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"Sorrow" is a song written by Brett Gurewitz and Greg Graffin, and performed by Bad Religion. It was the first single to be released from their twelfth studio album, The Process of Belief, which was released in 2002, although the single was first played in the fall of 2001 by the L.A. radio station KROQ. An acoustic version hit radio on June 24 ...
"Bad Religion" was on the list. [2] The song was also remade by Dale Oliver as an entrance song for TNA tag team The Naturals. [citation needed] The song was featured in ATV Quad Power Racing 2 for PlayStation 2, Xbox and GameCube. [citation needed] It was also featured in the 2003 film Mayor of the Sunset Strip. [3]
In October 2020, Bad Religion released a new song, "What Are We Standing For", on streaming platforms, which was an outtake from the Age of Unreason sessions. [104] On January 20, 2021, Bad Religion released a previously unreleased song called "Emancipation of the Mind", which was recorded during the Age of Unreason sessions.
The Process of Belief features one of Bad Religion's well-known songs "Sorrow", the band's first to chart in the US in six years, since "A Walk" (from 1996's The Gray Race). "Broken", "The Defense" and "Supersonic" also received radio airplay, but all failed to make any national chart (although "Broken" reached number 125 on the UK Singles Chart ).
The music video is shot in cut-out animation and depicts a man in shorts and a track singlet with a Crossbuster (Bad Religion's logo, which features a black cross with a red prohibition sign over it) on it running through a burning, apocalyptic Los Angeles. People with TV news cameras as heads are also shown shooting fire out of their "mouths ...
Suffer is the third studio album by American punk rock band Bad Religion, released on the Californian independent record label Epitaph Records on September 8, 1988. [8] It was the first album that was both released and distributed by the label.
How Could Hell Be Any Worse? is the debut studio album by American punk rock band Bad Religion, released on January 19, 1982, by Epitaph Records. [3] [4] Released almost a year after their self-titled EP, it was financed from the sales of the self titled EP and partly by a $1,000 loan by guitarist Brett Gurewitz's father.
Before the release of Faceless, Godsmack filmed a performance-based video for the song in Los Angeles with director Dean Karr."The song has got good aggression, and the visuals, when the band plays it, look really good," Erna explained to MTV.com. [3] "Sometimes it's really hard to shove a story within a four-minute video, unless you're a solo artist like Eminem or wherever, because all you ...