Head on Collision
"Head on Collision" is the second single from New Found Glory's third studio album, Sticks and Stones (2002). The single peaked at number 28 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.[2]
"Head on Collision" | ||||
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Single by New Found Glory | ||||
from the album Sticks and Stones | ||||
Released | October 15, 2002 | |||
Recorded | 2002 | |||
Genre | Pop punk[1] | |||
Length | 3:42 | |||
Label | Drive-Thru, MCA | |||
Songwriter(s) | New Found Glory | |||
Producer(s) | Neal Avron | |||
New Found Glory singles chronology | ||||
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Track list
All songs written by New Found Glory.
- "Head on Collision"
- "Head on Collision" (Radio Session)
- "Something I Call Personality" (Radio Session)
Use in popular media
- Pop punk band All Time Low derived their name from lyrics in "Head on Collision".
gollark: I assume you're doing binomial distributions if whatever A-level spec you do is similar to mine, which it probably is, in which case I don't think they cover anything more advanced than trial and error/look at a table for that. Although it's probably <=/>= instead of = 0.02, as there's no guarantee that there is any x satisfying the = version.
gollark: It *also* matters how it's distributed.
gollark: I'm pretty sure you need information about what "X" is there.
gollark: I suppose you could just work out how many possible 50-move sequences exist somehow. There's definitely more than you could tractably store, at least.
gollark: Is it two images for the real and imaginary part or what?
References
- Pauker, Lance (January 22, 2014). "49 Phenomenally Angsty Pop-Punk Songs From The 2000s You Forgot Existed". Thought Catalog. Retrieved June 12, 2016.
- allmusic ((( New Found Glory > Charts & Awards > Billboard Singles )))
External links
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