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Avenged Sevenfold (also known as The White Album) [4] [5] [6] is the fourth studio album by American heavy metal band Avenged Sevenfold, released on October 30, 2007, through Warner Bros. and Hopeless Records. Recorded in the middle of 2007, it was the band's first studio album to be solely self-produced.
In 2004, Avenged Sevenfold toured again on the Vans Warped Tour and recorded a video for their song "Unholy Confessions" which went into rotation on MTV2's Headbangers Ball. [ 25 ] City of Evil , the band's third album and major label debut, was released on June 6, 2005, and debuted at No. 30 on the Billboard 200 chart, selling over 30,000 ...
The All Excess video, released earlier in the year, topped the Billboard Music Video Sales chart and reached number 2 on the UK Music Video Chart. [8] [9] Avenged Sevenfold was the band's final full release to feature The Rev, who died of an accidental overdose of prescription drugs and alcohol on December 28, 2009, while they were producing ...
In January 2020, Avenged Sevenfold released "Set Me Free", an unreleased song recorded during the Hail to the King recording sessions. They also announced that the song would be included in a remastered re-release of Live in the LBC & Diamonds in the Rough , expected to be released on March 6 and February 7, respectively.
The video itself was filmed at Linda Vista Community Hospital in Los Angeles, California. The music video premiered on July 17, 2010, on MTV2, at 11 am EST, and on Avenged Sevenfold's website. An unedited version of the video premiered later on that day. The video can be seen on the band's official YouTube page. [14]
The problem was resolved the next day, and a lyric video for the song was simultaneously posted on YouTube. [31] On July 21, "So Far Away" was released to KROQ radio exclusively for one day. [32] "Welcome to the Family" was released to YouTube on July 23 with a now-deleted music video featuring gameplay from Call of Duty: Black Ops. [33]
SFA7X When the video was released, the site crashed due to so many people attempting to watch the video at once. After a second failed attempt to release the video, they solved the problem by hosting the music video on YouTube. This was the second video not to feature the current drummer for Avenged Sevenfold; the first being Nightmare.
In 2014, the band released a music video for "Chapter Four" to promote the release of "Waking The Fallen: Resurrected". [6] The video features clips of the band playing live, shot entirely in black and white. [7] Footage from the same show was also used to film a music video for Unholy Confessions a decade prior. [8]