Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On March 23, 2023, Silverstein announced Misery Made Me Deluxe, an extended version of the album which was released on April 7. [11] The deluxe edition features live performances and remixes of songs from the standard album, as well as new single "Poison Pill", one of two previously unheard tracks from the original recording sessions.
Song Album Label 2007 "Red Light Pledge" (acoustic) Punk Goes Acoustic 2: Fearless: 2009 "Apologize" (OneRepublic cover) Punk Goes Pop 2: Fearless 2011 "Stay Posi" (feat. Ryan Key of Yellowcard) Take Action! Vol. 10: Hopeless "Runaway" (Kanye West cover) (featuring Down with Webster) Punk Goes Pop 4: Fearless 2012 "Song to Woody" (Bob Dylan cover)
Silverstein formed in February 2000. [7] They self-released their first EP, Summer's Stellar Gaze, in August that year. [8] After several lineup changes, the band acquired Billy Hamilton, a local fan who learned of the band's need for a bassist on the Internet message board "The 905 Board" (an Ontario area outreach board which used to be for local musicians).
A lyric video for the song "Milestone" was released on March 4, 2015. This video consists of footage from Silverstein's Discovering the Waterfront 10th anniversary tour as well as images of highways and buildings. This is all overlaid by the lyrics of the song. On May 11, the music video for "Face of the Earth" was released. [10]
"Steal Away" is a standard Gospel song, and is found in the hymnals of many Protestant denominations. An arrangement of the song is included in the oratorio A Child of Our Time, first performed in 1944, by the classical composer Michael Tippett (1908–98). Many recordings of the song have been made, including versions by Pat Boone [6] and Nat ...
"Runaway" is a 1978 song and single by Jefferson Starship, written by Nicholas Q. Dewey for the album Earth. It was the second U.S. Top 40 hit from that album, and was the follow-up to the Top 10 hit "Count On Me". The song peaked at #12 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and number 13 on the Cash Box Top 100.
Discovering the Waterfront is a post-hardcore album that utilizes elements of hardcore punk, [1] power pop, [2] math rock, [3] pop punk [4] and screamo. [5] Rick Anderson of Allmusic noted the reduction in screamed passages in comparison to the album's predecessor, saying "they keep the screaming to a tasteful minimum, using it as a spice rather than a main ingredient.
The Arizona Republic also deemed it the band's fifth-best song, noting how it sounded "a million miles away from the angsty formulaic pop-punk of the first album." [15] Louder Sound named it Brand New's third-best song, describing it as "not a song driven so much by belief as it is a song about wrestling with your spiritual and religious ...