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Collective Soul rhythm guitarist Dean Roland has called the song's chorus "basically a prayer" and noted that the uplifting single was released during an odd time amidst heavy grunge. He noted that despite the song's unique feel, this circumstance wrongfully pigeonholed the band as being grunge.
The track "Shine" gained the band attention thanks to college radio. The cover art is a modified and colored version of a nineteenth century advertising image, [2] with the album's title added to the sign. The opening track, "Shine", would arguably become Collective Soul's biggest hit.
"Heavy" is a song by American post-grunge band Collective Soul. It is the second single from their fourth album Dosage . It was the last of the band's seven number ones on Billboard's Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks , as well as their most successful, staying atop the chart for 15 weeks.
Collective Soul: 2009 "Untitled" Ed Roland ‡ Collective Soul: 1995 "Vent" † Ed Roland ‡ Blender: 2000 "Wasting Time" † Ed Roland ‡ Hints Allegations and Things Left Unsaid: 1993 "Welcome All Again" † Ed Roland ‡ Collective Soul: 2009 "What I Can Give You" Ed Roland ‡ Afterwords: 2007 "When the Water Falls" Ed Roland ...
The band's live album, Collective Soul: Live, was released on December 8, 2017, by Suretone Records. [19] The recordings were selected by the band as their best over the course of 160 shows they performed in two years. [citation needed] Around this time, Collective Soul changed the name of their label from El Music Group to Fuzze-Flex Records. [20]
See What You Started by Continuing is the ninth studio album by American rock band Collective Soul. It was released on October 2, 2015, by Vanguard Records . The album represents a return to the classic guitar-driven rock sound that the band were known for during the 1990s .
See What You Started by Continuing. Released: October 2, 2015 ... "Shine" 11 1 4 — — 8 25 6 21 80 RIAA: Gold [7] ... Collective Soul
Editors at AllMusic rated this album 4 out of 5 stars, with critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine writing that the album "does indeed vibrate" with "dense layers of fuzz and intertwined riffs" and sums up that it is "the sound of a band being fully, completely themselves, relying on their song- and studiocraft, resulting in an album that's far more tuneful and vigorous than the group's veteran status ...