
One day, Furey went into Manhattan from his home in The Bronx and received a call from a friend who was having dinner with none other than Seymour Stein, the owner of Sire Records and the man who signed Madonna to her first recording deal in the early '80s. Furey went over to the restaurant and played "The Rejection" to Stein on his iPod. The label boss was impressed and eventually signed Dangerous Muse to his label.
The initial whirlwind of publicity in The Advocate, the coverage on major blogs and the viral power of MySpace made The Rejection," a bonafide hit on iTunes. The song was accompanied by a video that spread like wildfire on YouTube and pictured Furey crawling around a mic stand and Napack bouncing around with his vintage keytar.
After a couple of digital EPs that included new tracks like "Give Me Danger" and "Apart," things got quiet. The group took the time to prepare their full-length LP while also adjusting to the speed of a big label where priorities constantly shift.

Head over to their MySpace page to get a taste for all things Dangerous Muse including their new digital single "Every Day Is Halloween."

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