Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Blue-Sky Research garnered mixed reviews from music critics who admired the genre shift and lush production but found it wasted with angst-filled lyrics. Corey Hoffy of AbsolutePunk praised the album for Wright's stellar production, the band's controlled instrumentation and Richards's lyrics approaching close to political territory, concluding that "this remains their most complex and best ...
Taproot promoted Plead the Fifth with a headlining run in the summer of 2010, with support from Ice Nine Kills and label-mates Destrophy. [citation needed] In September 2011, Taproot announced they were preparing to record their eighth studio album, working with producer Patalan once again and recording at the Loft Studios in Saline, Michigan.
Label: Taproot; Formats: CD ... List of music videos, showing year released, director, and album Title Year Director(s) Album "Again & Again" 2000 — Gift
"Fractured (Everything I Said Was True)" is the lead single from Taproot's fifth studio album Plead the Fifth. It is the band's first single released through Victory Records. This is the band's first song to chart within the top 20 of the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart since 2005's "Calling" from Blue-Sky Research. [2]
Single by Taproot; from the album Blue-Sky Research; Released: June 27, 2005: Recorded: ... Music video. The song's music video was directed by Moh Azima. [1] Charts
"Poem" is a song by American alternative metal band Taproot and the lead single from their second major label album, Welcome. It was released in 2002 and met with the highest success of any Taproot single, reaching #5 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks.
Plead the Fifth is the seventh studio album by American alternative metal band Taproot.Originally planned for an April 13, 2010 release, it was delayed to May 11. The album marks Taproot's first release through Victory Records, having signed in November 2009.
During the early development of Welcome, Taproot had given producer Toby Wright roughly 40 complete songs. Wright said that while they were good, the songs were not up to the band's potential, and he forced them to start from scratch. Several earlier tracks were reworked for the album, while the bulk of the material was discarded.