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"Young" is a song by American rap rock band Hollywood Undead. It is the fourth single from their debut studio album, Swan Songs, and is the sixth track on that album.The single was released after the album's release on April 13, 2009, with a music video directed by Kevin Kerslake released the same day.
The band originated on June 3, 2005, as The Kids [8] from a song titled "Hollywood" (Later released as "The Kids") that Jorel Decker (J-Dog), Aron Erlichman (Deuce), and Jeff Phillips (Shady Jeff) posted on the band's MySpace profile to positive reviews, [9] leading them to form the group Hollywood Undead with their friends George "Johnny 3 Tears" Ragan (formerly known as "The Server"), Jordon ...
Swan Songs is the debut studio album by American rap rock band Hollywood Undead.It was released through Octone Records and Polydor Records on September 2, 2008. [3] " Everywhere I Go" was the first single to be released, it was a web single and was available for download only on iTunes. [4]
The official music video was released on 10 December, which was directed by Shawn ‘Clown’ Crahan, the percussionist of Slipknot.The music video has various different scenes happening, such as Da Kurlzz isolated in a fenced area being ignored by the crowds walking by, Funny Man robbing a liquor store, J-Dog burning pictures of each band member in a church, Danny smashing up televisions in ...
"Tear It Up", a song by Hollywood Undead from Desperate Measures, 2009 "Tear It Up", a song by R. Kelly from Black Panties , 2013 Topics referred to by the same term
Five (stylized as V) is the fifth studio album by American rap rock band Hollywood Undead.It was released on October 27, 2017 through MDDN and BMG.It is the first album to not feature Matthew "Da Kurlzz" Busek who departed from the band in early 2017.
The band started writing lyrics about the Sunset Strip when suddenly Johnny 3 Tears started talking weird about losing his mind, the band quickly began writing lyrics on it. At the end, the band felt that the song came out feel like an old school Hollywood Undead song. [5]
The lyrics of the genres are mostly party-themed, hedonistic, and sexually explicit. [1] [2] [5] Family Force 5 is a lyrical exception, instead melding the sounds of the genre with Christian-themed lyrics. [2] [5] Hollywood Undead, Brokencyde, and 3OH!3 are credited as the