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We All Bleed

We All Bleed
WeAllBleed.jpg
Studio album by Crossfade
Released June 21, 2011
Recorded 2008-2011
Genre Post-grunge, hard rock
Length 48:42
Label Eleven Seven Music
Producer Les Hall, Ed Sloan
Crossfade chronology
Falling Away
(2006)Falling Away2006
We All Bleed
(2011)
Singles from We All Bleed
  1. "Killing Me Inside"
    Released: April 5, 2009
  2. "Prove You Wrong"
    Released: November 12, 2011
  3. "Dear Cocaine"
    Released: April 10, 2012
  4. "We All Bleed"
    Released: December 8, 2012
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 3/5 stars
dutchdistortion 8.5/10 stars
Sputnikmusic 3.5/5 stars

We All Bleed is the third studio album by American rock band Crossfade. It was released on June 21, 2011 – the band's first album in five years as well as their first album since signing with Eleven Seven Music.

In 2008, after being cut from Columbia Records, lead singer Ed Sloan admitted that he fell into a depression of sorts and began to feel disillusioned with the music industry. He admits "Coming from the success of the first record and losing our way after the second album hit me hard. You get signed, everything is golden and you think it’ll go on forever. After we were dropped, I was consumed with self-doubt. Music had always been my escape, but then music became my enemy. I shut down as a songwriter—and actually, pretty much as a human being."

Lead guitarist and keyboardist Les Hall is credited with rejuvenating Sloan's musical interest and masterminding the recording of We All Bleed. Ed Sloan says that his exile had taken him to a darker place in life and that the songs in We All Bleed would reflect that. Though dealing with harsh realities the band also stated that there is a strong element of positivity in the album that 'gets you ready to face the day'. Sloan and Hall maintain that cutting the ties associated with a major label also helped to charter that new path. "It was a fresh start. We spent two years writing whatever we wanted, with no expectations, no deadline," Sloan says. "Who knew if we would even release another record? It was a blast to have no obligation to copy the past."

We All Bleed has received a significantly better critical response compared to Crossfade's first two albums. William Rulhmann from Allmusic gave the album an average three out of 5 stars saying "Five years after the disappointing sophomore album Falling Away, Crossfade return on We All Bleed as a somewhat reconstituted outfit." The album received a review from SputnikMusic that scored the album a three and a half out of five. The review said " It is not the album that will revitalize modern radio rock, and chances are Crossfade isn’t even the band that will eventually accomplish that deed; but it is a positive step for the entire genre, and it also has the to potential to revive the musical careers of Crossfade’s members. We All Bleed is truly a brand of radio rock that you won’t feel guilty for sinking your teeth into."


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