School chums Chris Brown and Peter Charell absorbed the heavy rock sound
of Korn, Soundgarden, and Metallica during the mid-'90s. Both were music
geeks and naturally flirted with the idea of getting a group together.
Casual gigs in school motivated them even more, leaving Brown and Charell to
design what would become Trapt. In 1997, fellow guitarist Simon Ormandy
joined the band. The trio recorded its own demo and landed gigs in and
around the suburbs of southern California. Within a year, Trapt were opening
up for the likes of Papa Roach, Dredg, and Spike 1000, but high-school
graduation loomed ahead.
Trapt's second album, Amalgamation, was self-released in 1998, but the
band's dynamic was shifting. Ormandy and Brown were attending classes at UC
Santa Barbara by fall 1999 while Charell was several hours away at UC Santa
Cruz. The band met up on weekends for rehearsals and shows, and also managed
to issue another record, Glimpse, in early 2000 with hopes that a record
label would notice. As luck would have it, Trapt impressed those at the
Immortal label after a stellar gig at the Troubadour one evening in late
2000. Talks of a deal were in the works, but Immortal dropped the band after
eight weeks.
Each member eventually dropped out of school and moved to Los Angeles to
focus solely on Trapt. Seattle native Aaron Montgomery joined to play drums,
and after a 9/11 benefit show, Warner Bros. offered the band a deal in late
2001. A year later, Trapt prepared their proper debut, and a self-titled EP
appeared in spring 2004. The band returned in 2005 with Someone in Control.
A live album released in 2007 -- simply titled Live -- was their first for
Nikki Sixx's Eleven Seven label. A year later they teamed with producer
GGGarth Richardson for their third studio album, Only Through the Pain.
MacKenzie Wilson, All Music Guide