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"The Hell Song" is a song by Canadian rock band Sum 41. The song was released on February 10, 2003, as the second single of the band's album Does This Look Infected?. "The Hell Song" became a top-40 hit in Ireland, Italy, and the United Kingdom. On May 29, 2015, it was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).
[10] "The Hell Song" is about a friend of Sum 41 who contracted HIV. Whibley spoke about "The Hell Song" saying, "It’s one of my favorite songs on the record. It's about this girl I used to date who I've known forever. Just last Christmas she found that she was HIV positive, and it was so brutal. She doesn't sleep around.
Heaven :x: Hell [a] is the eighth and final studio album by Canadian rock band Sum 41, released on March 29, 2024, through Rise Records.A double album, Heaven :x: Hell is divided into two discs; the first disc, Heaven, features a return to the pop-punk style of the band's early career, while the second disc, Hell, follows the heavy metal sound the band pursued in subsequent years.
“I didn’t go into this album thinking this would be the last one,” Sum 41’s Deryck Whibley says about Heaven :x: Hell, an ambitious double album of 10 pop-punk songs and 10 metal songs ...
"Landmines" is a song by Canadian rock band Sum 41, written by Deryck Whibley. It was released as the lead single from the band's eighth and final studio album Heaven :x: Hell on September 27, 2023. Background
All the Good Shit: 14 Solid Gold Hits 2000–2008 (known as 8 Years of Blood, Sake and Tears: The Best of Sum 41 2000–2008 in Japan) is a greatest hits album by Canadian rock band Sum 41. The Japanese version was released on November 26, 2008, and the worldwide version was released on March 17, 2009. This is the band's first greatest hits album.
Sum 41 frontman Deryck Whibley claims he was sexually abused by his former manager. In his memoir Walking Disaster: My Life Through Heaven and Hell, Whibley claims he was "groomed" by Greig Nori ...
The band appeared in Sum 41's music videos for "Fat Lip" and "We're All to Blame" and had at least one song on each of the band's first three releases. [211] The group's best known song under the Pain for Pleasure moniker is the song of the same name from All Killer No Filler , a track that remains the band's staple during live shows and ...