Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Billy Gould (pictured in 2009) has writing credits on every studio album released by Faith No More. Faith No More collaborated on two songs for Plagiarism, a 1997 album by Sparks (pictured in 1974). The Virus 100 Various Artists compilation contains a cover of Dead Kennedys' "Let's Lynch the Landlord" (singer Jello Biafra pictured). Mr.
In early 1998, rumors of Faith No More's imminent demise began; commencing with a post to Faith No More newsgroup alt.music.faith-no-more claiming Mike Patton had quit the band in favor of side projects. This rumor, denied at the time, proved to be at least partly true. Faith No More played their last show in Lisbon, Portugal on April 7, 1998. [25]
The Greatest Videos in 2006 and the three-disc compilation album The Works in 2008. Two more compilation albums, The Very Best Definitive Ultimate Greatest Hits Collection and Midlife Crisis: The Very Best of Faith No More, were released in 2009 and 2010 respectively. After an eleven-year hiatus, Faith No More announced a reunion in 2009.
The touring cycle began with a run of European shows in early 1995, and Faith No More were supported by New Zealand band Shihad. They would go on to support Faith No More again for their 1997 Album of the Year Tour shows in Australia. For Faith No More's North American shows in mid-1995, they were supported by noise rock band Steel Pole Bathtub.
The Greatest Hits is a greatest hits retrospective compilation album by American rock band Faith No More. It was released on compact disc and compact cassette by Slash Records and London Records in Britain and Europe on November 24, 1998, and by Slash Records and Reprise Records in North America on December 8, 1998. [ 2 ]
It should only contain pages that are Faith No More songs or lists of Faith No More songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Faith No More songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
The first half of the video is taken directly from Faith No More's 1993 VHS release, Video Croissant (from "Midlife Crisis" to "Easy"), which covered footage from the band's first three Slash Records releases, Introduce Yourself, The Real Thing, and Angel Dust.
It is Faith No More's most successful album to date and is widely considered to be the band's magnum opus. In 1995, Patton released three albums— King for a Day... Fool for a Lifetime with Faith No More, which also saw the release of three singles; Disco Volante with Mr. Bungle; and Elegy with John Zorn, performing vocals all three.