Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Pressure" is a power pop and pop rock song with contrasting horns and guitars, reminiscent of nerd rock. [1] [2] [3] The song features several interchanging riffs. [4]Prior to the release of the single, Muse frontman Matt Bellamy expressed that the single would be a "straight Muse rock track" [1] and return to the band's "classic" sound, following the release of "Something Human".
"Who Knows Who" is a rap rock song by the English rock band Muse and the English hip hop artist Mike Skinner. The song leaked onto several Muse internet forums in August 2008 and it was confirmed the band let the song leak. [2] The song was officially released as the B-side to the 7" vinyl single "Uprising" in September 2009.
It was released on 9 November 2018 through Warner Bros. Records and Helium-3. Muse co-produced the album with Rich Costey, Mike Elizondo, Shellback, and Timbaland. Following the darker themes of Muse's prior albums, Simulation Theory incorporates lighter influences from science fiction and 1980s pop culture, with extensive use of synthesisers ...
"Unintended" is a song by English rock band Muse, released as the fifth and final single from their 1999 debut album, Showbiz. It peaked at number 20 on the UK Singles Chart in June 2000 and reached number five in Norway in 2008.
"Thought Contagion" was released as a single and music video on 15 February 2018. [2] Speaking to Rolling Stone magazine, Muse frontman Matt Bellamy revealed that the song was written in late 2017, explaining that "I came up with the bass line and then I used a theremin, originally, to [create] this lead melody that went over the top."
Muse's new album, 'Will of the People,' marks a return to the guitar-heavy sound that made them festival headliners: 'We've gone back to our safe space.'
After Matty Healy Controversy, Muse Replaces Expletive-Filled Song With Even More Defiant One in Malaysia. Thania Garcia. August 1, 2023 at 11:25 AM.
Lyrically, "Compliance" is an anti-establishment protest song, in common with previous Muse songs such as "Uprising". [2] It features themes of oppression of the people, delivered from the perspective of the oppressor; lyrics such as "we have what you need, just reach out and touch" and "you will feel no pain any more" are an attempt to gaslight the population into accepting their oppressed ...