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The album received positive reviews. In a retrospective review, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic declared that "12 Bar Blues is an unpredictable, carnivalesque record confirming that Weiland was the visionary behind STP's sound. He's fascinated by sound, piling on layers of shredded guitars, drum loops, and keyboards, making sure that each ...
On May 18, 2011, an excerpt of the song was released in the form of a YouTube video directed by Mark C. Eshelman, before Regional at Best. In the video's title slide, the song's title is spelled "Forrest". This could have been the title of the song before its official release, [15] or it could have been a simple typo. "Formidable" 2:56 Scaled ...
Two soundtrack albums were released for the motion picture Scott Pilgrim vs. the World: an original soundtrack and an original score.Co-writer, co-producer, and director Edgar Wright, co-producer Marc Platt, and music producer/composer Nigel Godrich, who also composed the original score, served as executive producers of both albums.
On analogue formats (LP and cassette) of the original release, the album title is shown as simply Stone Temple Pilots on the tape shells and LP labels. No track listing appears on the back cover, which instead displays the image of a decorated cake with the phrase 12 Gracious Melodies , which is a clue to a hidden track as song twelve.
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"Holding On to You" is a song by American musical duo Twenty One Pilots from their second studio album Regional at Best (2011). It was re-recorded and later made their debut single and was listed as the second song on the track list of their major-label debut album, Vessel (2013).
On January 22, 2019, fans of Twenty One Pilots began speculating that a music video for the song "Chlorine" would be released the following day due to a series of teasers that the band posted on social media, including a short clip of a dirty swimming pool soundtracked by a drum beat similar to the one found on the track.
The video begins with illustrations and scenery in relation to the lore created by the band (coinciding with the German, French and Spanish voices at the beginning of the song). It then shows the duo playing at the venue, which begins to fill up with people who are known as the "citizens of Dema", all of whom are showing no emotion.