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Holding Onto Strings Better Left to Fray is the fifth studio album by South African rock band Seether. It was the only Seether album to have Troy McLawhorn as the lead guitarist. He departed from the band just before the album's release, once again becoming the rhythm guitarist for the band Evanescence.
Album US Hard Rock Digi. US Hot Hard Rock "Forsaken" 2011 8 — Holding Onto Strings Better Left to Fray "Suffer It All" 2014 11 — Isolate and Medicate "Watch Me Drown" — — "Stoke the Fire" 2017 20 — Poison the Parish "Count Me Out" — — "Nothing Left" — — "Beg" 2020 19 22 Si Vis Pacem, Para Bellum "Illusion" 2024 — 24
The album's first single, "Country Song", was released on 8 March in the US and on 4 April in the United Kingdom, [19] and the new album was released on 17 May 2011. [20] Seether reached their highest position on the US Billboard 200 Charts when Holding Onto Strings Better Left to Fray rose to the Number 2 position.
"Country Song" is a song by South African rock band Seether. It was released on March 8, 2011 as the lead single from their fifth studio album Holding Onto Strings Better Left to Fray . [ 1 ]
A remix contest for Seether's Remix EP, an EP release that has six remixes of Seether's songs from their album Holding Onto Strings Better Left to Fray, was held for the song through Indaba Music's website. Won by popular vote as grand prize winner, Neon Feather's remix of the song appeared on the EP and DJ Schmolli, though his or her song was ...
"No Resolution" is a song by South African rock band Seether. It was the third single from the band's fifth studio album Holding Onto Strings Better Left to Fray . [ 1 ]
Since then, Seether has released seven more studio albums: Karma and Effect (2005), Finding Beauty in Negative Spaces (2007), Holding Onto Strings Better Left to Fray (2011), Isolate and Medicate (2014), Poison the Parish (2017), Si Vis Pacem, Para Bellum (2020), and The Surface Seems So Far (2024).
"Here and Now" is a song by South African rock band Seether. It is the fourth single from the band's fifth studio album Holding Onto Strings Better Left to Fray, from which the title of the album is taken. A deconstructed version is found on some bonus editions of the album, containing only an acoustic guitar, strings, and vocals.