Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"45" is a song by American rock band Shinedown. The song was released on July 13, 2003, on the album Leave a Whisper. Following the album's release, "45" became a popular single. An acoustic cover of "45" was featured on the album's re-release on June 15, 2004. "45" placed twelfth among U.S. Modern Rock and third among U.S. Mainstream Rock ...
Leave a Whisper is the debut studio album by American rock band Shinedown.The album was released on May 27, 2003, by Atlantic Records, faring well due to the success of the singles "Fly from the Inside" and "45".
The song earned 5.9 million rock radio audience impressions, a boost of 5 percent, in the week ending Nov. 18, according to Nielsen Music. [90] On March 1, 2019, the band released the song "Monsters" as the third single from Attention Attention and was followed by a music video. [91] [92] On July 2, 2019, an animated video for the song was also ...
All of Shinedown's singles have charted on at least one Billboard tracking chart. Their biggest hit is " Second Chance ", the second single from their album The Sound of Madness . The single reached number seven on the Hot 100, number three on the Mainstream Top 40 , and number one on the Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks , Alternative Songs , and ...
"How Did You Love" is a single by American rock band Shinedown. It is their fourth and final single from their fifth studio album, Threat to Survival.The song was used in season 1 episode 2 of 9-1-1: Lone Star, And was featured as the official theme song of WWE’s Hell in a Cell (2017).
The song was released on June 1, 2022, as the second single from the band's seventh studio album, Planet Zero. [1] In August 2022, the song topped the Billboard Mainstream Rock Songs chart. The song was their 18th to do so, breaking their tie with Three Days Grace for the most number ones in the chart's history. [ 2 ]
"Diamond Eyes (Boom-Lay Boom-Lay Boom)" is a digital single by Shinedown, written for the 2010 film The Expendables. The song was released on iTunes on June 15, 2010, and to online retailers on June 21, 2010. [1] It is the nineteenth track on the deluxe version of The Sound of Madness. The song was released to U.S. radio on December 7. [2]
The fact that it was chosen for the album was a rarity; the band often writes 40–60 songs over the course of an album's writing sessions, and typically discards the earlier material. [3] The song's music video, expanded beyond the length of the song and dubbed a "short film" by the band, pokes fun of the band and the music industry in general ...