Breakin' Down
"Breakin' Down" is a song by Skid Row and released as a single from their third album, Subhuman Race. The song was released in 1995 and written by Dave "the Snake" Sabo. It is mostly known for its use in the Christopher Walken film The Prophecy.
"Breakin' Down" | ||||
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Single by Skid Row | ||||
from the album Subhuman Race | ||||
Released | 1995 | |||
Genre | Alternative rock | |||
Length | 4:30 | |||
Label | Atlantic | |||
Songwriter(s) | Dave Sabo | |||
Producer(s) | Bob Rock | |||
Skid Row singles chronology | ||||
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Alternative cover | ||||
Part 2 of the 2 CD set Cover | ||||
Alternative cover | ||||
German Version Cover |
"Breakin' Down" features a music video and a remix of the song was included on the bands compilation album, 40 Seasons: The Best of Skid Row.
The song charted at #48 on the UK Singles chart.[1]
Track listings
UK 7” green vinyl
- “Breakin’ Down” (LP Version)
- “Riot Act” (Live)
UK CD1 (Part 1 of a 2 CD Set)
- "Breakin' Down" (LP Version)
- "Firesign" (Demo)
- "Slave to the Grind" (Live)
- "Monkey Business" (Live)
UK CD2 (Part 2 of a 2 CD Set)
- "Breakin' Down" (LP Version)
- "Frozen" (Demo)
- "Beat Yourself Blind" (Live)
- "Psycho Therapy" (Live) [originally performed by The Ramones]
Germany CD
- "Breakin' Down" (LP Version)
- "Firesign" (Demo)
- "Frozen" (Demo)
US CD
- “Breakin’ Down”
- “Monkey Business” (Live)
- “Slave to the Grind” (Live)
US Promo CD
- “Breakin’ Down” (Remix)
- “Breakin’ Down” (LP Version)
gollark: Though there are still the random dropouts which the router/modem/thingy reports as being with the broadband connection.
gollark: *This* problem actually seems to be to do with my wireless network and/or WiFi card, as it didn't happen when I connected my laptop over wired briefly.
gollark: Google's DNS servers, it's easy to remember.
gollark: I admittedly haven't checked very hard, but `ping 8.8.8.8` says `(DUP!)` a lot sometimes and sometimes receives the same sequence number twice.
gollark: Apparently my internet connection is even more broken now. It seems to somehow be duplicating packets and having wildly variable latency.
References
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