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I undid several edits to this page by User:Killingwithasmileuk in which they added additional band members to the article. This is only because of it being completely original research, saying they formed in 1999, saying none of the current members are original and providing no sources to support this is not how wikipedia works. Below is a collapsed table with the added original research inside.
Extended content
The band formed in 1999, by Andy Bryne, Mark Brown, Stu Dornan, Dan Baker, Chris Preddy and Adam Jackson. They were originally called 'Conspiracy Theory', changing their name to 'Bury Tomorrow' after inspiration from Matt Davies from Funeral For A Friend. The band released their debut release 'The Truth About Today', featuring fans favorites 'Seven Stars' and 'And A Champion Will Rise..'. Stu left the band in 2004. In late 2005, Dan Baker was replaced by Sam Glasspool. Sam was soon replaced by Davyd Winter-Bates. Chris was also replaced by Jason Cameron. Dani Winter-Bates joined the band on synth. During this transition period, they released a debut extended play The Sleep of the Innocents'. Dani replaced Andy on vocals in 2006. It was around this time that Tobias Young replaced Mark on guitar, but soon left the band to pursue his own project 'Ghosts On Pegasus Bridge'. Mehdi Vismara joined to fill the empty guitar position, and Bury Tomorrow as they are known today was formed.
I have searched for this and the location of this information is taken from a fan-made wikia page here, however is unreferenced. I find it highly ironic that the band was apparently called "Conspiracy Theory" however this is fake since we have referenced backing up fact that they formed in 2006. - SilentDan297talk10:28, 6 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]
May I add post-hardcore as a genre to the infobox, citing this as a source, as is done later in the text? I was going to go through with it but saw the note.----MASHAUNIX06:18, 12 November 2014 (UTC)[reply]
@Mashaunix: It has already been referenced in the "Musical style" section, but has only been referenced once compared to Melodic metalcore, so I'd suggest you find some more references to cite this genre, add it to that section then add it to the infobox. SilentDan (talk) 15:26, 13 November 2014 (UTC)[reply]
OK, I'll look into it, thanks for the heads up. I don't think melodic metalcore accurately summarizes their style, as there is a lot of different influence to it beyond melodic death metal.----MASHAUNIX15:46, 13 November 2014 (UTC)[reply]