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"The Chemicals Between Us" is a song by alternative band Bush. It was released on 14 September 1999 as the lead single from the band's third album The Science of Things (1999). The song was featured in the TV series Charmed .
The Science of Things is the third studio album by British band Bush, released on 26 October 1999, through Trauma Records.The last Bush album released through Trauma, peaked at number eleven on the US Billboard 200 [4] and has been certified platinum by both the RIAA and Music Canada.
"Letting the Cables Sleep" is the second single from British rock band Bush's third studio album The Science of Things, which was released in 1999. In an interview, Gavin Rossdale revealed that the song was written for a friend who had contracted HIV. [2] The song became a minor hit, and pushed the album to platinum status.
It's been nearly 30 years since Bush broke with an album that was a massive commercial success. More than 6 million copies of 1994's "Sixteen Stone," which is a solid guitar-driven album, were ...
Putting together a collection of Bush's greatest hits was relatively easy. Convincing frontman Gavin Rossdale to do it was a bit harder. Rossdale relented and that's why we have “Loaded: The ...
On 18 October 2011, "The Sound of Winter" topped the Alternative Songs chart, knocking off "Walk" by the Foo Fighters.It was the band's fifth number-one hit single on the chart (their first in 12 years, since 1999's "The Chemicals Between Us"), as well as their first self-released single to reach number one on the alternative radio chart.
If I told you 40 years ago, when the Cure was in the midst of its new-wave wonder moment, that the band would craft an inventively elegiac epic like “Songs for a Lost World” — a singular ...
Although the song was not as successful as the other singles from The Science of Things, only managing to reach No. 38 on the U.S. Alternative Songs chart and No. 16 on the U.S. Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart, the song became the band's third most successful song in their native Britain (behind "Swallowed" and "Greedy Fly") reaching No. 45 on the UK Singles Chart.