Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Stone Sour reunited several years later, releasing its full-length debut album Stone Sour in 2002 which featured songs from early demos. [1] Ekman was replaced by Roy Mayorga in 2006, [3] who performed on the band's second album Come What(ever) May. [4] The songs on the album were written by Taylor, Root, Rand and Economaki. [5]
The American rock band Stone Sour has released six studio albums, one live album and twenty-two singles.The band has also released twenty-four music videos.Stone Sour formed in Des Moines, Iowa in 1992 but did not release an album until 2002.
Stone Sour was an American rock band formed in Des Moines, Iowa, in 1992.The band performed for five years before disbanding in 1997. They reunited in 2000 and since 2015, the group has consisted of Corey Taylor (lead vocals, guitar), Josh Rand (guitar), Christian Martucci (guitar), Johny Chow (bass) and Roy Mayorga (drums).
The Family Values Tour 2006 is a live album released on December 26, 2006, by Firm Music, to commemorate the fourth iteration of the Family Values Tour, launched in 1998 by American nu metal band Korn. It is executive-produced by Peter Katsis and is the fourth and final Family Values record.
MetalSucks praised the song for being "a really good song, a slower number at first that opens up into a rocker, and it only solidifies my impression of Hydrograd.Stone Sour don’t get a ton of respect from the heavier spectrum of the metal community, but they’ve been pumping out incredibly solid hard rock jams album after album for nearly two decades now.
In "Absolute Zero", the main character is stuck in some sort of other-worldly realm. Within this realm, two versions of Stone Sour perform the track throughout the area; one colored grey and the other colored gold. The man is presented with a choice, his body getting twisted and warped as he struggles to make a truly impossible decision.
In support of the album, Stone Sour released two singles in quick succession; "Get Inside" was the band's first music video and it included live footage. [6] Released shortly after, "Bother" also featured a music video. [7] Throughout October and November 2002, Stone Sour toured the United States in support of the album with Chevelle and Sinch. [8]
Journalists noted that the song was a more melodic, accessible song compared to the band's other initial single from Hydrograd – "Fabuless". [9] Billboard described the song as an "...emotive cut with a driving style that's similar to Stone Sour's Mainstream Rock Songs No. 1s 'Say You'll Haunt Me' (2010) and Tired' (2014)."