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The album debuted at number two on the US Billboard 200 after selling approximately 227,000 copies in its first week, just 0.18% below the number one spot, Michael Bublé's Christmas. [7] Nickelback toured in support of the album on their Here and Now Tour. As of October 2013, the album has sold two million copies worldwide. [8]
In 2011, the seventh album Here and Now topped the charts in Canada. [4] The band has since released No Fixed Address (2014), Feed the Machine (2017), and most recently its 10th album Get Rollin' (2022). Nickelback is one of the most commercially successful Canadian rock bands, having sold more than 50 million albums worldwide. [5]
The Canadian rock band Nickelback has released 10 studio albums, two compilation albums, one extended play (EP), 44 singles, five video albums and 38 music videos. Formed in Hanna, Alberta in 1995 by Chad Kroeger, Ryan Peake, Mike Kroeger and Brandon Kroeger, [1] the band issued its debut album Curb in 1996 through non-profit organization FACTOR, followed by a self-released follow-up The State ...
Nickelback bassist Mike Kroeger is the brother of the band's lead singer, Chad Kroeger. Over the past three decades, the band eclipsed over 50 million albums sold worldwide with music that ...
Nickelback performing in 2012. From left to right: Ryan Peake, Daniel Adair, Chad Kroeger and Mike Kroeger Nickelback is a Canadian hard rock band from Hanna, Alberta.The band was founded in 1995 by vocalist and guitarist Chad Kroeger, guitarist and vocalist Ryan Peake, bassist Mike Kroeger and drummer Brandon Kroeger. [1]
Both songs were released as singles on September 26 and available for download on September 27. The music video was released on November 3, 2011. "When We Stand Together" was used for the theme song of WWE's Tribute to the Troops. The band also performed this song at the event.
"Bottoms Up" is a single by Canadian rock band Nickelback as the second single from their seventh studio album, Here and Now. A Billboard review of the song said that it was a "surprising return to [...] bawdy arena rock," but that it was also "amazingly monolithic" and "lack[ed] the slick melodies of the group's past hits."
The music video for "Lullaby", directed by Nigel Dick, was shot in a factory in California [1] on January 28, 2012. [2] It premiered on March 22 on VH1. [3]The video features a constructed narrative interspersed with shots of the band performing in a cavernous building.