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L.D. 50 is the debut studio album by American heavy metal band Mudvayne.Released on August 22, 2000, [1] it is the band's first release on Epic Records, following the independently-released extended play Kill, I Oughtta.
For its self-titled fifth album, Mudvayne hoped to create a "white album", describing its cover art. [18] The album, printed with blacklight paint, was only visible under a black light (a light whose wavelength is primarily ultraviolet). [37] Mudvayne was recorded in the summer of 2008 [38] and released in 2009.
Mudvayne is the fifth studio album by American heavy metal band Mudvayne, released on December 21, 2009, it was the band's final album before entering an eleven-year hiatus in 2010. The material from the album was recorded simultaneously with the material that appeared on The New Game .
The Mudvayne discography consists of five studio albums, one live album, one compilation album, three EPs, thirteen singles, two video albums, and seventeen music videos. Mudvayne is an American heavy metal band formed in Peoria, Illinois .
Gray quit his factory job that paid $40,000 a year to move to Peoria, Illinois and formed Mudvayne. [1] The band's first album, L.D. 50, was released in 2000 to unexpected success, selling over half a million copies within a year of its release. [2]
The video for the song is directed and conceptualized by Thomas Mignone and is shot in two locations: At the abandoned Seaview Hospital located in Staten Island, NY (also utilized in the film Jacob's Ladder), where the four members are playing their instruments; and a seemingly mystic beach in a remote part of Malibu, CA, where an old, frail woman is going through the transition into afterlife ...
Kill, I Oughtta is the debut extended play of American heavy metal band Mudvayne.It was self-released by the band in 1997. [3] [4] [5] [6] In 2001, the EP was ...
The song "Determined" (originally titled "Fucking Determined") [15] utilizes elements of modern thrash [1] and hardcore punk, [16] while the song "IMN"'s lyrics revolve around suicide, [1] a recurring theme in Mudvayne's songs. The track "Choices" was described by Gray as "the eight-minute opus". [9] It is to date the longest Mudvayne song.