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Talk: Pulling Teeth (song) Add languages. Page contents not supported in other languages. Article; Talk; English. ... Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF;
The song was written about Armstrong's experiences living in bad neighborhoods around Oakland, California. [38] "Pulling Teeth", one of the album's slower songs, uses dark humor about domestic violence. The typical victim and perpetrator are reversed; the male narrator is at the mercy of his female partner. [24]
Pulling Teeth is the fourth full-length studio album by the hardcore punk band Straight Faced. [6] It was released in 2000 on Epitaph Records. [7] The album was produced by Blag Dahlia of Dwarves. The track "Happy" appeared on Epitaph Records' Punk-O-Rama Vol. 5.
Pulling Teeth may refer to: Dental extraction in dentistry; Pulling Teeth (band), a hardcore punk band from Baltimore, formed in 2005 (Anesthesia)—Pulling Teeth, a bass solo by Cliff Burton on the 1983 Metallica album Kill 'Em All "Pulling Teeth", a song by Green Day from their 1994 album Dookie; Pulling Teeth, a 2000 album by Straight Faced
"Windows" is a song by the English pop group Take That. It was released by EMI Records on 22 September 2023 as the first single from their ninth studio album, This Life (2023). It was written by Take That, and produced by Grammy-winner Dave Cobb with Gary Barlow on lead vocals.
Pulling Teeth was an American hardcore punk/metalcore band from Baltimore, Maryland. Formed in 2005, the band released several recordings (as themselves or under aliases), and toured many times throughout North America, Europe and Japan before settling down and becoming a studio band.
DJ Jazzy Jeff then recommended he and Smith record what they think the theme song should sound like. They made a demo that basically "tells the story of the show," Smith said. They brought their ...
The album was released on October 16th 2015, to act as a volume two of the band's debut album, Through the Deep, Dark Valley. [3]The album takes its title from The Screwtape Letters by C. S. Lewis, which has every chapter of the book begin with the words "Dear Wormwood,".