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Stay What You Are is the third studio album from American rock band Saves the Day, released in 2001.The album received positive reviews from critics at the time of its release and remains an influential album in the emo and pop punk genres.
On September 4, 2014, [20] Saves the Day and Say Anything announced a co-headlining tour, with support from Reggie and the Full Effect. The three bands were celebrating anniversaries. Saves The Day celebrated 15 years since Through Being Cool; Say Anything had their 10th anniversary of ...Is a Real Boy, and Reggie celebrated Under The Tray.
On September 4, 2014, Saves the Day and Say Anything announced a co-headlining U.S. tour with support from Reggie and the Full Effect. [42] On the tour, Saves the Day played Through Being Cool, Say Anything played ...Is a Real Boy (2004), and Reggie and the Full Effect played Under the Tray (2003). [43] The tour lasted from November 14 to ...
Two Tongues is a collaborative project between Conley, former Saves the Day guitarist David Soloway, Max Bemis and Coby Linder of Say Anything. Their debut album hit shelves February 3, 2009. In Fall of 2010, Two Tongues made their first performances as a surprise in the middle of Say Anything's set each night of the Motion City Soundtrack ...
Saves the Day was one of the more successful emo bands during the late 1990s and early 2000s, when emo was still primarily underground. Independent label Vagrant Records signed several successful late-1990s and early-2000s emo bands. The Get Up Kids had sold over 15,000 copies of their debut album, Four Minute Mile (1997), before signing with ...
AJ Turner is a 32-year-old musician. "The emo subculture was more than just a scene for me as a teenager in the noughties. "It was a lifeline at a time when I was experiencing severe depression ...
Saves the Day is the self-titled eighth studio album released by rock band Saves the Day. It was released September 17, 2013 on Rory Records, an imprint of Equal Vision Records, created by Say Anything frontman Max Bemis. The album was well received from music critics, praising the energy, diversity, and change in tone, although opinion was ...
It was the early 2000s: emo music was making its mark on the world, and Say Anything’s Max Bemis was creating a masterpiece—while simultaneously losing his mind. While the band has since ...