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Worth Dying For is the self-titled debut album of the Modesto, California-based contemporary worship band Worth Dying For (now Fearless BND). It was released by Integrity Music in April 2008. [ 3 ]
It features electronic music elements intertwined with heavy guitar lines. [31] "Worth Dying For" is instrumentally the fastest track on the album, and also touches on the subject of war. It features symphonic metal and djent elements that recalls Meshuggah, with fast guitar work, a guitar solo, and a skipping rhythm.
Christianity Today said, "even with vertical lyrics, the album could fit in easily with modern rock radio." [ 2 ] Jesus Freak Hideout gave the album an overall positive review and said while the techno and industrial blends are more of an "acquired taste", the album is "right up your alley" if a person likes their worship "edgy."
Worth Dying For is the fifteenth book in the Jack Reacher series of thrillers written by Lee Child. It was published on 30 September 2010 in the United Kingdom [1] and was published on 19 October 2010 in the USA. [2] It is written in the third person.
The song opens with a slide piece and quickly moves into a solo acoustic guitar capo on the 3rd fret strumming the chords of A, D and E before bass, drums and piano join in, respectively. Wyman's autoharp can be heard somewhat faintly during the first verse with noticeable 'ping' sounds coming from it around the 0:40-0:50 mark but it is mostly ...
Time Out of Mind is the thirtieth studio album by American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan, released on September 30, 1997, through Columbia Records.It was released as a single CD as well as a double studio album on vinyl, his first since The Basement Tapes in 1975.
Worth Dying For may refer to: . The former name of Fearless BND, American Christian band; Worth Dying For, 2008 album by the above; Worth Dying For, 2010 novel by Lee Child; Worth Dying For (non-fiction book), 2016 book on flags by Tim Marshall
The song ranked in music charts even before its official release. The song peaked at #52 on the Billboard US Hot 100 and #54 on the Billboard Pop 100.Although the song is the band's first charting single on Modern Rock Tracks to not reach the #1 spot since "Pts.Of.Athrty" in 2002 stalled at #29, it did however hold the #2 spot on the chart for nine consecutive weeks then got replaced by Three ...