It's not easy to find a success story as genuine as Creed's in popular culture
these days when considering all of the carefully scripted rises to glory and
the falls that inevitably follow careers built on hype. If any band in recent
years can claim to have ascended strictly on its own merits, it's Creed. This
Florida-based band went from zero to sixty, (or, more accurately, from zero
to selling more than twenty million albums) by virtue of a combination of
finger-on-the-pulse songs and powerful live performances. Their debut album,
My Own Prison, has sold over six million albums to date. Creed's sophomore
effort, Human Clay, debuted at #1 on the Billboard charts and has gone
on to sell more than 10 Million copies. The band's third release, Weathered,
also debuted at #1, selling more copies in its first week than any other rock
release in 2001, and tying the record for the longest run at the top following
a #1 debut.
"With My Own Prison, I knew we had the talent to get a record deal
and I knew we had songs good enough to get played on the radio, but I never
had any expectations of reaching this many people," says Creed's frontman
Scott Stapp.
Nonetheless, the band's success has been truly phenomenal. Creed was the first
band in history to have four #1 Rock Radio singles from a debut album. On the
strength of their singles, including the crushing title track and the more
pensive "What's This Life For," Creed topped countless year-end charts and was
recognized as the Rock Artist of the Year at Billboard's 1998 Music Awards.
Their debut album was also the #1-selling Hard Music album of 1998 on SoundScan's
Hard Music chart.
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