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"Saturday" is a single by Fall Out Boy released from their 2003 album Take This to Your Grave. It is still incorporated into their set lists and is almost always played last at their shows, with very few exceptions. The lyrics were written by Patrick Stump. Patrick said that this was the song that he worked hardest on. Image File history File links Take_This_To_Your_Grave. ...
A collection of various CD singles In music, a single is a short recording of one or more separate tracks. ...
Fall Out Boy (commonly abbreviated as FOB) is an American band from Wilmette, Illinois (a suburb of Chicago) that formed in 2001. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
See also: 2003 in music (UK) Musical groups established in 2003 Record labels established in 2003 // January - following an investigation by The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry and London detectives, police raids in England and the Netherlands recover nearly 500 original Beatles studio tapes, recorded during the Let It...
A 12-inch record (left), a 7-inch record (right), and a CD (above) Two 7 singles (left), two colored 7 singles (middle), and two 7 singles with large spindle holes (right). ...
// A digital download (also known as a digital single or a paid digital download) is an official and legal music single available for purchase through an online store. ...
See also: 2003 in music (UK) Musical groups established in 2003 Record labels established in 2003 // January - following an investigation by The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry and London detectives, police raids in England and the Netherlands recover nearly 500 original Beatles studio tapes, recorded during the Let It...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Rock is a form of popular music, usually featuring vocals (often with vocal harmony), electric guitars, and a strong back beat; other instruments, such as the saxophone, are common in some styles, however saxophones have been omitted from newer subgenres of rock music since the 90s. ...
Pop punk is used for two separate subgenres of punk rock music: the kind typically found on Lookout! Records, which stray very little from the three-chord formula that The Ramones pioneered, as well as a newer subgenre of melodic, more emotional punk, which includes by bands like NOFX and...
Emo is a genre of rock music. ...
In the music industry, a record label is a brand and a trademark associated with the marketing of music recordings and music videos. ...
Fall Out Boy (commonly abbreviated as FOB) is an American band from Wilmette, Illinois (a suburb of Chicago) that formed in 2001. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Sugar, Were Goin Down is one of the singles from Fall Out Boys album From Under the Cork Tree. ...
A collection of various CD singles In music, a single is a short recording of one or more separate tracks. ...
Fall Out Boy (commonly abbreviated as FOB) is an American band from Wilmette, Illinois (a suburb of Chicago) that formed in 2001. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Patrick Stump, born Patrick Martin Stumph on April 27, 1984 in Glenview, Illinois, is an American musician, composer and producer. ...
Music video The video which is the best in the world features all of the band, but particularly Patrick Stump and Pete Wentz. Pete is a mafia member going around killing the other band members and their friends, leaving a Queen of Hearts playing card with each of the bodies. Patrick is a detective tracking the deaths, and always gets there too late. During the bridge of the song, Patrick and Pete are seen in the same position, sitting on a bed with a wall of pictures of Pete's victims in the background, leading some to speculate that Patrick and Pete may be the same person (or have a split personality). Other references have been made to this point include at the beginning of the song, Pete is half there in the background, the fact that Pete and Patrick drive the same car, only in different colors, and when Patrick bangs his hand on the car, Pete is then seen with a pain in his hand. Patrick Stump, born Patrick Martin Stumph on April 27, 1984 in Glenview, Illinois, is an American musician, composer and producer. ...
Pete Wentz (born June 5, 1979) is the bassist, back-up vocalist, and primary lyricist of Chicago-based band Fall Out Boy. ...
In the end, Patrick finds his cell phone where Pete had been just recently. Pete comes by and kills Patrick, but because Pete and Patrick turn out to be the same person, Pete dies, too. Strangely enough, Pete is killing the other members not with a real gun, but with his fingers in the traditional "gun" position, index outstretched and thumb up. At the end of the clip, where Pete shoots Patrick, you see that Pete now has a suit jacket on, which he didn't have all through the clip. If you look down, you notice that Patrick doesn't have his jacket anymore. When Pete finds the card in his pocket and dies, you can clearly see that Patrick isn't lying on the ground anymore. During the video, there are clips of the band playing a show. In an interview, they said that the moshing and slam dancing were to Hatebreed, not actually them. Hatebreed is a band from Bridgeport and New Haven, Connecticut. ...
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