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"Built to Fall" is the second single of American heavy metal band Trivium's fifth studio album, In Waves. This song was released on August 16, 2011. [1] It is the second single to feature drummer Nick Augusto. [2] The album featured a sound closer to Ascendancy than The Crusade and Shogun and features a more metalcore sound than thrash metal.
The Washington Post wrote that "the music and attitude are entirely predictable, but the 'hey-hey-heys' are rather charming." [10] Entertainment Weekly wrote that the band manages "to overcome the genre’s bark-and-lunge cliches simply because they’re so archetypal; these guys can actually make you feel the fury behind a song called 'Us Vs ...
[2] The song's lyrics are about pressure when it comes to songwriting and the attempt to make people happy because of it. [2] New Found Glory guitarist Chad Gilbert, who produced Homesick, was shown a demo of the song. The band immediately told him that it would be the album's opening track.
"Castles Made of Sand" is a song written by Jimi Hendrix and recorded by the Jimi Hendrix Experience for their 1967 second album, Axis: Bold as Love. Produced by manager Chas Chandler, the song is a biographical story about Hendrix's childhood, and was recorded towards the end of the production cycle for Axis: Bold as Love.
The song is played with 1/2 step down-tuned guitars, unlike most of Velvet Revolver's catalogue. Similar to "Sweet Child o' Mine" by Guns N' Roses (Slash, McKagan and Sorum's previous band), the song is in the key of D-flat Mixolydian, and is based on an arpeggiated riff around the Dsus4 chord. Weiland wrote the lyrics; Slash, McKagan, Kushner ...
"To Build a Home" is a piano ballad [2] that serves as the opening track to its companion album, Ma Fleur, [3] though it serves as the closing track on the Domino-released versions of the album. [4] It features vocals from Canadian singer-songwriter Patrick Watson , who also has writing credits on the song alongside Phil France and Jason ...
The song was the second of two new releases that Friday along with “Hits Different,” and new versions of two original songs from the album: “Karma” featuring Ice Spice and “Snow on the ...
"Carry the Zero" has received wide acclaim from contemporary music critics. David Fricke at Rolling Stone praised the song's "lyric mix of run-on, conversational syntax and curveball wordplay." [ 9 ] Pitchfork reviewer Jason Josephes called it "downright pretty," noting that it "merges Cocteau Twins -esque guitars and melody with equal sigh and ...