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"Rise Above This" is a song by South African rock band Seether. It is the second single from the band's album Finding Beauty in Negative Spaces.It is the sixth track on the album and became the band's second consecutive number-one song on the U.S. Modern Rock chart.
Music videos: 29: This is the general discography of the South African rock band Seether. ... The Seether Sessions [18] Released: 11 November 2009; Label: Musketeer;
"Here and Now" is a song by South African rock band Seether. It is the fourth single from the band's fifth studio album Holding Onto Strings Better Left to Fray, from which the title of the album is taken. A deconstructed version is found on some bonus editions of the album, containing only an acoustic guitar, strings, and vocals.
It should only contain pages that are Seether songs or lists of Seether songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Seether songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
"Remedy" is a song by South African rock band Seether. It is the second track on their album Karma and Effect, and was released as the album's lead single.It became their first single to hit the top spot on the Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart, dropping and regaining the spot for a total of eight weeks at number one and spent 52 weeks on the same chart.
The South African musician discovered Nevermind as a teenager, became endlessly enamored with Kurt Cobain, and decided that he needed to pursue his own path in music because of the grunge icons ...
The song was first released on 23 June 2020, at the same time as the band's announcement of the name and release date of their eighth studio album, Si Vis Pacem, Para Bellum on 28 August 2020. [2] In just one week in July, the song had accumulated 1.9 million airplay audience impressions, 340,000 streams, and 1,000 downloads in the US. [ 3 ]
"Broken" is a song by South African rock band Seether, first appearing on their debut album, Disclaimer (2002). It was reworked and recorded again in 2004, this time featuring American singer Amy Lee , the lead singer of Evanescence and then-girlfriend of Seether vocalist Shaun Morgan .