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"Paralyzer" is a song by Canadian rock band Finger Eleven. It was released as the lead single from their fourth studio album, Them vs.You vs. Me, on March 1, 2007.The song's release as a single preceded the release of Them vs.
AllMusic senior editor Stephen Thomas Erlewine was conflicted with the album, praising the flourishes of disco-rock and funk in tracks like "Paralyzer" and "Lost My Way" but felt there wasn't enough of it in "a collection of otherwise colorless but capable by-the-book alt-rock", concluding with: "So, the variety of rhythms, along with the increasing emphasis on acoustic-based power ballads ...
"I'll Keep Your Memory Vague" is the third single (final in the U.S. because "Talking To The Walls" was only released in Canada) and also the third track on Finger Eleven's fifth studio album Them vs.
It was released in August 2010. This song, along with "Paralyzer" from their last album, has a "dance-rock" feel to the track. The song failed to be as big a hit internationally as the last album's lead single, "Paralyzer" was, failing to hit the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States and reaching the top five on any rock format.
Finger Eleven is the third studio album by the Canadian rock band Finger Eleven from Burlington, Ontario. The sounds on this album range from grunge and prog-rock to Electric Six-style disco metal. [3]
The video for "Falling On" starts off with the band playing in a digital-like white world made out of different dots. When the band nears the end of the first chorus, the dots fall and come back up. At the end of the video, the dots get sucked away and the band is left in the white world. The video reached number-one on the Much Music Countdown.
The song reached number two on the Alternative Airplay chart, staying longer than their number one hits at 43 weeks, beating "Animal I Have Become" by two weeks and "Pain" by a hefty 13 weeks. [16] The song is also the band's only cross-over hit to date charting on both the Mainstream Top 40 and Adult Top 40 formats at number 12 and number 13 ...
I went to school for music and the first time I heard this song I thought "Take Me Out." I decided to check into your theory as well and I gotta say, you could not be more off unless you were comparing Paralyzer to the theme from "Sesame Street." Youth Gone Wild and Paralyzer sound nothing alike... --Sarahnewyork 11:26, 5 September (UTC)