Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"It's Not My Time" is the first official single from the self-titled fourth studio album by rock band 3 Doors Down. The song was serviced to US modern rock radio on February 18, 2008. Lyrically, the song focuses on "being resilient, going against the grain and going against the world when the world's trying to push you down, or take you out ...
3 Doors Down is the fourth studio album by American rock band 3 Doors Down, released on May 20, 2008. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] Its first two singles, " Citizen/Soldier " and " It's Not My Time ", were released in November 2007 and February 2008, respectively.
The discography of 3 Doors Down, an American rock band from Mississippi, consists of six studio albums, four extended plays, 29 singles, one video album and one compilation album. [ 1 ] The band's first studio album, The Better Life , was released in 2000.
"Let Me Be Myself" is the second main single (fourth, counting the promo singles "Citizen/Soldier" and "Train") by rock band 3 Doors Down from their eponymous fourth studio album. The song was released on December 2, 2008. [ 1 ]
On July 6, 2011, 3 Doors Down had an interview with K-Mart Music. The band discussed several different topics ranging from their influences to where they will be touring along with the dates. Most importantly, they discussed their new album Time of my Life , and what made the album different from the past albums they have recorded.
3 Doors Down lead singer Brad Arnold said of the song, "I think it's a song that a lot of people can identify with. There's somebody out there who needs to hear this song, and I hope they hear it. So many times, older people look at young kids and say, "Enjoy this time!
A two-disc Limited Edition version of the album was released in 2002 with a bonus DVD that included live video footage of the band, a behind-the-scenes "Making of" video about the album, 5.1 audio recordings of the songs "Dangerous Game" and "When I'm Gone", and the music videos "Kryptonite," "Loser," "Duck and Run," and "Be Like That" from the ...
The song was written by the band's vocalist and drummer, Brad Arnold, in a mathematics class when he was 15; it was one of the first songs he ever wrote. [5] The song is composed in the time signature of common time, the key of B minor with a tempo of "double time feel" 100 bpm, and the vocal range of B3-F♯5, according to Musicnotes.com. [6]