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Bedouin Soundclash is best-known for the Top 10-charting radio single, "Walls Fall Down". [1] The rock and reggae-influenced song was the first single from the band's third album Street Gospels (2007). The song was released to radio in summer 2007. After the success of "Walls Fall Down", the album Street Gospels was released.
That year their video for "Walls Fall Down" jumped to No. 1 on MuchMusic countdown. At the Juno Awards of 2008, Bedouin Soundclash received two nominations: the video for "Walls Fall Down" for Video of the Year, Street Gospels for Pop Album of the Year. They performed Japan's Summer Sonic Festival in 2008, with Coldplay, Alicia Keys and The Verve.
Street Gospels is the third album by Canadian reggae band Bedouin Soundclash. It was released on Dine Alone Records on August 21, 2007. [3] In the UK the album was released on August 20 through SideOneDummy Records. The song "St. Andrews" features guest vocals from Alexisonfire's Wade McNeil.
[5] [7] Five singles were released from the album, with "Walls Fall Down" charting at number six on the Billboard Canadian Hot 100. In 2009, Pengelly left Bedouin Soundclash [8] and was replaced by Sekou Lumumba on the band's fourth studio album Light the Horizon, released in September 2010. [9] It reached number 14 in Canada.
The first trailer has been unveiled for “Walls” (“Mur”), actor-turned-filmmaker Kasia Smutniak’s directorial debut that will world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival. In ...
"When the Night Feels My Song" is a song by Canadian alternative rock group Bedouin Soundclash released in 2004 as the lead single from their debut album Sounding a Mosaic. It features a reggae/soft rock sound. When this song was first released in the UK in 2005, it reached number 24 in the charts.
Director Megan Park’s sophomore feature is a coming-of-age comedy revolving around Elliott (Maisy Stella), who meets her 39-year-old self (Aubrey Plaza) during a ‘shroom trip on her 18th birthday.
He met Eon Sinclair at Queen's and after discovering their mutual love of reggae music, decided to form their own band, Bedouin Soundclash, with fellow Queen's student, Patrick Pengelly. By the end of third year, they signed to Stomp Records and had toured across Canada.