolling Stone exclusively announced Evanescence's U.S. fall tour that will span sixteen dates in October and November.[78] During this tour, they played a brand new song called Take Cover, a leftover from Evanescence,[79] and the positive reaction from fans and the chemistry playing together gave them a "creative mindset" and that "[they're] playing the best that [they've] ever played".[80]

The Ultimate Collection vinyl box set was announced on September 14th.[81] This includes the demo album Origin, the studio albums Fallen, The Open Door and Evanescence, a b-side album Lost Whispers and a picture booklet that contains photos, lyrics, journal pages, designs and sketches. The pre-order link was made available on their official website on October 11th.[82] Unfortunately, the release date was pushed back from December 9th until January 2017 due to issues with the manufacturer. Because of this, Amy signed an exclusive poster for every pre-order and had them shipped immediately.[83]

When Amy was interviewed on AOL's BUILD series on September 30th, 2016, she hinted at new Evanescence material by saying that they do have "a new little plan in store" and that "there is some new Evanescence stuff [they're] starting at, but it's not exactly the most traditional thing". She added that "it's going to take you down a different path [they] want to try".[84]

The first of the 2017 tour dates were announced in December for South America and Europe. The Ultimate Collection began being shipping week commencing January 23rd.[85] The b-side album, Lost Whispers, was made available on digital music platforms on February 17th.

Evanescence began their South American tour on April 20th at NET Live Brasilia in Brazil and played seven shows before concluding at the Movistar Arena in Chile on May 4th. During the month-long break before starting their European tour, Amy announced the band's new project, Synthesis.[86] In the brief explanation, Amy said that the new album is called Synthesis because it's about "the synergy between the organic and the synthetic, and also the past and the present". The album will feature songs from their catalog of music that will be stripped of the distorted guitars and rock drums and replaced with "full orchestration and a completely synthetic world of beats and sounds". Amy made it very clear that the songs are not remixes and that they will be recording "from the ground up". As well as the songs the fans will know, there will be two new compositions included. David Campbell, who worked on strings for all three studio albums, will be arranging the orchestra for Synthesis as well. The new album and an orchestral tour are to be expected in the fall.

Synthesis album cover.

Evanescence began their European tour at the Caribana Festival in Switzerland on June 7th and played 18 shows, concluding at The Palladium in Germany on July 9th.

A month later, Evanescence announced that their tour, Synthesis Live, will begin October 14th and run through North America until December 19th.[87] Bring Me to Life (Synthesis) was released digitally on August 18th, which also included an instrumental version of the song. Amy confirmed that the release date for Synthesis will be November 10th in a radio interview with 93.3 WMMR Rocks!.[88]

The second single, Imperfection, was leaked to YouTube on September 4th and was officially released on September 15th. On the same day, Evanescence posted pre-order links for Synthesis and 2018 European tour dates for Synthesis Live were confirmed. The track list was published to include, in order: Overture, Never Go Back, Hi-Lo, My Heart Is Broken, Lacrymosa, The End of the Dream, Bring Me to Life, Unraveling, Imaginary, Secret Door, Lithium, Lost In Paradise, Your Star, My Immortal, The In-Between and Imperfection.[89]

In a Facebook Q&A with Amy, she confirmed that Imperfection will have a music video that will be filmed September 15th and will be directed by Paul R. Brown, a more "traditional" album will be made after Synthesis and Lindsey Stirling contributed music to Hi-Lo.[90]

On September 29th, Evanescence posted that they will be hosting a Synthesis listening party in New York on October 3rd. A live interview with Amy Lee at the listening party was streamed on Facebook, along with an acoustic performance of Good Enough, in celebration of The Open Door's eleventh anniversary.[91][92]

Australian tour dates for Synthesis Live were confirmed in February 2018.[93]

Evanescence began their North American Synthesis Live tour at the Pearl Concert Theater in Las Vegas, Nevada on October 14th. The Synthesis album was played in full, along with a medley intro of Amy's favorite classical pieces. Good Enough and Swimming Home were performed as the encore. At the second show of the tour, they added Speak to Me to the setlist, and played it for the remainder of the tour.

The music video for Imperfection premiered on October 19, 2017.[94] A behind-the-scenes video was later published by Revolver.[95]

The third promo single, Lacrymosa, became digitally available to download and stream on October 27th.[96]

Evanescence live streamed Never Go Back and Lacrymosa from their Connecticut show on their Facebook page. Some of the fans who attended the pre-show VIP posted online that they were told the show was being recorded for a DVD.

Synthesis was released in Japan on November 8th, then worldwide on November 10th. They finished their first leg of the North American tour at the Kings Theatre in Brooklyn, New York. The second leg began on November 30th at the Chicago Theatre in Illinois. For the encore, they replaced Swimming Home with a Synthesis version of Weight of the World.[97] They concluded the 2017 North American tour at the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall in Portland, Oregon.

Evanescence and Lindsey Stirling co-headlining tour promo picture.

On March 5th, Evanescence announced a co-headlining tour with Lindsey Stirling that will take place in the USA and Canada between July 6th and September 8th. Pre-sale tickets were released on March 6th 10AM local time in each city and general sale began on March 9th.[98]

Craft Recordings, who manage the catalog of The Bicycle Music Company, announced that they will reissue the b-side album, Lost Whispers, on blue translucent vinyl exclusively for Record Store Day on April 21, 2018. Only 2,500 copies were available to purchase.[99]

Evanescence began their European tour on March 12th at Crocus City Hall in Moscow, Russia. When it came to the band's two performances at the Royal Festival Hall in London, UK, a poster at the venue stated that they will be recorded "for use in a music video", which was later confirmed to be for Hi-Lo.[100] The leg concluded on April 9th at the Eventim Apollo in London, UK.

On April 30th, Amy Lee and Lindsey Stirling began promo work for their co-headlining tour. In a live Q&A on Facebook, they confirmed that the Hi-Lo music video will feature both of them in a live setting, with Lindsey's parts filmed separately. The music video was uploaded to YouTube on June 8th.

The co-headlining tour began on July 8th at the Starlight Theatre in Kansas City, Missouri. Evanescence added a new song to the setlist by covering Across the Universe by The Beatles, in tribute to Amy's late brother, Robby Lee. When it came to Lindsey's setlist, Amy sang the vocals for her song, Shatter Me, and for the encore, Amy and Lindsey covered Lana Del Rey's Young and Beautiful. On the second night, the encore was replaced by a mash-up of Palladio, Ozzy Osbourne's No More Tears and Sia's Alive. The encore alternated between the two covers every night depending on who opened and closed the shows. The Synthesis era concluded on September 8th.

The Synthesis Live DVD was officially announced on August 8th and was released on October 12th on multiple formats: DVD, DVD+CD, Blu-ray, Blu-ray+CD and Digital.

2019–Present: Live Return, The Chain and The Bitter Truth

After a short break, Evanescence confirmed that they will be "brushing the rock dust off" and played some shows in the summer and fall of 2019. Amy said that the band will begin writing brand new music later in the year and return to the "rock" sound.[101]

At the live shows, the band performed a rock version of Imperfection and brought back a few songs they haven't played in several years. At their headline shows, the encore featured a medley of Haunted, My Last Breath, Cloud Nine, Everybody's Fool, Weight of the World and Snow White Queen.

The first writing sessions began after the US tour in May, and the band wrote intermittently during the tours, still with no specific release date set.[102]

On September 17, 2019, Evanescence announced a joint tour with Within Temptation called Worlds Collide that will span 13 dates in Europe during April 2020. Amy said that for the tour, the band are going to get "really creative with [their] production" on stage.[103] The tour had to be postponed to September 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[104] And then it was pushed back a second time to September and October 2021.[105] It was postponed a third time, to Spring 2022. Due to travel restrictions, it was postponed a fourth time, to Fall 2022.

On October 14th and 15th, the band posted several videos to their Instagram story recording a cover of Fleetwood Mac's The Chain after Amy gave her vocals for the Gears 5 trailer.[106] The song was officially released on November 22, 2019.[107]

On November 30th, the band were due to perform at Knotfest Mexico, but unfortunately their set was cancelled due to security concerns with a broken barricade. The crowd at the festival grew angry, stormed the stage and destroyed some of Evanescence's equipment, including burning Will Hunt's drums. They used this as inspiration to use a set of burning drums for The Chain's music video, which was filmed on December 3rd. It was officially released to YouTube on January 9, 2020.

The Bitter Truth album cover.

Evanescence officially announced their new album cover and title, The Bitter Truth, on April 17, 2020, and said that it would be released in pieces throughout the year.[108] The first single, Wasted on You, was released on April 24th. The second single, The Game is Over, was released on July 1st. Both had accompanying music videos that were filmed at home and edited by P.R. Brown. The third single, Use My Voice, was released on August 14th and was originally intended as the first single.[109] Its music video, directed by Eric D. Howell and shot in Nashville, Minneapolis and Germany, premiered on August 28th. The fourth single, Yeah Right, was released on December 4. The fifth single, Better Without You, was released on March 5, 2021 and its music video premiered on April 16.

On September 9, Amy told Kerrang! that the album was nearing completion, with "seventy per cent" done, though she couldn't set a release date because she was still writing lyrics.[110] In November, the band were putting the finishing touches on the album, such as programming and orchestration. On December 4, it was announced the album would be released on March 26, 2021 and feature 12 tracks.[111] A deluxe fan box set was released on the same day, comprising a bonus CD with their livestream concert, journal, poster, and a cassette tape titled The Bitter Truth Evolution with exclusive audio from the making of the album.[111]

In her Kerrang! cover story on March 10, 2021, Amy said she considers The Bitter Truth the band's fourth album, and not 2017's Synthesis.[112] Following her interview, the album was leaked in its entirety the following day.

On May 10, 2021, the band announced a joint U.S. Fall 2021 tour with Halestorm that took place from November to December.[113] The last four shows were rescheduled to January 2022 due to multiple people in their team testing positive for COVID.

Evanescence circa 2022: Will Hunt, Emma Anzai, Amy Lee, Tim McCord and Troy McLawhorn.

On December 17, their cover of The Beatles' Across the Universe was digitally released for purchase and stream, as it was only available on a bonus CD on the deluxe box set of The Bitter Truth.

On May 21, 2022, it was announced via social media that Jen Majura parted ways with Evanescence.[114] The reason is unknown, but she said it wasn't her decision to leave.[115] The band said they would announce a new lineup in the next few days. On the 23rd, it was announced that Tim McCord is the new guitarist in replacement for Majura, and Emma Anzai is the new bassist.[116]

In an interview with Revolver on August 12, 2022, Amy Lee talked about future Evanescence music, stating that the band are "in that mode right now where it feels like it's time to do something," and "(they) need to just start playing around and getting creative."[117]

In celebration of Fallen's 20th anniversary, it was announced a special edition remaster with bonus material would be released in late 2023.[118] On September 28, the band released a remaster of a 2002 demo of Bring Me to Life. On the same day, they announced a remastered edition of Fallen on 2-LP, 2-CD, and digital formats that was released on November 17 through Craft Recordings.[119] Available exclusively on the band's official store is the limited edition Super Deluxe Edition box set, including the original album with bonus tracks on 2-LP, plus a cassette of 10 previously unreleased demos and voice notes, and a book featuring new track-by-track notes. The box set was going to be released in February 2024 but was pushed back a week due to manufacturing issues. All physical formats include previously unseen photos from the era.[119]

On October 13, the band released an acoustic version of Going Under recorded in Madrid in 2003 along with a remastered version of the song's studio version.[120]

On December 13, 2023, the band released a music video for Yeah Right, which was shot in the 2023 Latin American tour.[121] It was previously previewed through a tour diary video in October.

To be continued...

Band Members

Current

  • Amy Lee – lead vocals, piano, keyboards, harp (1995–present)
  • Troy McLawhorn – guitar (2007–present)
  • Tim McCord – bass (2006–2022), guitar (2022–present)
  • Will Hunt – drums (2007–present)
  • Emma Anzai – bass (2022–present)

Former

  • Ben Moody – guitar, percussion (1995–2003)
  • David Hodges – keyboards, backing vocals (1999–2002)
  • Will Boyd – bass (2003–2006)
  • Rocky Gray – drums (2003–2007)
  • John LeCompt – rhythm guitar (2003–2007)
  • Terry Balsamo – lead guitar (2003–2015)
  • Jen Majura – rhythm guitar, backing vocals, theremin (2015–2022)

Session Musicians

External Links

References

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  103. ""We Instantly Connected In A Beautiful Way": An Epic Conversation With Amy Lee and Sharon den Adel". Kerrang!. October 9, 2019. https://www.kerrang.com/features/worlds-collide-amy-lee-and-sharon-den-adel-get-together-for-an-epic-conversation/.
  104. "As promised, almost every date on the Worlds Collide Tour has been rescheduled!". Facebook. April 3, 2020. https://www.facebook.com/Evanescence/posts/10156824482351786.
  105. "We will officially be postponing the World’s Collide tour to 2021.". Twitter. June 22, 2020. https://twitter.com/evanescence/status/1275066223412129793.
  106. Watch it here and here.
  107. "The Chain (from Gears 5) is out NOW!". Twitter. November 22, 2019. https://twitter.com/evanescence/status/1197742250966413312.
  108. "We promised you a new album in 2020 and we won’t let anything stop us. We are proud to begin sharing our new album ‘THE BITTER TRUTH’ with you". Twitter. April 17, 2020. https://twitter.com/evanescence/status/1251180922046517248.
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  113. Shaffer, Claire (May 10, 2021). "Evanescence Announce Fall 2021 U.S. Arena Tour With Halestorm". Rolling Stone.
  114. "EVANESCENCE Parts Ways With Guitarist JEN MAJURA". May 21, 2022. Blabbermouth.net.
  115. Majura, Jen (May 22, 2022). "I feel the need to address that none of this was my decision!". Twitter.
  116. "Ladies and gentlemen, we have some very big news to share. Introducing our new guitarist… TIM MCCORD!!". May 23, 2022. Twitter.
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