Track Listing 1. Movies - Alien Ant Farm 2. Hate to Say I Told You So - The Hives 3. First Date - Blink 182 4. Motivation - Sum 41 5. Feeder - Just a Day 6. Middle - Jimmy Eat World, The 7. Nice to Know You - Incubus 8. Used For Glue - Rival Schools 9. Private Eye - AlKaline Trio 10. Island in the Sun - Weezer 11. Shining Light - Ash 12. Another Perfect Day - American Hi-Fi 13. Walkin on the Sun - Smash Mouth 14. Vegas Two Times - Stereophonics 15. Hyper Music - Muse 16. Crawling in the Dark - Hoobastank 17. Contrasts - Number One Son 18. Chronic Youth - Raging Speedhorn 19. What I Always Wanted - Kittie 20. Dont Wake Me - Anyone 21. How You Remind Me - Nickleback 22. Nothing - A 23. Woke up Now -Amen 24. Left Behind - Slipknot 25. No Stress - Cyclefly 26. Party Hard - Andrew W K 27. Dead Girl Superstar - Rob Zombie 28. On a Night Like This - Professional Murder Music 29. Wrong Day - The Kennedy Soundtrack 30. Glow - Coal Chamber 31. Numbered Days - Killswitch Engage 32. Links 2 3 4 - Rammstein 33. Chasing Around You - Machine Head 34. Nightmare - Dry Kill Logic 35. Dead Inside - Chimaira 36. Sucker - 28 Days 37. God Save Us - Ill Nino 38. Fire Water Burn - Bloodhound Gang 39. Crazy - Sugarcoma
| Details | | Distributor: | Phantom Import Distributi | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Kerrang, Vol. 3 is a collection of almost 40 bands that the namesake British metal magazine has covered or promoted between the late '90s and 2002. If a band was a big deal in hard rock during this time and didn't go by the name Korn or Limp Bizkit, chances are you can find them somewhere on this album. Disc one seems mostly dedicated to hard rock and punk more than anything else, displaying good songs from the Hives, Ash, Weezer, Jimmy Eat World, Stereophonics, and others. The second disc is much more metal-oriented, offering some powerful singles, but in exchange the filler material is more bland and forgettable. Still, having good songs from A, Slipknot, Cyclefly, the Bloodhound Gang, and Machine Head doesn't hurt this collection in the slightest. And putting tracks by Andrew W.K. and Rob Zombie next to one another is a clever bit of track sequencing that serves as a good comparison for those who think they sound too much like one another. Sure, it isn't all great, but there are a lot of good singles here that will be near to impossible to find together anywhere else. ~ Bradley Torreano
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