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Coming from different styles of rock music, they decided to name the experiment Skillet. Soon afterward Trey McClurkin joined the band as a temporary drummer. Skillet was only together for a month when they received interest from major Christian record label ForeFront Records and were signed soon afterward. Ken Steorts left the band in 1999 and ...
Skillet is an American Christian rock band formed in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1996.The band currently consists of husband and wife duo John Cooper (lead vocals, bass) and Korey Cooper (rhythm guitar, keyboards, backing vocals) along with Jen Ledger (drums, co-lead vocals) and Seth Morrison (lead guitar).
John Cooper, lead singer of rock band Skillet, talks about growing up in a community where rock music wasn't allowed, leaning on his faith while his mom was dying from cancer, and debuting his new ...
It was released on November 1, 2024. It is the first Skillet album to be released independently. [1] [2] With regard to the album title and theme, Skillet frontman John Cooper explains that "the revolution we're talking about on this record is not a political revolution, [and] it is certainly not a militaristic one, which I've never supported ...
Jann Wenner is facing backlash after making controversial comments about women and Black musicians. The Rolling Stone magazine co-founder, 77, was removed from the board of directors of the Rock ...
Skillet's lead singer and primary songwriter John L. Cooper explained the meaning of the song to theskilletsizzle.com; " the song is about my relationship with my Dad and feeling that I was kind of betrayed by him and all these bad feelings going on. But in the end, it came down to 'forgiveness' in the end when I forgave my Dad there was a real ...
Bethenny Frankel is sharing her opinion on the recent Vanity Fair exposé about the Bravo network, which included an allegation that former co-star Ramona Singer once used a racial slur during ...
Dominion received generally mixed to positive reviews from critics. Taylor Markarian from Blabbermouth.net gave the album 6.5 out of 10 and said: "Ultimately, just as there is a push and pull between oppressive and liberating forces in the theme of the record, there is tension between disjointed and cohesive elements in its sound and structure.