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"Perfect" is the fourth and final single released from Canadian rock band Simple Plan's debut album, No Pads, No Helmets...Just Balls (2002). It became a top-40 hit in the band's native Canada as well as in Australia, New Zealand, and the United States. The single's B-side, "Happy Together", is a cover of the 1967 Turtles song.
No Pads, No Helmets...Just Balls is the debut studio album by Canadian rock band Simple Plan. Formed by members of Reset, Simple Plan spent over a year recording their first album with producer Arnold Lanni. It is a pop-punk record that revolves around being an outcast, drawing comparisons to Blink-182, Good Charlotte and New Found Glory.
It should only contain pages that are Simple Plan songs or lists of Simple Plan songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Simple Plan songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Pierre Bouvier, the spiky-haired frontman for Simple Plan, can’t help but get a little self-referential.“This is sort of a bad joke,” he replies, “but sometimes I feel like life is a ...
Canadian rock band, Simple Plan, formed in 1999, has released six studio albums, two live albums, one video album, three extended plays and twenty singles.. In 2002, they released their first album No Pads, No Helmets...Just Balls, which soon became a moderate commercial success and was certified multi-platinum in Canada and the United States and platinum in Australia.
The song is in common time throughout and follows the basic ABABCB skeleton, wherein 'A' is the verse, 'B' is the prechorus and chorus, and 'C' is the bridge. The song's verses are in the key of C natural minor and feature a i-VI-III-VII progression repeated three times, with a chord change every two beats. The song then enters a prechorus that ...
"Welcome to My Life" is a song by Canadian rock band Simple Plan. "Welcome to My Life" was released to radio on September 14, 2004, as the lead single from their second studio album , Still Not Getting Any...
I still loved the chords — they were so emotional. So I wrote some new lyrics over it, and that was “Say It Ain’t So.” Brian Bell (guitarist): Ironically, Jason Cropper gave me a Weezer ...