Liam Sutter is from Provo, Utah. Attended a private LDS-affiliated high-school where he participated in lacrosse, wrestling, and the careful observation of human behavioral systems. Developed an early fascination with strategic thinking, group psychology, and why emotionally uncomfortable truths tend to produce the best art.

Spent adolescence balancing disciplined athletics with increasingly suspicious philosophical interests. Earned limited acclaim for calmly dismantling weak arguments during late-night conversations. Once spent an entire winter analyzing crowd behavior at live performances instead of paying attention to the actual bands.

Has practical experience surviving avoidable snowboard collisions, particularly involving first-time out-of-state skiers (who’ve never seen snow before, and are strangely ‘surprised’ by how it works on mountains).  Liam has a reputation as a magnet for anything strange, fast-moving and on final approach.

Met future bandmate Jake Tibedeaux while Jake was interning at the Sundance Film Festival (Park City, UT).  Jake was briefly mistaken for a UAT (Unidentified Anomalous/Arial Texan).  The incident resulted in prolonged discussions regarding storytelling, identity, music theory, technology, and whether modern culture accidentally incentivizes loneliness.  (Fortunately, for all but the victim, a miniature styrofoam diorama of a proposed time-share community was the only well-publicized casualty).

Met Nathan while trying to convince a local Elder / Park City Deputy that Jake’s splintered-snowboard and crushed ego were sacrifice enough, and that they might be better off taking Jake’s unintended rampage of the time-share diorama as a sort of cosmic shot across the bow.

 

Developed several unpopular but difficult-to-refute opinions regarding fame, algorithms, and emotional manipulation in entertainment culture. Has strong interests in bass tone, controlled chaos, and songs that make people briefly stop looking at their phones.

Believes the best music does not attempt to impress people.
It attempts to haunt them slightly.

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