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"The Reason" is a song by American rock band Hoobastank. Released on January 26, 2004, as the second single from their second studio album of the same name, the power ballad [3] [4] is Hoobastank's most commercially successful single, peaking at number two on the US Billboard Hot 100 and number one on the US Modern Rock Tracks chart.
"Out of Control" is a song by American rock band Hoobastank featuring Lostprophets’ frontman Ian Watkins and turntablist Jamie Oliver, [2] released as the lead single from their second studio album, The Reason (2003). It charted at No. 16 on the US Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart and at No. 9 on the US Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart.
"Running Away" is a single recorded by Hoobastank. It was the second single released from their self-titled debut album on April 1, 2002. The song peaked at number two on the US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.
"Crawling in the Dark" is the first single by American rock band Hoobastank, released from their major-label debut, Hoobastank. The song was released as a single on October 2, 2001. A nu metal song, [1] [2] [3] the single was their breakthrough hit and is their second most successful song from their debut album behind their second hit "Runn
The music video for the song switches between footage from live Hoobastank shows during their 2004 tour (supporting the release of The Reason), and footage of them performing the song at the Utah State Fairgrounds, in Salt Lake City during a local radio station's music festival.
Hoobastank recorded an unreleased version of "Inside of You" with the singer Rihanna.Both artists were on Island Def Jam at the time, and the label requested that the band potentially feature a "new artist" on the album; at the time, Rihanna had only released her debut album Music of the Sun and none of the band members were aware of her.
True story. There is a version of a @Hoobastank song featuring @rihanna when she was a “newer” artist. Displaying a total lack of foresight, we didn’t use that version of the song for the album.
The song received a positive review from Chuck Taylor of Billboard Magazine: "So Close, So Far" sounds like a better bet to return Hooba to the upper reaches of the charts: It's still credibly post-grunge, but a better display case for lead Doug Robb's fervid vocals, alongside plenty of howling guitars and pealing percussion.