Hauntingly ethereal melodies, intricate but memorable hooks, dynamic moods, crunchy riffs and the banshee wail of a metaphor-master lead singer collide within the groundbreaking and steadfastly unique outfit known as INTO ANOTHER. Almost disturbingly defiant of categorization, INTO ANOTHER's catalog dabbles in hard rock, alt-rock, grunge, electro-pop and post-hardcore, somehow without sounding disjointed or disorganized.
INTO ANOTHER came together in 1990. Richie Birkenhead, one-time guitar player for seminal straightedge flag bearers YOUTH OF TODAY and vocalist for the reggae-tinged hardcore band UNDERDOG hooked up with drummer Drew Thomas, himself a veteran of old-school youth crew bands CRIPPLED YOUTH and BOLD. Both men shared a desire to abandon the restrictive musical and aesthetic limitations of the scene without sacrificing its sense of community or passionate spirit.
The pair found exactly what they were looking for in Lower East Side musician Peter Moses, a longhaired guitar player who had never performed in a band before. His virtuosic and uninhibited playing style awed Thomas and Birkenhead, who next recruited incredibly fluid bassist Tony Bono. Bono had done a tour of duty in proto-speed metal act WHIPLASH, who once lent a member to SLAYER.
The following year, Revelation Records released their debut, a self-titled album displaying INTO ANOTHER's sharp musical chops and tripped-out spiritual vision, encapsulated by the band's eleven-pointed star logo which adorned the album's cover artwork. In 1992, INTO ANOTHER released the playfully titled "Creepy Eepy" — four songs that reflected their increasing range.
1994 saw the release of what many consider to be their masterstroke — the epic "Ignaurus" album, filled to the brim with spectacular songs that venture into deep, dark, and progressive rock territory while still being firmly anchored in melody, groove, and abrasive angst. This album catapulted INTO ANOTHER into the ranks of much-heralded "buzz" bands. INTO ANOTHER signed a major label deal of their own in 1995 with the Disney-owned label Hollywood Records.
INTO ANOTHER entered Seattle's London Bridge Studios with Rick Parashar, who had produced PEARL JAM's cultural mile marker, "Ten", as well as the TEMPLE OF THE DOG album and ALICE IN CHAINS' "Sap" EP. The band emerged with "Seemless", which reigned in some of their excesses in favor of shorter compositions and straightforward lyrics without sacrificing INTO ANOTHER's well-established musical identity.
The band set off on tours with groups including WHITE ZOMBIE and SEAWEED. The video for "Mutate Me" received some airplay and "T.A.I.L.", which spawned an EP of the same name, was a Top 40 rock radio track.
Even as INTO ANOTHER's relationship with Hollywood (and with one another) began to unravel, they managed to record another album's worth of material. Sadly, the record was never released and the band parted ways with their record label and eventually with one another. Any hope of a reunion seemed to disappear with the tragic death of Tony Bono in 2002. The remaining members drifted further apart as the years rolled on.