Fairmont may refer to:
Fairmont (1040 East) is a streetcar stop in the Sugar House neighborhood of Salt Lake City, Utah, in the United States, served by Utah Transit Authority's (UTA) S Line (previously known as the Sugar House Streetcar). The S Line provides service from this station to the city of South Salt Lake (where it connects with UTA's TRAX light rail system).
The Fairmont stop (previously referred to as McClelland) is located at 2216 South McClelland Street (1040 East), immediately west of McClelland Street on the north side of Sugarmont Drive. The stop is on the southwest corner of the Granite Block. Just west of this stop the single set of tracks diverges to form another passing track at this stop, however the track do not yet merge heading east since the tracks end at the stop. The two side platforms are located on the far north and south sides tracks. There is very limited street side parking possible nearby, as well as possibly at Fairmont Park. The stop began service on 8 December 2013 and is operated by Utah Transit Authority.
Fairmont is an indie rock band based in northern New Jersey. The band is fronted by longtime indie/punk music veteran Neil Sabatino. They have done several US tours and released eight full-length albums as well as six EPs.
After leaving Pencey Prep, Sabatino signed with Reinforcement Records in 2001 under the moniker Fairmont, initially an acoustic project he compared to Dashboard Confessional. The debut sixteen track album Pretending Greatness Is Awaiting was released on 3 December 2001. Work on the second album Anomie was delayed in March 2003 as three of the members quit the night before recording began. Soon after former Pencey Prep bassist John McGuire joined Fairmont, as well as guitarist Kevin Metz. During that year Fairmont performed locally, at Manhattan's Arlene's Grocery with groups like Fighting Gravity and Val Emmich, and by 2005 Fairmont had done three tours across the United States, again performing locally with Nada Surf and Ted Leo, among others. They also released their third full-length entitled Hell Is Other People, an album heavily influenced by McGuire's fondness of bands like The Replacements and Hüsker Dü. The content of the album was conceptually based on Jean Paul Sartre's play No Exit. It was released jointly by Reinforcement Records and Renfield Records.
It was all poverty
Was not heat around
When dignity is expensive
Masses always need a messiah
Do you need some crimes?
To feel you like a god?
Despise the loosers
High-powered cleaning
We come to fight
To use long knives
And when there is no light
Anyone can jump to fire
March! March! March! March! March!
March! March! March! March! March!
They will pay our pain
To see the world so fake
Somebody fighted for a nation
Someone will fight for the blood
Was a race cleaning?
Was a wotan revenge?
Was a demon cumming
Over the wordl ass?
Wake up!
Every dogged is always ready to make a war
Every dogged is always ready to make a war
Every dogged is always ready to make a war
Every dogged is always ready to make a war
Bleed, bleed, bleed!
Bleed, bleed, bleed!
Bleed, bleed, bleed! Bleed, bleed, bleed!
When the power rises
Nobody can't stop the rifle
Bleed, bleed, bleed
Bleed, bleed, bleed
Bleed, bleed, bleed