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"Song #3" is a single by American rock band Stone Sour, off of their studio album Hydrograd. It topped the US Billboard Mainstream Rock Songs chart in June 2017, where it held the top spot for five consecutive weeks.
Stone Sour reunited several years later, releasing its full-length debut album Stone Sour in 2002 which featured songs from early demos. [1] Ekman was replaced by Roy Mayorga in 2006, [3] who performed on the band's second album Come What(ever) May. [4] The songs on the album were written by Taylor, Root, Rand and Economaki. [5]
MetalSucks praised the song for being "a really good song, a slower number at first that opens up into a rocker, and it only solidifies my impression of Hydrograd.Stone Sour don’t get a ton of respect from the heavier spectrum of the metal community, but they’ve been pumping out incredibly solid hard rock jams album after album for nearly two decades now.
The song was one of Stone Sour's first songs to put them into the mainstream. The cover features Taylor's hands and rings, one of them being a Spider-Man ring which is a reference to the song being featured on the soundtrack to the film Spider-Man (although the track is credited to Taylor as the performer, not Stone Sour) and to Taylor being a ...
Hydrograd is the sixth studio album by American rock band Stone Sour.Recorded at Sphere Studios in Los Angeles, it is the follow-up to the band's 2012–2013 double concept album, House of Gold & Bones Part 1 and 2.
In "Absolute Zero", the main character is stuck in some sort of other-worldly realm. Within this realm, two versions of Stone Sour perform the track throughout the area; one colored grey and the other colored gold. The man is presented with a choice, his body getting twisted and warped as he struggles to make a truly impossible decision.
These songs have appeared on Stone Sour's third album Audio Secrecy in 2010. These demos are posted to allow fans to hear the evolution of their tracks. Some songs have very few changes from the demo version to the final version, such as "Digital," whereas the demo of songs as "Mrs. Suicide" and "Threadbare," contain many differences compared ...
A video for the song, directed by David Brucha, was released in February 2007, combining images of corporate America with pictures of clenched fists of resistance, revolutionists such as Mao Zedong, Ayatollah Khomeini, Che Guevara, and AK-47 assault rifles. According to the Roadrunner Records website: "The video for Stone Sour's 'Silly World ...