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Search Results for "p.o.d."
There are 32 Retriever pages mentioning "p.o.d.":
  1. Blindside -- Albums
    When Swedish rockers Blindside presented their label debut under Elektra Records and P.O.D.'s short-lived 3 Point imprint, the group seemed poised for big things. The album was well-received by the press and fans, and tours with Linkin Park, Hoobastank, and their benefactors only served to magnify their exposure. But due to massive restructuring at the Warner Music Group, Elektra folded into Atlantic Records, leaving bands such as Blindside lost in the shuffle. Add to that a wrecked tour bus and stolen equipment during 2004's Internal Storm Tour, and it clearly wasn't a sunny year for the foursome.
  2. Jason Mraz -- American Music
    Jason Mraz is inviting fans to contribute footage to his music video for "Geek in the Pink" via his Web site. Fans can upload their photos and videos to the site and then use online video-editing software from partner Muvee to edit their footage into the video.
  3. Crossfade -- Columbia Records
    "Cold," the first single from Crossfade, made music history as radio's #1 Most Played Rock Song of 2004. The track spent a record-breaking 65 weeks on the Active Rock chart while spending a record 46 weeks on the Modern Rock chart. Both "Cold" and its follow-up single, "So Far Away," were Top 10 records at Active Rock Radio. The album kicked out three hit singles -- "Cold," "So Far Away," and "Colors" -- all of which peaked within the Top 5 (at #1, #4 and #5 respectively) of the Billboard Monitor Active Rock chart. "Cold," "So Far Away," and "Colors" ... peaked at #3, #4, and #6 (respectively) on Billboard's Mainstream Rock singles chart and at #2, #14, and #18 (respectively) on the Modern Rock chart.
  4. Infectious Grooves -- Music
    Infectious Grooves' second infection, Sarsippius' Ark, digs into the band's organic Fishbone stew with phenomenally entertaining relish. Pulled together from various sources (1989 demos with entirely different sidemen, first album outtakes, a '92 LA concert, new sessions) and stitched up by spoken bits from a Richard Pryor-sounding fictional music biz narrator, Ark is more unified and consistent than either of the Grooves' other discs. David Bowie's "Fame" and Led Zeppelin's "Immigrant Song" make perfect covers for the quintet's furious once-overs; such hot'n'funky originals as "Savor da Flavor," "Don't Stop, Spread the Jam!" and "Slo-Motion Slam" strike a blistering balance of motion and metal that's easy to catch and hard to shake.
  5. Blindside -- Bands
    This DVD celebrates Blindside's 10 year anniversary with nearly 3 hours of content spanning the journey so far. It includes a new documentary created by the band, 2 live shows - Live at 110 degrees from Cornerstone 2003 and The Internal Storm Tour Film. This jam-packed DVD ... features the entire library of Blindside music videos including the never-before-seen video for About A Burning Fire. The collection is rounded out with Photo galleries, web videos and much more from the guy's personal photographs and media archives from the early days and pre-history of Blindside. If you love Blindside you must have this DVD. Also included is Blindside's release: The Great Depression
  6. Project 86
    Under the surface... Project 86 has always been a band that transcended the genre. With each successive album, beginning with 1998's self-titled debut, the band has continued to evolve, touching on elements of punk, metal, industrial and post-hardcore without losing touch with its audience.
  7. Blindside
    Blindside is one Swedish rock band whose ship may have just arrived - at least in America, anyway. With two memorable indie releases under their belt, the scorching foursome have signed with Elektra in the U.S., and have been busily putting the finishing touches on their American debut -
  8. Drowning Pool -- Dave Williams
    Singer Dave Williams from Drowning Pool passed away on August 14th, 2002. Results of the autopsy were inconclusive. Sinner, is Drowning Pool's major laber debut, they did have at least one independant release before that. His nickname "Stage" was given to him by Dimebag Darrel of Pantera. He was ... refered to as"the Mayor" during Ozzfest 2002 due to his good nature and ability to get along with everyone. Even though radio stations rested the song "Bodies" for a few weeks after the 911 attacks, it's appeal was so strong it reemerged to become an even bigger hit on the charts.
  9. Papa Roach -- Jacoby Shaddix
    Papa Roach started writing Getting Away With Murder on the road last year, and finished  when they got back to their homes in Sacramento, California. By the time they started recording demos, they had over 30 complete songs to work from. And when they began pre-production with producer Howard Benson (P.O.D., Blindside, Hoobastank) they had 12 songs chosen and pretty fully arranged. "We knew where we wanted to go," Shaddix says. "It was just a matter of honing it and getting it perfect."
  10. Chevelle (Musical Act)
    Inspired by the lurching riffs of Helmet and the soft/loud vocal styling of Tool Chicago-based trio Chevelle s aggressive, heavy sound is all about mounting tension exploding into raw guitar bursts. Formed in 1995, Chevelle s members are brothers Sam (drums), Pete (vocals, guitar), and Joe Loeffler (bass). They started out playing parties and outdoor events, which quickly led to bookings at Chicago clubs when youngest member Joe was just 14. In 1999, Chevelle released their Steve Albini produced debut album, Point #1 on Squint Entertainment Three years later, the band inked a deal with Epic and issued Wonder What's Next In June, the album went platinum and their second single, "Send the Pain Below," was a number one hit on modern rock and mainstream radio. Main stage dates with the annual Ozzfest tour followed that summer, and 2003 brought a concert album, Live from the Road This Type of Thinking (Could Do Us In) followed in 2004. ~ Tracy Frey, All Music Guide
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