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On March 24, the same day the album was released, the band released a music video for "Hold Me Like a Grudge". The video is a continuation of the music video for the band's song, "This Ain't a Scene, It's an Arms Race". [7] [8] Pete Wentz called it "the most ambitious music video that we’ve attempted to make in the past 10 years." [7]
On March 13, the band announced that "Hold Me Like a Grudge" would be the next single of the album. On March 15, a clip of the song was shared. [27] On March 24, the same day the album was released, the band released a music video for "Hold Me Like a Grudge".
The music video for "Hold Me Like a Grudge", the third single off the band's eighth studio album, So Much (for) Stardust, acts as a sequel to the video for "This Ain't a Scene, It’s an Arms Race". The beginning of Hold Me Like A Grudge shows what happened after Pete attempted to stage dive, it is revealed that Pete broke his leg, and ends up ...
On the track “The Grudge” in particular, she sings about someone she had an “undying love” for who broke her trust and left her deeply hurt. In the first verse, she sings: Trust that you ...
"Hold Me" was the first single release of Houston's career. In the US, the song became a top ten hit on both the R&B singles chart and adult contemporary singles chart and peaked at number 46 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in 1984 and number 44 on the UK OCC Singles Chart in 1986.
Teasing the song, the band posted a photo of a package with a set of coordinates leading to the Field of Dreams movie filming site in Dyersville, Iowa. [1] The package contained another seashell marked 2 of 13 with a letter, this time printed was the date January 25, 2023, and a speculated song title "Heartbreak Feels So Good".
While the dictionary definition of a grudge is simply being mad at someone for something they did, “holding a grudge” refers to “a qualitatively different kind of anger than healthy anger ...
"Hold Me" is a song by the American pop singer Laura Branigan, which was released in 1985 as the second single from her fourth studio album Hold Me. [1] It was written by Bill Bodine and Beth Andersen, and produced by Jack White and Harold Faltermeyer .