Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Trivia / Sum41

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* MultiDiscWork: ''Heaven :x: Hell'' is a DistinctDoubleAlbum consisting of two differently-styled parts (''Heaven'', focused on the band's initial PopPunk style, and ''Hell'', which keeps the HeavyMetal sound that the band had progressively developed over the course of their later discography), with a single disc delegated to each of them in all of the formats the album was released on.[[note]]While it requires two discs to fit the whole album on vinyl, as was the case with the significantly shorter ''Underclass Hero'' and ''Screaming Bloody Murder'' (the latter of which never had a vinyl release), ''Heaven :x: Hell''[='s=] 55-minute length is still short enough for a single disc on CD.[[/note]]

to:

* MultiDiscWork: ''Heaven :x: Hell'' is a DistinctDoubleAlbum consisting of two differently-styled parts (''Heaven'', focused on the band's initial PopPunk style, and ''Hell'', which keeps the HeavyMetal sound that the band had progressively developed over the course of their later discography), with a single one disc delegated to each of them in all of the formats the album was released on.[[note]]While it requires two discs to fit the whole album on vinyl, as was the case with the significantly shorter ''Underclass Hero'' and ''Screaming Bloody Murder'' (the latter of which never had a vinyl release), ''Heaven :x: Hell''[='s=] 55-minute length is still short enough for a single disc on CD.[[/note]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* MultiDiscWork: ''Heaven :x: Hell'' is a DistinctDoubleAlbum consisting of two differently-styled parts (''Heaven'', focusing on the band's initial PopPunk style, and ''Hell'', which keeps the HeavyMetal sound that the band had progressively developed over the course of their later discography), with a single disc delegated to each of them in all of the formats the album was released on.[[note]]While it requires two discs to fit the whole album on vinyl, as was the case with the significantly shorter ''Underclass Hero'' and ''Screaming Bloody Murder'' (the latter of which never had a vinyl release), ''Heaven :x: Hell''[='s=] 55-minute length is still short enough for a single disc on CD.[[/note]]

to:

* MultiDiscWork: ''Heaven :x: Hell'' is a DistinctDoubleAlbum consisting of two differently-styled parts (''Heaven'', focusing focused on the band's initial PopPunk style, and ''Hell'', which keeps the HeavyMetal sound that the band had progressively developed over the course of their later discography), with a single disc delegated to each of them in all of the formats the album was released on.[[note]]While it requires two discs to fit the whole album on vinyl, as was the case with the significantly shorter ''Underclass Hero'' and ''Screaming Bloody Murder'' (the latter of which never had a vinyl release), ''Heaven :x: Hell''[='s=] 55-minute length is still short enough for a single disc on CD.[[/note]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* MultiDiscWork: ''Heaven :x: Hell'' is a DistinctDoubleAlbum consisting of two differently-styled parts (''Heaven'', focusing on the band's initial PopPunk style, and ''Hell'', which keeps the HeavyMetal sound that the band had progressively developed over the course of their later discography), with a single disc delegated to each of them in all of the formats the album was released on.[[note]]While it requires two discs to fit the whole album on vinyl, as was the case with their previous, significantly shorter albums ''Underclass Hero'' and ''Screaming Bloody Murder'' (the latter of which never had a vinyl release), ''Heaven :x: Hell''[='s=] 55-minute length is still short enough for a single disc on CD.[[/note]]

to:

* MultiDiscWork: ''Heaven :x: Hell'' is a DistinctDoubleAlbum consisting of two differently-styled parts (''Heaven'', focusing on the band's initial PopPunk style, and ''Hell'', which keeps the HeavyMetal sound that the band had progressively developed over the course of their later discography), with a single disc delegated to each of them in all of the formats the album was released on.[[note]]While it requires two discs to fit the whole album on vinyl, as was the case with their previous, the significantly shorter albums ''Underclass Hero'' and ''Screaming Bloody Murder'' (the latter of which never had a vinyl release), ''Heaven :x: Hell''[='s=] 55-minute length is still short enough for a single disc on CD.[[/note]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* CreativeDifferences: The reason why Dave Baksh intially left the band - he was the metal guy in the band and wanted to go in a heavier and more technical direction, which the rest of the guys weren't on board with, and he sensed that a gulf was forming between him and the others and decided to leave to focus on Brown Brigade, which he figured would be the best for everyone. By his own admission, ''Screaming Bloody Murder'' ironically wound up being everything he wanted from a Sum 41 album, and he regretted his decision to leave from the moment he first heard it, eventually re-joining shortly before recording of ''13 Voices'' began.

to:

* CreativeDifferences: The reason why Dave Baksh intially left the band - between the releases of ''Chuck'' and ''Underclass Hero'' -- he was the metal guy in the band and wanted to go in a heavier and more technical direction, which the rest of the guys weren't on board with, and he sensed that a gulf was forming between him and the others and decided to leave to focus on Brown Brigade, which he figured would be the best for everyone. By his own admission, ''Screaming Bloody Murder'' ironically wound up being everything he wanted from a Sum 41 album, and he regretted his decision to leave from the moment he first heard it, eventually re-joining shortly before recording of ''13 Voices'' began.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* CreativeDifferences: The reason why Dave Baksh left the band - he was the metal guy in the band and wanted to go in a heavier and more technical direction, which the rest of the guys weren't on board with, and he sensed that a gulf was forming between him and the others and decided to leave to focus on Brown Brigade, which he figured would be the best for everyone. By his own admission, ''Screaming Bloody Murder'' ironically wound up being everything he wanted from a Sum 41 album, and he regretted his decision to leave from the moment he first heard it, eventually re-joining shortly before recording of ''13 Voices'' began.

to:

* CreativeDifferences: The reason why Dave Baksh intially left the band - he was the metal guy in the band and wanted to go in a heavier and more technical direction, which the rest of the guys weren't on board with, and he sensed that a gulf was forming between him and the others and decided to leave to focus on Brown Brigade, which he figured would be the best for everyone. By his own admission, ''Screaming Bloody Murder'' ironically wound up being everything he wanted from a Sum 41 album, and he regretted his decision to leave from the moment he first heard it, eventually re-joining shortly before recording of ''13 Voices'' began.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* CreativeDifferences: The reason why Dave Baksh left the band - he was the metal guy in the band and wanted to go in a heavier and more technical direction, which the rest of the guys weren't on board with, and he sensed that a gulf was forming between him and the others and decided to leave to focus on Brown Brigade, which he figured would be the best for everyone. By his own admission, ''Screaming Bloody Murder'' ironically wound up being everything he wanted from a Sum 41 album, and he regretted his decision to leave from the moment he first heard it.

to:

* CreativeDifferences: The reason why Dave Baksh left the band - he was the metal guy in the band and wanted to go in a heavier and more technical direction, which the rest of the guys weren't on board with, and he sensed that a gulf was forming between him and the others and decided to leave to focus on Brown Brigade, which he figured would be the best for everyone. By his own admission, ''Screaming Bloody Murder'' ironically wound up being everything he wanted from a Sum 41 album, and he regretted his decision to leave from the moment he first heard it.it, eventually re-joining shortly before recording of ''13 Voices'' began.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* MultiDiscWork: ''Heaven :x: Hell'' is a DistinctDoubleAlbum consisting of two differently-styled parts (''Heaven'', focusing on the band's initial PopPunk style, and ''Hell'', which keeps the HeavyMetal sound that the band had progressively developed over the course of their later discography), with a single disc delegated to each of them in all of the formats the album was released on.[[note]]While it requires two discs to fit the whole album on vinyl, as was the case with their previous, significantly shorter albums ''Underclass Hero'' and ''Screaming Bloody Murder'' (the latter of which never had a vinyl release), ''Heaven :x: Hell''[='s=] 55-minute length is still short enough for a single disc on CD.[[/note]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** During the making of the music video for Pieces, Deryck walks across various trucks that spot slogans such as "The perfect family", "The perfect body" or "The perfect night". At the end of the video, he himself is in one such truck that reads "The perfect life is waiting for you". Then the F in life falls off, changing the line to "The perfect lie is waiting for you". While this was an accident, they decided to leave it there, as they thought it fit the mood of the song.

to:

** During the making of the music video for Pieces, "Pieces", Deryck walks across various trucks that spot slogans such as "The perfect family", "The perfect body" or "The perfect night". At the end of the video, he himself is in one such truck that reads "The perfect life is waiting for you". Then the F in life falls off, changing the line to "The perfect lie is waiting for you". While this was an accident, they decided to leave it there, as they thought it fit the mood of the song.

Top