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Lead singer Chino Moreno appearing in the music video for "Change (In the House of Flies)". The music video, directed by Liz Friedlander, [9] features the band playing at a party. The people attending have apathetic looks and wear animal masks. The video was shot at a Hollywood, California estate in May. [10] [11]
The song featured a guitar solo by Alice in Chains guitarist Jerry Cantrell; this is considered unusual for a Deftones song. [110] Gwilym Mumford of The Guardian praised the album for its emphasis on experimentation and ambiance and noted the exploration work in the tension between the " croon " in Moreno's "soulful" voice, his "opaque" lyrics ...
The band can also be seen performing this song during the Day of the Dead festival scene in the movie. 2000 "The Boy's Republic" White Pony (limited edition) Appears on editions with black and red covers. "Crenshaw Punch / I'll Throw Rocks at You" † "Change (In the House of Flies)" On "Change (In the House of Flies)", it was simply titled ...
THE YEAR IN MUSIC, 2024: Year of the CD. WAXAHATCHEE (FEATURING MJ LENDERMAN) “Right Back To It” “Play a song about fucking!” an annoying friend yelled at a band between every song at a ...
Ohms (stylized as _Ohms on physical editions) [1] is the ninth studio album by the American alternative metal band Deftones, released on September 25, 2020, through Reprise Records.
As the title suggests, Covers is a compilation of cover songs—many of which were previously released on B-Sides & Rarities (2005) and the digital version of Diamond Eyes (2010). [1] Deftones record cover songs after each album recording session, [ 2 ] and the songs on Covers span their entire career up to that point.
Moreno was born in Sacramento, California, the second of five children.His mother is of Mexican and Chinese descent and his father is Mexican. [5] The nickname "Chino" is the Spanish-language term for Chinese people, a moniker "given to him as a kid by his uncles because he looked predominantly Asian, when most Mexicans are mestizo."
While the pop star kept some of the lyrics the same, she made the song her own by rewriting a number of lines, thereby changing its meaning. In Beyoncé’s voice, “Jolene” is no longer a plea ...