Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The music video premiered on MTV.com and VH1.com and was directed by Gerard Way and Paul Brown.Picking up after the events of the "Na Na Na (Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na)" music video, "Sing" opens with My Chemical Romance as their alter-egos (The Fabulous Killjoys) driving down a freeway tunnel on their Pontiac Firebird with brief "television advertisement" clips from Better Living Industries ...
Song Writer(s) Original release Year Ref(s). "All I Want for Christmas Is You" Walter Afanasieff / Mariah Carey: Kevin & Bean's Christmastime in the 909: 2004 [1] [2]"All the Angels"
It should only contain pages that are My Chemical Romance songs or lists of My Chemical Romance songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about My Chemical Romance songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
The official discography of My Chemical Romance, an American rock band, consists of four studio albums, two live albums, three compilation albums, six extended plays, 24 singles, two promotional singles, four video albums, 18 music videos, and 13 original appearances on other albums.
This whole country album is an ode to love and heartbreak, but the 2018 song paints a picture of a significant other being so special it’s almost rare and beautiful with lyrics like “That you ...
"Headfirst for Halos" is a song by American rock band My Chemical Romance from their debut studio album, I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love (2002). It was released as a single on April 5, 2004. A pop-punk and glam rock song, the song combines an upbeat "arena style" composition with lyrics about drug addiction and suicide. The ...
"Famous Last Words" is a song by American rock band My Chemical Romance. It was released as the band's second single on January 22, 2007, from their third studio album, The Black Parade. It is also the band's ninth overall single, and the final track on The Black Parade (if the hidden track "Blood" is not counted).
[19] [2] The song demonstrates this meaning with dark, "edgy" lyrics such as "just like the hearse you die to get in again". [13] Sam Law of Kerrang! believed that the track, alongside its original meaning as a personal song, also could fit as a continuation of a previous song by the band, "Demolition Lovers". [20]