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Black Eyed Sceva

Dark Eyed Sceva didn’t last lengthy (1992-1996) and their result was hardly prolific (an indie demonstration tape, a single full-length Compact disc, and an EP), however they may lay some state to being one of the better bands from the 10 years, certainly inside the Christian music picture. The three-piece device (Jeremy Post, electric guitar and lead vocals, Brad McCarter, bass and vocals, and Brent Nims, drums) was a good one; their muscular, angular playing was both supple and fiery. The tracks, deftly created with some genuine poetry and cleverness behind them, obviously articulated the joys and issues of living being a Christian nowadays. Minus Nims, and adding Erik Herzog, the music group became the very much gloomier Model Engine, and appeared to lose just a little center even while the music continuing to develop. After shedding their record agreement, the group disbanded, with Post time for college. Sceva got their name from several poseurs in the Bible’s section of Acts. They often times caused Toad the Moist Sprocket’s Bruce Wintertime.

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