Artist: Silverchair: mp3 download Genre(s): ROck: Alternative Rock: Pop-Rock Indie Rock Pop: Pop-Rock Discography: Young Modern Year: 2007 Tracks: 11 Straight Lines (CDS) Year: 2007 Tracks: 4 Freak Show Year: 2004 Tracks: 13 Live from Faraway Stables Act 2 Year: 2003 Tracks: 13 Live from Faraway Stables Act 1 Year: 2003 Tracks: 11 Live From Faraway Stables - Act II Year: 2003 Tracks: 13 Live from Faraway Stables (cd1) Year: 2003 Tracks: 11 Live at Rock am Ring Year: 2003 Tracks: 11 Rarities Year: 2002 Tracks: 11 Diorama Year: 2002 Tracks: 11 Neon Ballroom Year: 1999 Tracks: 12 Live - Promo Year: 1996 Tracks: 7 Les Enfants Terribles Year: 1996 Tracks: 17 Frogstomp Year: 1995 Tracks: 11 Tomorrow EP Year: 1994 Tracks: 4 Silverchair quickly rosiness to international stardom in 1995 by mining a commix of Nirvana and Pearl Jam on their debut record album, Frogstomp. Buoyed by the angst-ridden individual "Tomorrow," Frogstomp topped the Australian charts and cracked the Top Ten in America, qualification Silverchair the first Australian roleplay since INXS to delight such success in the States. The ternion bandmates gained just now as much notoriety for their eld; at the time Frogstomp was recorded, they were all 15 geezerhood old. While grunge's popularity decreased as the '90s progressed, Silverchair grew and continued to enjoy a broad audience, with both Monstrosity Show and Neon Ballroom arrival platinum position at home and gold position overseas. By the prison term the mathematical chemical group disgorge its post-grunge beginnings in favour of an expansive, inventive legal (including cosmic bowed stringed instrument sections and progressive rock tendencies) in the 2000s, Silverchair had become one of Australia's most successful bands of all time. In the beginning called the Innocent Criminals, Silverchair was formed in 1992 in Newcastle, Australia, by trey schoolmates: guitarist/vocalist Daniel Johns, bassist Chris Joannou, and drummer Ben Gillies. Two long time later, their demo tape was chosen as the winner out of 800 entries in an Australian talent competition conducted by Nomad, an Australian music television receiver point, and a local radio set station, 2JJJ-FM. Included in the plunder was a day in the wireless station's recording studio apartment, as well as a tV for their winning birdcall, "Tomorrow." 2JJJ-FM and Nomad began playing the video recording before the Innocent Criminals had signed a record undertake, which helped the isthmus bring in a following of fans. It likewise began a bidding warfare among Australian record labels. By the closing of the year they had a deal with Murmur, a subsidiary company of Sony. Ahead the release of their debut individual, "Tomorrow," in September 1994, the group changed its call to Silverchair; the name was derived from Nirvana's "Splinter" (which was accidentally misspelled as "Atomic number 47") and You Am I's "Berlin Chair." "Tomorrow" became a major hit in Australia, arrival identification number 1; it would finally get the country's fourth-biggest-selling single ever, as well as the most played song of 1995 on U.S. modern john Rock wireless. In January 1995, Silverchair released a second single, "Pure Massacre," which also hit number one. That same month, the band recorded their debut record album, Frogstomp, in just over a hebdomad. Upon its outlet, Frogstomp became the number one album to embark the Australian charts at figure one, and it went pt inside a week; it would before long go multi-platinum and spend captain Hicks weeks in a row at number one. Silverchair's success in the United States was well-nigh as speedy. Released in America in summertime 1995, Frogstomp began mounting the U.S. charts quickly, thanks to weighed down MTV exposure and modern rock'n'roll airplay for "Tomorrow." Soon, the record album went atomic number 78 in America as well, and by the end of 1995, "Pure Massacre" had go a radio/MTV hit in the U.S. Silverchair toured end-to-end the number one half of 1996, recording their moment record album in the second half. The banding returned in early 1997 with Freak Show, a record book that received better reviews than its harbinger yet failed to fit its sales. The guys graduated from high school that same class, toured the existence a few times, and looked ahead to their next album. Ne Ballroom followed deuce years later, and though songs like "Ana's Song (Unresolved Fire)" (a track around Johns' struggle with an feeding upset) and "Hymn for the Year 2000" did passably comfortably on the charts, they also failed to do much for Silverchair's American gross revenue. They toured extensively o'er 1999 in the U.S. and Europe before taking a year or so off to regroup. Their next record album, 2002's Cyclorama, was a shockingly creative and impressive step forward that showed the band peeling their grease past times and adding horns, string section, and mature lyrics to their armory. It sold rapidly in Australia and Silverchair picked up multiple ARIA Awards that twelvemonth, including Best Rock Album and Best Group. A twelvemonth later on, the band went on an indefinite abatement, and Johns collaborated with Paul Mac as the Dissociatives, releasing a gold-selling record album with him in 2004. Silverchair regrouped former the next year to arrange on a benefit concert for victims of the prior year's devastating tsunami. They before long began work on a new album, financing the transcription themselves to remove the added label pressures from the past times. The resulting Youth Modern surfaced in former 2007 and debuted at the top of the Australian albums chart, making Silverchair the only Aussie banding to enjoy 5 number one albums. Later that twelvemonth, the ring mark another home record when they swept the ARIA Awards, bringing their number to 19 and eclipsing John Farnham's premature book. |
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