** ** A A ** . F if a * a A A A A A A A A A A A A six , sixth , A A A ** , A * A A A A , A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A sixth A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A * A A A A sixth A A A
Beautiful, piano-led ballads excluded from the standard tracklist of The Fray (2009) but included on deluxe digital releases. the fray full discography repack
The album’s secret weapon is “Heartbeat.” Over a synth pulse that mimics a cardiac monitor, Slade sings about a love that persists despite distance and disaster. It is the closest The Fray ever came to a pure love song—not a desperate plea, but a quiet affirmation. Yet even here, the shadow looms. The album closer, “Happiness,” asks a devastating question: “Does happiness mean peace to you?” In The Fray’s lexicon, peace is suspicious. It might just be numbness wearing a nice suit. ** ** A A **
"Over My Head (Cable Car)", "How to Save a Life", "Look After You", "All at Once". It is the closest The Fray ever came
The Fray was formed by high school classmates Isaac Slade (vocals, piano) and Joe King (guitar, vocals). The two met at a music store in Denver, and after local media buzz caught the attention of Epic Records, the band was signed in 2004. Original members also included Dave Welsh on guitar and Ben Wysocki on drums. Their breakthrough came with the debut album How to Save a Life , propelled by massive hits that dominated both radio and TV placements.
A collection of their greatest hits plus three then-new tracks, including "Singing Low." Live Records & Rarities
This official compilation spans their decade-long run with Epic Records. Crucially for collectors, it includes three brand-new tracks that showed a return to their classic piano-rock roots: "Singing Low," "Corner," and "Changing Tide." 4. Live Albums and B-Sides