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"Ronald" is a song by American rock band Falling in Reverse, featuring American rapper Tech N9ne, and Russian singer Alex Terrible of Slaughter to Prevail. It was released on May 7, 2024, through Epitaph Records , as the lead single from the band's fifth studio album Popular Monster .
The song features the lyrics: “I could play the doctor, I can cure your disease" and showcases the singer battling her inner demons. Four days later, she dropped the official music video, which ...
Inner Demons is a 2014 found footage horror film that was directed by Seth Grossman. [1] The movie had its world premiere on 13 June 2014 at the Los Angeles Film Festival and stars Lara Vosburgh as a teenage drug addict whose problems may be a result of demonic possession.
The music video premiered via Gaga's Vevo channel on YouTube at 18:00 Pacific Daylight Time (UTC−07:00) on October 29. [66] [67] [68] Gaga revealed via her social media that the inspiration behind the concept of the song and music video was her personal "inner darkness" and her relationship with her "inner demons". She expanded upon this ...
The second half of the video is an animation depicting Juice Wrld fighting his inner demons before changing forms and leaving Earth. [9] The video concludes with him disappearing into space. [8] Cannon first started working with Juice Wrld in March 2018 as a photographer and videographer. [10]
The act of exorcism was never more delightful than it is in Allison Russell’s elaborate new music video for her song “Demons,” being released just in time to really turn Halloween into a ...
The music video for "Need You Now" was directed by Mick Jones [2] and released on 27 April 2017. [3] The video charts a man's inner demons, addiction problems and continual self-destruction. Lewis explained to MusicFeeds: "Instead of the video being a direct reflection of the lyrics, we came up with this dark idea of this guy who is keeping ...
The album's lyrical themes explore Townsend's inner demons, past addictions, self-acceptance, and his "newfound ability to say no." [4] The album opens with a brief instrumental that leads into "Coast", a quiet, bass-driven track that sets the stage for the album as a "metaphor for Devin's newfound restraint."