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List of music videos, showing year released and director Title Year Director(s) "Teenage Riot" 2001 Joe Escalante [47] "San Dimas High School Football Rules" Leif Stoehr "Summer Wind Was Always Our Song" Joe Escalante [48] "In This Diary" 2003 Steven Murashige [49] [50] [51] "The Boys of Summer" "The Saddest Song" "Not Capable of Love" 2006
From 2013, the Ataris began a North American tour with Kris Roe as singer and the former members John Collura, Mike Davenport and Chris Knapp to celebrate the 10 years of their most successful album So Long, Astoria. In 2016, the band released a six-song EP entitled October in This Railroad Earth through Bandcamp.
Blue Skies, Broken Hearts...Next 12 Exits is the second studio album by the American pop punk band The Ataris.It was released on Kung Fu Records on April 13, 1999. The album cover is the neon sign for the Blue Skies Mobile Park in Santa Barbara, California, taken by Roe.
The Saddest Song" charted at number 27 on the Alternative Songs chart. [59] " The Boys of Summer" charted at number two on the Alternative Songs chart, [ 59 ] number 10 on the Mainstream Top 40 chart, [ 60 ] number 18 on the Adult Top 40 chart, [ 61 ] number 20 on the Hot 100 chart, [ 62 ] number 22 on the Radio Songs chart, [ 63 ] number 36 on ...
"The Saddest Song" is a song by The Ataris. Described as a ballad, [1] this song was released as the third and final single from their fourth album, So Long, Astoria. [2] It reached #27 on the US Modern Rock Tracks. This song was written by singer Kris Roe about being away from his daughter, Starla. He also cites his own broken childhood.
Musically, the sound of End Is Forever has been described as pop punk, [5] [6] with themes revolving around Roe's relationships, and being lonely while on tour. [7] [8] Roe considered it "a little bit more dynamic" than their previous album, with "a little bit more intricate" song structures, incorporating the use of cello and piano. [9]
It should only contain pages that are The Ataris songs or lists of The Ataris songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Ataris songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Anywhere but Here (stylized as ...Anywhere but here) is the first full release on Kung Fu Records by The Ataris. The album was released on April 29, 1997, and was characterized by a straightforward, upbeat, pop punk sound. The majority of the songs clock in at two minutes or less in length.