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Army of Anyone is the debut album by Army of Anyone, an American rock band featuring Richard Patrick of Filter, the DeLeo brothers from Stone Temple Pilots (Robert and Dean), and David Lee Roth's former drummer, Ray Luzier. The album was released on November 14, 2006 in America, December 4, 2006 in the UK. It was produced by Bob Ezrin (who has produced records for Pink Floyd and KISS) and mixed by Ken Andrews. Army of Anyone has been considered a commercial failure (given the previous success of Stone Temple Pilots and Filter), selling less than 100,000 copies and debuting at #56 on the Billboard Top 200.
[edit] Track listing
- "It Doesn't Seem to Matter" (Richard Patrick, Robert DeLeo, Dean DeLeo) - 3:51
- "Goodbye" (Patrick, R. DeLeo, D. DeLeo) - 4:31
- "Generation" (Patrick, R. DeLeo, D. DeLeo) - 3:30
- "A Better Place" (Patrick, R. DeLeo) - 4:58
- "Non Stop" (Patrick, R. DeLeo, D. DeLeo) - 3:58
- "Disappear" (Patrick, R. DeLeo) - 4:07
- "Stop Look and Listen" (Patrick, R. DeLeo) - 3:51
- "Ain't Enough" (Patrick, R. DeLeo) - 3:44
- "Father Figure" (Patrick) - 4:04
- "Leave It" (Patrick, D. DeLeo) - 4:27
- "This Wasn't Supposed to Happen" (Patrick, D. DeLeo) - 5:23
[edit] Bonus tracks
- "Good Time to Loosen" (iTunes exclusive)
- "Used to Know Her" (iTunes exclusive)
- "Ain't Enough (Acoustic)" (Target exclusive)
- "It Doesn't Seem to Matter (Acoustic)" (Best Buy exclusive)
[edit] Singles
[edit] Charting
Album
Year |
Chart |
Position |
2006 |
Billboard Top 200 |
56 |
[edit] Credits
[edit] Trivia
- "A Better Place" was the first song written by the band. It was originally written for Filter's fourth album. However after recording the song at a home studio, Richard Patrick and the DeLeo brothers decided to form Army of Anyone.
- The iTunes bonus track "Used to Know Her" was a downloadable mp3 on the band's official website a while before the album's release. It was later removed from the website. The iTunes version cuts out abruptly at the 2 minute 59 seconds mark. Army of Anyone has since reposted it for download on their official website. [1]
- The song "It Doesn't Seem To Matter" is featured on Burnout Dominator.
[edit] References