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Ignite is an American melodic hardcore band from Orange County, California. Formed in 1993, their commercial breakthrough album, A Place Called Home , was released in 2000 on TVT Records . Prior to this release, they were well regarded among hardcore fans, thanks in part to constant touring and having visited over 40 countries.
It should only contain pages that are Ignite (band) albums or lists of Ignite (band) albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Ignite (band) albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Our Darkest Days is the fourth studio album by American punk rock band Ignite.It was released on May 16, 2006 through Abacus Recordings.Following the release of their third studio album A Place Called Home (2000), the band left their label, went through line-up changes, and the members focused their time on the side project California United.
A Place Called Home is a full-length album by Californian hardcore punk band Ignite.The record was first released on June 13, 2000, [1] and released in Europe in February 2001 to coincide with the band participating in the Vans Club Tour that same month.
Scarred for Life is the debut album by Californian melodic hardcore band Ignite. Track listing. Automatic (3:16) ... (Ignite album) at Discogs; Scarred for Life at ...
The album contains the hidden track "Falu" ("Village" in Hungarian), which is the Hungarian version of "Where I'm From". It is Ignite's final album with long-time vocalist Zoltán "Zoli" Téglás, who left the band in 2020.
Ignite (band), a melodic hardcore band from Orange County, California; Ignite (Econoline Crush album), 2007; Ignite (Shihad album), 2010 "Ignite" (Eir Aoi song), a single by Japanese singer Eir Aoi "Ignite" (K-391 song), a single by Norwegian music producer K-391, featuring DJ Alan Walker, Julie Bergan and Korean artist Seungri
Ignite / Good Riddance is a split EP by the hardcore punk bands Ignite and Good Riddance, released in 1996 through Revelation Records. [1] Good Riddance's tracks were two of seven that had been demoed for their second album A Comprehensive Guide to Moderne Rebellion but had been left off the record; they were recorded in a separate session from the album, with Andy Ernst at Art of Ears, and ...