"The P.I.T.S. sound like a steely midnight locomotive chugging through the … Read Full Bio ↴"The P.I.T.S. sound like a steely midnight locomotive chugging through the mountains on a snowy night. Their live show is moody, highly textured, dark stuff with a primal warmth and passion that really captivates me." --Luke Brogden, AC Entertainment publicist and long-time fan.
The small mountain town of Kingsport, Tennessee is not known for its rock bands—not yet, anyway. Years from now, rock trio The P.I.T.S. will look back down the road to Kingsport and think, “That’s where it started.”
It started with two kids—Luke Peace and Chris Bryant—a drum set, a guitar, and an amp. After blowing the doors off the John Sevier Middle School Auditorium with impeccable grunge, punk and surf-rock covers at a talent show in their seventh grade year, the boys knew they had something special--something worth evolving, working and fighting for.
Nearly ten years (and several bassists) later, The P.I.T.S. have amassed a sizable repertoire of over one hundred original songs, have performed with up-and-coming stars Gibson and Bishop of Rise Phoenix Rise, and received the award for Most Original Band in the Cookeville, TN annual Battle of the Bands in 2006.
The P.I.T.S.' signature style mixes shades of grunge, hard alternative and indie rock, and even a hint of psychedelia among dark grooves on certain songs, paying tribute to some of the most unique bands of the past two decades while retaining an uncanny individual flair and identity, an identity a decade in the making, centered around the seemingly cosmically linked Peace and Bryant.
Luke Peace's lyrics are introspective masterpieces, perfectly capturing the feelings of isolation, disenchantment and melancholy that often plague today's generation. Never political, never caddy or overly emotional, Peace is sometimes frank, sometimes dizzyingly cryptic, but always right on target. His intense, spaced-out vocal style recalls Thom Yorke and Billy Corgan and serves as the perfect vehicle for The P.I.T.S.' message.
Chris Bryant's drumming brings to mind that of Dave Grohl, Murph of Dinosaur Jr., and Jimmy Chamberlain of the Smashing Pumpkins--heavy-hitting, rapid-fire, entering every hole the melody might leave with explosive fills that don't dominate, but do what a drum part should--provide the perfectly incendiary punctuation to each song he plays on.
After honing their writing and performing skills for nearly a decade, The P.I.T.S. are ready to break out of their small town and show this country what rock and roll really is—pounding drums, growling guitars, thumping basses, and soaring vocals.
Their live shows take audiences on a rollercoaster ride from rock to ruin and back again. It’s time for the rest of the world to get on board.
The small mountain town of Kingsport, Tennessee is not known for its rock bands—not yet, anyway. Years from now, rock trio The P.I.T.S. will look back down the road to Kingsport and think, “That’s where it started.”
It started with two kids—Luke Peace and Chris Bryant—a drum set, a guitar, and an amp. After blowing the doors off the John Sevier Middle School Auditorium with impeccable grunge, punk and surf-rock covers at a talent show in their seventh grade year, the boys knew they had something special--something worth evolving, working and fighting for.
Nearly ten years (and several bassists) later, The P.I.T.S. have amassed a sizable repertoire of over one hundred original songs, have performed with up-and-coming stars Gibson and Bishop of Rise Phoenix Rise, and received the award for Most Original Band in the Cookeville, TN annual Battle of the Bands in 2006.
The P.I.T.S.' signature style mixes shades of grunge, hard alternative and indie rock, and even a hint of psychedelia among dark grooves on certain songs, paying tribute to some of the most unique bands of the past two decades while retaining an uncanny individual flair and identity, an identity a decade in the making, centered around the seemingly cosmically linked Peace and Bryant.
Luke Peace's lyrics are introspective masterpieces, perfectly capturing the feelings of isolation, disenchantment and melancholy that often plague today's generation. Never political, never caddy or overly emotional, Peace is sometimes frank, sometimes dizzyingly cryptic, but always right on target. His intense, spaced-out vocal style recalls Thom Yorke and Billy Corgan and serves as the perfect vehicle for The P.I.T.S.' message.
Chris Bryant's drumming brings to mind that of Dave Grohl, Murph of Dinosaur Jr., and Jimmy Chamberlain of the Smashing Pumpkins--heavy-hitting, rapid-fire, entering every hole the melody might leave with explosive fills that don't dominate, but do what a drum part should--provide the perfectly incendiary punctuation to each song he plays on.
After honing their writing and performing skills for nearly a decade, The P.I.T.S. are ready to break out of their small town and show this country what rock and roll really is—pounding drums, growling guitars, thumping basses, and soaring vocals.
Their live shows take audiences on a rollercoaster ride from rock to ruin and back again. It’s time for the rest of the world to get on board.
The Worst Off
The P.I.T.S. Lyrics
We have lyrics for these tracks by The P.I.T.S.:
April May There was a time Love is seems so hard to define Nothing…
Come Back Alive Chorus: I'll always come back to you I'll always come…
Goodbye to You It's inevitable everything that's good comes to an end It's…
Hospital I can't sleep another night while we're waiting for a…
NYU Наконец-то мы дождались этого, наконец-то Теперь люди записы…
Sky High Float through our fantasies Of how we'd imagine the end of…
Smokin [Ja Rule] Gangsta.. you know Huh, gangsta, see'mon, hehe …
Story Binks Beatz Brr, brr, brr À 15 ans il enfilait les gants Il…
The End Tell me who you think you really are Just like me,…
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
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nunya 🐝s wax - august 73
ring a ring a rosie
(the nursery rhyme about “the plague”)
🤣
🤦🏻♀️
wtfig
why are those 🤡’s there?!
i always wanted to do
glass fest😃
should’ve done it in the 90’s
when i had the chance.
fook 😏
lol
✌🏻🇦🇺
Jes
This is the worst Kung Fu movie I've ever seen.
Ben Severance
TheFatalitiesTV 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Roy-Z
IMDB lied to me
Skinless678
It’s hardcore moshing buddy
DeadOnABed
TheFatalitiesTV no karate in the pit tho
Paul Gold
1000th like. You are welcome.
veggiesaremurder
The one with the girls was actually good! It was just small which made it lame. They did a good job, they followed pit etiquette, and they immediately did the unwritten rule of picking someone up when they fall. There was nothing wrong with that.
SoYcD
they were moshing to beatboxing tho
stedmangg
still cringe
EvilPolitics
That was the best one in the video.