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In May 2022, Citizen Soldier announced their fifth album, Scarecrow, with another 18 songs. The complete album was released on December 14, 2022. [13] [14] The band typically released the songs of new albums as singles first before being released collectively as an album. [15] [16]
"Let Me Be Myself" is the second main single (fourth, counting the promo singles "Citizen/Soldier" and "Train") by rock band 3 Doors Down from their eponymous fourth studio album. The song was released on December 2, 2008. [1] The song is a power ballad, similar to previous hits by the band, "Be Like That" and "Here Without You".
Let’s talk about “Bad Childhood.” I’ve got lots of questions. Let’s hear ’em, man, I got lots of answers. “Bad Childhood,” musically, sounds upbeat.
3 Doors Down is the fourth studio album by American rock band 3 Doors Down, released on May 20, 2008. [10] [11] Its first two singles, "Citizen/Soldier" and "It's Not My Time", were released in November 2007 and February 2008, respectively.
Citizen is an American rock band from Southeast Michigan and Northwest Ohio that formed in 2009. [1] The band currently consists of Mat Kerekes (vocals), brothers Nick (lead guitar) and Eric Hamm (bass), Mason Mercer (rhythm guitar), and Ben Russin (drums).
"Citizen/Soldier" is a single by the American alternative rock band 3 Doors Down from their self-titled album 3 Doors Down. The song was released as a single in November 2007 in conjunction with a recruitment campaign by the United States National Guard. [2] The lyrics convey the band's views regarding the actions performed by the Guard.
The song was number 245 on Rolling Stone magazine's 2004 list of the 500 greatest songs of all time. [5] Pitchfork Media named it the forty-second best song of the 1960s. [10] The song is included in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's "500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll" [11] and Time magazine's All-Time 100. [12]
The song was officially added to US modern rock radio on February 18, 2008. [2] By its first official day of release, it was the most-added track at both active- and modern-rock radio stations. The song debuted at number 37 on the Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart for the week of March 1, 2008. It went on to top the chart, becoming the ...