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Feeding the Wolves is the fifth studio album by American alternative metal band 10 Years, and their third major label release. It debuted at No. 17 on the Billboard 200 chart, with 19,000 units sold.
On June 17 and 18, the band shot a music video for "Fix Me" in Columbus, Ohio with production company Thunder Down Country. [citation needed] The video was released via YouTube on August 9, 2011. The video depicts the band in a karaoke bar playing as various different characters.
It does not accurately represent the chord progressions of all the songs it depicts. It was originally written in D major (thus the progression being D major, A major, B minor, G major) and performed live in the key of E major (thus using the chords E major, B major, C♯ minor, and A major). The song was subsequently published on YouTube. [9]
Feeding the Wolves may refer to: Feeding the Wolves (10 Years album), 2010; Feeding the Wolves, a 2005 EP by Josh Pyke This page was last edited on 28 ...
The song was the band's fifth song in a row to top the active rock chart, [6] and their fourth to top the Billboard Mainstream Rock Songs chart. The song also made the band be the first to have two different songs top the latter chart, with "Killing Me Slowly" topping earlier in the year. [7] Sober stayed atop of the chart for two weeks. [8]
Lock Up the Wolves is the fifth studio album by American heavy metal band Dio, released on May 15, 1990.It displayed a complete change of musician line-up over the previous album, Dream Evil, including 18-year-old guitarist Rowan Robertson and Simon Wright on drums who had played with AC/DC from 1983 to 1989 as well as bassist Teddy Cook who was in the band Hotshot that morphed into Danger Danger.
"Wolves" is a guitar-driven alternative rock song with industrial, grunge and electronic elements. [2] [3] [4] Singer Shirley Manson described it as the album's "pop song." [5] "Wolves" was inspired by the two wolves story which Manson read somewhere on Easter-European folklore about "the boy who had the wolves inside and this wrestling of good ...
Pérez explained, "We'd sit down with a guitar, a tape recorder and a jar of Taster's Choice, and we were coffee achievers all afternoon." [ 4 ] The album's title and the song " Will the Wolf Survive? " were inspired by a National Geographic article entitled "Where Can the Wolf Survive", which the band members related to their own struggle to ...