Love And Theft Biography

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Love And Theft photo courtesy of Carolwood Records.

Stephen, Eric and Brian met not long after each arrived in Nashville, and their backgrounds bonded them as strongly as their love of music. Each was born in 1984, first sang in church and developed an affinity for harmonies at a young age.

Stephen grew up in Palm Harbor, Florida, exposed to a great deal of early gospel and contemporary Christian music. He was a fan of Michael W. Smith and Elvis early on. As a teenager, he expanded his tastes to include everything from Johnny Cash to MxPx and has always loved the music of Tim McGraw and George Strait. He was on scholarship as the Head Student Assistant for the University of South Florida Men's Basketball team and intended to coach college ball after graduation. While traveling with the team he would bring his guitar and write songs, but it wasn't until reaching the state finals of the Colgate Country Showdown in his third year of college that he realized "music was where I was supposed to be." With his decision made, Stephen left college to pursue his dreams in Nashville.

Eric, raised in Charlotte, North Carolina, picked up an appreciation for Johnny Cash and Roy Orbison from his grandfather, who played banjo in bluegrass bands, and for the Eagles and Beatles from his father. He went on yearly mission trips to Romania throughout his childhood and realized early on "I didn't really want to grow up and have a normal job." He began writing songs and played in bands while at the University of North Carolina-Charlotte. In Nashville, Eric got a job playing bass on a six-week college tour. When the singer dropped out at the last minute, Eric was forced to fulfill the dates, so he hired a percussionist and toured singing his own songs. That went so well he realized his days as a sideman were over.

Brian was surrounded by music from birth and comes from a long line of accomplished musicians, including a grandfather and uncle who were noted jazz players. Growing up in Austin, Texas, he started playing piano after listening to Michael W. Smith then later began playing acoustic music, writing music and eventually started his own band after hearing the Goo Goo Dolls. Both an athlete and a musician, he showed up at Tuesday night open mic nights with his basketball warm-ups on after high school games. When his parents talked to him about his options in life after his second year of college, he jumped at their mention of Nashville and took off on what he viewed as "both an adventure and a life calling."

Their obvious chemistry enabled them to forge a distinctive three-way sound.

"We consciously decided not any one of us would be the lead singer," says Eric. "We all rotate singing lead, and see where the harmonies fall most naturally. In most songs, each of us will sing a different verse or the bridge. Then, our signature is that big three-part harmony on the chorus. It doesn't really matter who's singing lead or who's singing harmony. Somehow it just works."

"Love and Theft," adds Brian, "is in this really comfortable place that lands right in the middle of all three of us and makes us all really satisfied with what we're doing."

Once they had their label deal, they signed with O-Seven Artist Management and began working with producers Robert Ellis Orral and Jeff Coplan on their debut album. In capturing the energy and incredible harmonies they bring to their live performances, the project introduces country fans to one of the freshest new acts to emerge in years. Underpinning it all is an authenticity that resonates with audiences everywhere.

"We believe," says Brian, "that the most impactful music is written from a personal place, which is the way we approach it. The priority for us is to write something people are really going to connect with. Otherwise, what's the point?"

"Lyrically," adds Eric, "we feel like rawness and authenticity is a real driving force behind this band."

"Nothing beats country songwriting," says Stephen, summing it up for his brothers-in-song. "That's as real as it gets and that's why we're here. We love what it represents and we want to carry it forward."

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