Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Through the Iris" is a single released by American alternative metal band 10 Years in 2006. It is the second single released and track 8 from their first major release, The Autumn Effect . It was released for radio only, as there was no CD single.
"Wasteland" is a single released by American alternative metal band 10 Years in 2005. It is their debut single from their first major release, The Autumn Effect.The song reached number one on the Billboard Alternative Songs chart in February 2006 during its twenty-seventh week on the chart, making it one of the slowest-rising number-one singles in the chart's history. [2]
On July 2, 2012, 10 years releases a compilation video on their website featuring another song "Knives" from their upcoming album Minus the Machine. "Backlash" music video made its premiere on July 27, 2012. [19] 10 Years revealed to fans the next single "Dancing with the Dead" from their latest record on October 25, 2012. [citation needed]
"Human" is a song by British singer and songwriter Rag'n'Bone Man, co-written by Jamie Hartman, and produced by Two Inch Punch. [2] It was released as a download on 21 July 2016 through Sony Music [3] and Columbia Records. [4] The song is included on his debut studio album of the same name, released in February 2017.
"This makes me sick." Home & Garden. Lighter Side
The US will honor the late former President Jimmy Carter, who died at age 100 on December 29. President Joe Biden declared January 9 as a day of mourning in an executive order – the same day as ...
Minus the Machine is the sixth studio album by American alternative metal band 10 Years.It was released on August 7, 2012 through their own independent label called Palehorse Records, which is a part of Warner Music Group's Independent Label Group.
"As you know, creating is not always easy. There's lots of agony that goes into it. Don't get me wrong, I'm not complaining, because this is how it has been since time began. If you want to make something really worthwhile and true, then you have to suffer for it." —Iris Dement, interview with critic Richard Phillips, April 18, 1998. [12]