Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In Europe the second single was "The Way I Am", and its video was available on the official Staind website as of December 24. "This Is It" was later released as the last single off the album. The album has sold over 318,000 units in the United States alone.
List of singles as lead artist, showing year released and album name Year Title Peak chart positions Album US Hard Rock Digi. 1998 "Suffocate" [A] — Dysfunction: 2003 "Layne" — 14 Shades of Grey: 2004 "Zoe Jane" [33] — 2005 "Schizophrenic Conversations" — Chapter V: 2009 "The Way I Am" [34] — The Illusion of Progress "Pardon Me ...
Staind's fifth album, titled Chapter V, was released on August 9, 2005, and became their third consecutive album to top the Billboard 200. The album opened to sales of 185,000 and has since been certified platinum in the U.S.
Staind is the seventh studio album by American rock band Staind, released on September 13, 2011. It was released as a download, a standard CD and a limited deluxe digipak edition, which contains a DVD documenting the recording process of the album, plus two live bonus tracks (Live in Houston) for the European digipak release. [ 1 ]
It should only contain pages that are Staind albums or lists of Staind albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Staind albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Dysfunction is the second studio album by American rock band Staind, released on April 13, 1999, by Flip Records and Elektra Records. It is the band's first studio album released on a record label. Staind self-released their debut album Tormented in 1996. On October 23, 1997, the band met Limp Bizkit vocalist Fred Durst.
"So Far Away" is a song by American rock band Staind, released on June 23, 2003 [1] as the second single from their fourth album 14 Shades of Grey. The song enjoyed much success on both rock and mainstream radio, reaching number-one on the US Mainstream Rock Tracks for fourteen consecutive weeks, one of the longest runs in the chart's history ...
There was never any thought of releasing it this way." [ 5 ] The live acoustic version from the album The Family Values Tour 1999 was picked up by radio stations across the country and became a hit peaking number-one on the US Mainstream Rock Tracks , number 2 on the Modern Rock Tracks , and number 56 on the Billboard Hot 100 .