
Collective Soul are on their Co-Headline Summer Unity Tour with +Live+ and special guests Our Lady Peace and Greylin James Rue
Hailing from Atlanta, GA, Collective Soul celebrated their 30th Anniversary in 2024 with the release of their highly anticipated and critically acclaimed 12th studio album, Here To Eternity, May 17, 2024 on their Fuzze-Flex Records label. It was written and produced by E. Roland and co-produced by Shawn Grove, and recorded at Elvis Presley’s estate in Palm Springs, CA. They’re the only other music artist to ever record at the historical landmark. With 11 studio albums—including 1995’s self-titled Collective Soul album, which went triple Platinum–and 8 #1 hits under their belt, frontman and chief songwriter Ed Roland is unwaveringly driven in his desire to double down on doing more of what he does best – making music, sweet music, both in the studio and onstage. They were one of only five artists to have performed at both Woodstock festivals in ’94 and ’99. They’ve sold over 15 million albums worldwide–six of which have gone Gold or Platinum—and boast seven #1 singles, including “Shine,” “December,” and “The World I Know.” They’re now giving fans an insight into their musical world with the release of their first-ever documentary, Give Me A Word: The Collective Soul Story, which was released July 8, 2025 via Trinity Content Partners. It tells the band’s untold history: the family component to the band, the creativity, and the wisdom that has been hard won over their illustrious career. Not only does the film contain footage of the recording process of Here To Eternity, it also features archival footage throughout the band’s career dating back to the band’s early days.
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With Collective Soul currently touring across North America, here’s a look back at their ten greatest tracks.
10. Where the River Flows
Like Weezer, Collective Soul released a self-titled album in the mid-‘90s with a blue cover that would be colloquially referred to by fans as ‘the Blue Album.’ And as was the case with Weezer, that album was Collective Soul’s biggest seller, eventually going triple platinum, with “Where the River” becoming the third song from the album to hit No. 1 on Billboard’s Mainstream Rocks chart.
9. Precious Declaration
1997’s Disciplined Breakdown is the dark horse favorite of Collective Soul’s early albums, with a more eclectic sound that included the legendary Memphis Horns appearing on the deep cut “Full Circle.” Ed Roland wrote the lead single “Precious Declaration” about the band’s bitter legal battle with a former manager, but there’s still a tone of optimism through the strife that inspired the lyrics: “I’ve been living for this, won’t break now/ I’m cleansed with hopefulness.”
8. Gel
After the success of Collective Soul’s debut, the band returned with “Gel,” the first single from both the band’s self-titled album and the soundtrack to The Jerky Boys: The Movie, which featured other fast rising stars like Green Day and Coolio. The swaggering, playful “Gel” was the first Collective Soul released with bassist Will Turpin, who joined in 1994 and is still with the band today.
7. She Said
The smoldering “She Said” played over the closing credits of the 1997 slasher movie Scream 2, with a music video that heavily featured clips from the popular horror franchise. A shorter version of “She Said,” with a programmed beat instead of live drums, appeared as a hidden track on Collective Soul’s next album, Dosage.
6. Run
Collective Soul was once again tapped for a major film soundtrack when Dosage’s lead single “Run” was featured in the Varsity Blues soundtrack. The ballad became the band’s biggest hit on Adult Contemporary radio since “December” five years earlier.
5. Shine
Collective Soul’s Hints Allegations and Things Left Unsaid was never meant to be a major label album – Ed Roland recorded it in a basement with producer Matt Serletic as a demo before an Atlanta college radio station began playing ‘Shine.” The surprise hit got the band signed to Atlantic Records, and the label simply re-released the demo with minimal changes, eventually selling over two million copies. And Serletic, having proven he could make a radio-ready album in a basement, produced Collective Soul’s sophomore album as well as breakthrough hits for other acts like Matchbox Twenty and Edwin McCain.
4. Tremble For My Beloved
Despite all of Collective Soul’s success with soundtrack albums, the band’s most memorable song placement in a film came many years after the fact, when the 1999 track “Tremble for My Beloved” appeared in the 2008 box office smash Twilight. As the opening track and fourth single from Dosage, “Tremble For My Beloved” was a minor radio hit that had dropped off the band’s setlists and was left off the band’s best-of compilation Seven Year Itch: Greatest Hits, 1994-2001. After its Twilight resurgence, however, “Tremble” became a live staple and Collective Soul filmed a music video for the song in 2010.
3. The World I Know
Ed Roland wrote “The World I Know” during a day of downtime in New York City, walking the streets of the city and imagining a suicidal man experiencing an epiphany and a change of heart. It was a major hit all over the globe, but it was only Collective Soul’s biggest song in Canada, where it topped RPM’s singles chart. American Idol winner David Cook’s cover of the song peaked at No. 28 on the Hot 100 after he performed it on the show in 2008.
2. Heavy
Collective Soul didn’t make a music video for the second single from 1999’s Dosage, but “Heavy” was a massive radio hit. The aptly titled uptempo track topped Billboard’s Mainstream Rock chart for 15 weeks, tying “Interstate Love Song” by Stone Temple Pilots to become the second longest reign at No. 1 on the chart at the time.
1. December
“December” isn’t really a seasonal or holiday-themed song, a catchy but downbeat track inspired by Collective Soul’s contentious relationship with the band’s manager, much like the later hit “Precious Declaration.” The “December single was released in March 1995, and it peaked on the charts in September. That December, however, the song was named rock radio’s most played hit of 1995.
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