THE SKYLINE RADIO BIO:
      In late 2003, myself (Sean Houston) and Josh Butler began to jam with two fellas named Jesse McCartney (not the one from Dream Street) and Gareth Smith. We tried to jam cover songs and failed miserably. We weren't really progressing as a band and Josh and I eventually stopped jamming with the other two. We started to move away from covers and began writing our own material, which, in retrospect, I wouldn't consider music. We began to take the band more seriously over time and decided "Hey, why don't we get a bass player?" And we did. We jammed with Chuck Brooker, who was in a band called Passchendale at the time so eventually he decided he couldn't balance both bands. So this is where our current bass player, Ethan Latimer parachutes in. Ironically enough, he was in Passchendale too. We started doing a mixture of writing our own songs and covering songs. At the time, we were shooting for a kind of quasi-N*Sync/B44 hybrid sound but it didn't quite work out. Anyway, we did some terrible and typical cover songs for a while but then eventually we said "no more covers". We played our first show in February of 2005 and have been writing material since. Later that year in November, we recorded a 5 song EP with Jason Garden entitled "Atop These Burning Hills". We were called Susanna No Pants at this time and only until Chuck Brooker joined us around June 2006 was when we decided we wanted to make a name change. So we came to a general consensus that The Skyline Radio fits the style we were trying for (shifted away from the N*Sync shit, we wanted to do more hardcore stuff like Simple Plan). Once Chuck joined the band (on guitar this time) we immediately started writing then recorded a 3 song demo in July 2006 titled "Draw the Curtains, Hit the Lights" with Mike Delisle of 4Q Studios. Mike Delisle is a solid dude who has his own computer all fancied up to look "arcade-esque" which has basically every arcade game on it that you could think of. I thought it would be completely neccessary to add that in our biography. What's next for us, you ask? Not much.