Fallen (Evanescence album)

Fallen
Studio album by Evanescence
Released March 4, 2003 (2003-03-04)
Recorded August 2002 (2002-08)–December 2002 (2002-12)
Track Record Inc. and NRG Recording Studios, Ocean Studios, Conway Recording Studios
Genre
Length 48:52
Label
Producer Dave Fortman
Evanescence chronology
Origin
(2000)
Fallen
(2003)
Anywhere but Home
(2004)
Singles from Fallen
  1. "Bring Me to Life"
    Released: April 22, 2003
  2. "Going Under"
    Released: September 9, 2003
  3. "My Immortal"
    Released: December 8, 2003
  4. "Everybody's Fool"
    Released: June 7, 2004

Fallen is the debut studio album by the American rock band Evanescence. After releasing several EPs and a demo CD, the group signed to Wind-up in January 2001. Writing songs for Fallen started eight years prior; several of the songs that would feature on the album appeared on the band's earlier releases. Fallen was recorded between August and December 2002 in several locations, including Conway Recording Studios in Hollywood, California. This was followed by a two-week period of mixing at Conway Recording Studios in North Hollywood.

Fallen was released on March 4, 2003, on Wind-up and Epic Records.[2] Fallen is Evanescence's most commercially-successful album to date, selling more than seven million copies in the United States and over 17 million copies worldwide. It debuted at number seven on the Billboard 200 after selling more than 141,000 copies during its first week, and peaked at number three in June 2003. Fallen topped the charts in more than ten countries. The album was certified seven times platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America and was certified abroad.

Fallen received mixed to positive reviews from music critics. Fallen yielded four singles: "Bring Me to Life", "My Immortal", "Going Under", and "Everybody's Fool". "Bring Me to Life" and "My Immortal" charted in over ten countries, including Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The album earned Evanescence five nominations at the 46th Grammy Awards: Album of the Year, Best Rock Album, Best Rock Song, Best Hard Rock Performance, and Best New Artist. The band won in the latter two categories.

Background and recording

After Evanescence was formed by Amy Lee and Ben Moody in 1995, the band released three EPs and one demo CD. In January 2001 they signed with Wind-up Records, their first major label.[3] Composing Fallen took eight years;[4] in an MTV interview, Ben Moody said that he wrote with Lee "maybe two or three times in eight years."[3]

The band onstage, dressed in black
Evanescence in a 2003 Denver performance

The album was recorded in California at Track Record Studios, NRG Recording Studios, Ocean Studios, and Conway Recording Studios.[5] Songs were recorded as demos before the recording sessions, and "My Immortal", "Imaginary", and "Whisper" appeared on earlier Evanescence recordings.[3] The album was recorded and mixed from late August to early December 2002.[4] Recording began at Ocean Studios in Burbank, where "Bring Me to Life" was recorded.[6] This recording was later used for the Daredevil soundtrack.[7] For that song, Jay Baumgardner used a mix at his studio (NRG Recording Studios in North Hollywood) on an SSL 9000 J.[4] Drum tracks were recorded at Ocean Studios, with Josh Freese playing on selected songs to click tracks of stereo guitars and vocals.[4]

Dave Fortman said that for the rest of the drums, he used a D112 on the inside of the kick drum, a U47 on the outside, and an NS-10 speaker as an outside mic. The producer used 414 microphones on the ride and hi-hat cymbals, recording the drums on two-inch tape on a Studer recorder and inputting the results into Pro Tools.[4] The guitars (Gibson Les Paul, Gibson SG, Mesa Boogie, Marshall Amplification) for the album were cut at Mad Dog Studios in Burbank with an old Mesa Boogie guitar cabinet. Lee's vocals, pianos and the background vocal by the Millennium Choir were recorded at NRG Recording Studios.[4] The orchestral parts were arranged by David Hodges and David Campbell except for "My Immortal", which was arranged by composer Graeme Revell. Fallen was mixed over a two-week period at Conway Recording Studios in North Hollywood and mastered by Ted Jensen at Sterling Sound in New York City.[4]

Song information

I didn't want it to sound too fabricated. I love electronics and I love digital manipulation, but I wanted to first establish us as a real rock band. We're actually playing all of those parts: The strings are real, the choirs are real, the piano is real. [...] I think one of the most positive features about [the album] is that it's like watching a movie from front to back.

-Ben Moody, on Fallen[4]

According to Amy Lee, "Going Under" is about a previous emotionally- and physically-damaging relationship: "And when you're at the end of your rope, when you're at the point where you realize something has to change, that you can't go on living in the situation that you're in. It's cool. It's a very strong song."[8] "Going Under" was Fallen's second single.[9] "Bring Me to Life" is a nu metal-rap rock song[10][11] written in common time and performed at a moderate tempo (96 beats per minute). Written by Lee, Ben Moody, and David Hodges, the song was conceived when an acquaintance asked Lee in a restaurant if she was happy in her current relationship. Lee realized that she was not, when she was "woken up"; the lyrics "wake me up inside".[12] The singer confirmed that the song was about longtime friend Josh Hartzler, whom she married in 2007.[13]

"Everybody's Fool", also by Lee, Moody, and Hodges, is about celebrities with false images.[14] In a VH1 interview, Lee said: "My little sister was really getting into these, I don't want to offend anyone, but like really fake, cheesy, slutty female cracker-box idols, and it really pissed me off. She started dressing like them and she was like 8 years old. So I gave her the talk and I wrote a song."[14] "My Immortal", a piano rock ballad[15] written by Moody with a bridge by Lee, is based on a short story Moody wrote; in the album booklet he dedicates the song to his grandfather, Bill Holcomb.[5] "Haunted" is also based on a Moody short story which was posted on the Evanescence fan forum, EvBoard.com.[16] "Tourniquet" was originally written for Christian metal band Soul Embraced, which included future Evanescence member Rocky Gray.[17] "Imaginary", a song from Evanescence's 1998 self-titled EP,[18] was originally intended as Fallen's fourth single.[19] The midtempo "Taking Over Me"'s lyrics are about Lee being consumed by another person's obsession with her.[20] "Hello" remembers one of Lee's sisters, who died of an illness in 1987 at age three.[21] The lyrics of "My Last Breath" explore emotional survival, with the lack of air a metaphor.[20] "Whisper" features the Millennium Choir singing in Latin against muted guitars,[20] but the choir is uncredited in the album booklet.[22]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[23]
The Austin Chronicle[1]
Blender[24]
Entertainment WeeklyB−[25]
Rolling Stone[26]
Spin[27]
The Village VoiceB–[28]

Fallen received mixed-to-positive reviews from music critics. Johnny Loftus of AllMusic gave it three-and-a-half stars out of five: "The album does include flashes of the single's PG-rated nu-metal ("Everybody's Fool," "Going Under"). But it's the symphonic goth rock of groups like Type O Negative that influences most of Fallen."[23] Entertainment Weekly, in a generally-positive review, graded the album B-minus: "The genre now too old to be called nü-metal isn't exactly overflowing with spine-tinglingly great vocalists – let alone female ones. Amy Lee, lead singer of gloomy Arkansas rockers Evanescence, is an exception."[25] In a mixed review, Kirk Miller of Rolling Stone gave Fallen three stars out of five: "When vocalist Amy Lee croons about lying 'in my field of paper flowers' or 'pouring crimson regret,' she gives Fallen a creepy spiritual tinge that the new-metal boys lack."[26]

Adrien Begrand of PopMatters criticized Fallen, calling the album "basically as unoriginal and dumb as everything else in its genre; it has a small handful of transcendent moments, but a complete lack of musical adventurousness has the band mucking around either in stultifying nu-metal riffage, pretentious high school journal caterwauling, or even worse, both." Begrand praised Lee's "soaring, enchanting, [and] angelic" voice, writing that "Evanescence would be nothing" without her.[29] Billboard's Christa Titus called the album a "highly polished, hook-filled affair."[30] Melissa Maerz of Spin gave it four out of five stars: "Nu metal gets a powdering of Andrew Lloyd Webber theatrics as Lee aces her piano A-levels, adds a string section, and tackles capital letter issues - God ('Tourniquet'), Love ('Going Under'), and Death ('Bring Me To Life') - with the grandeur they deserve."[27] In a lukewarm review, Christopher Gray of the Austin Chronicle wrote that Evanescence was "a little too by the numbers to fully capitalize on Lee's obvious talents."[1] According to Village Voice critic Robert Christgau, "Their faith, as embodied in Amy Lee's clarion sopralto [sic], lends their goth-metal a palpable sweetness". He jokingly concluded, "Now if only it wasn't goth-metal at all."[28]

Commercial performance

Amy Lee and Ben Moody onstage
Evanescence's Amy Lee and Ben Moody in a 2003 Barcelona performance

Fallen was a commercial success, selling more than 17 million copies worldwide since its 2003 release.[31] The album debuted at number seven on the Billboard 200, with more than 141,000 copies sold in its first week,[32] and it has sold more than 7.6 million copies in the United States.[33] Fallen was the eighth-bestselling album of 2004[34] and the nineteenth-bestselling album of the 2000s.[35] By October 2011 the album had spent 106 weeks on the Billboard 200,[33] with 58 of those weeks in the top 20. Peaking at number three on June 14, 2003,[36] it re-entered the chart at number 192 on March 13, 2010. Fallen spent 223 weeks on the Top Pop Catalog chart after it fell off the Billboard 200.[37] The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) certified the album platinum in April 2003; by June 2008, it had reached seven times platinum.[38]

On the UK Albums Chart, Fallen debuted at number 18 with sales of 15,589 copies.[39] The album reached number one (with 38,570 copies sold) seven weeks later, after "Bring Me to Life" topped the UK Singles Chart.[39] It sold 56,193 copies in December 2003, its highest week of sales (although it was number 28 on the chart that week).[39] Fallen spent 33 weeks in the top 20 and 60 weeks in the top 75. The album re-entered the UK chart at number 35 the week after the release of Evanescence's second studio album, The Open Door.[40][41] By October 2011, the album had sold more than 1,367,900 copies in the United Kingdom.[39] It was successful elsewhere as well, topping the charts in more than ten countries and reaching the top ten in over twenty countries worldwide. According to Nielsen SoundScan figures, after more than three months in the top 10 of the Canadian Albums Chart Fallen peaked at number one on August 13, 2003 with sales of 8,900 copies.[42]

Christian controversy

Although Evanescence was originally promoted in Christian stores, the band later made it clear that they did not want to be considered Christian rock like fellow Wind-up Records artists Creed.[43] In April 2003 Wind-up Records chairman Alan Meltzer sent a letter to Christian radio and retail outlets explaining that despite the "spiritual underpinning that ignited interest and excitement in the Christian religious community", Evanescence were "a secular band, and as such view their music as entertainment."[44] Meltzer also wrote that even the label "strongly feels that [Evanescence] no longer belong in Christian markets".[44] Soon after receiving the letter, many Christian radio stations pulled Fallen songs from their playlists.[44] Terry Hemmings, CEO of the Christian music distributor Provident, was puzzled by the band's about-face: "They clearly understood the album would be sold in these [Christian music] channels."[45] In 2006, Amy Lee told Billboard that she had opposed Evanescence being identified as a "Christian band" from the beginning;[46] Ben Moody had supported it, whereas she had not.[46]

Track listing

All lyrics written by Amy Lee and Ben Moody, with additional writers listed below; all music composed by Evanescence. 

No. TitleWriter(s) Length
1. "Going Under"  David Hodges 3:35
2. "Bring Me to Life" (featuring Paul McCoy)Hodges 3:56
3. "Everybody's Fool"  Hodges 3:16
4. "My Immortal"    4:23
5. "Haunted"  Hodges 3:05
6. "Tourniquet" (Soul Embraced cover) 4:38
7. "Imaginary"    4:16
8. "Taking Over Me"   3:49
9. "Hello"  Hodges 3:40
10. "My Last Breath"  Hodges 4:07
11. "Whisper"    5:27
12. "My Immortal" (Band version, only on later pressings)  4:33

Personnel

Credits are taken from AllMusic,[22] and Fallen's liner notes.

  • Beverly Allen – choir, chorus
  • Geri Allen – choir, chorus
  • Zac Baird – programming
  • Jay Baumgardner – mixing
  • Sergio Chavez – assistant engineer
  • Jason Cupp – assistant engineer, engineer
  • Mark Curry – engineer, mixing
  • Francesco DiCosmo – bass
  • Dave Fortman – mixing, producer
  • Josh Freese – drums
  • Al Fujisaki – assistant engineer
  • Rocky Gray – composer
  • David Hodges – composer, keyboards, piano, programming, string arrangements
  • Melanie Jackson – choir, chorus
  • Ted Jensen – mastering
  • Chris Johnson – programming
  • John LeCompt – composer
  • Amy Lee – arranger, composer, keyboards, piano, vocals

  • Paul McCoy - guest vocals on "Bring Me To Life"
  • Diana Meltzer – A&R
  • Ben Moody – composer, guitars, engineer, producer
  • Victor Murgatroyd – production supervisor
  • Dean Nelson – assistant engineer
  • Joanne Paratore – choir, chorus
  • Jeremy Parker – engineer
  • Leslie Paton – choir, chorus
  • Graeme Revell – string arrangements
  • John Rodd – engineer
  • Edwards Sherman – art direction
  • Tom Steel – stage crew
  • Dwight Stone – choir, chorus
  • Sam Story – assistant engineer
  • Richard Stubbs – choir, chorus
  • Bill Talbott – engineer
  • Damon Tedesco – stage crew
  • Talaya Trigueros – choir, chorus
  • Susan Youngblood – choir, chorus

Charts

Peak positions

Chart (20032005) Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[47] 1
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[48] 1
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[49] 3
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[50] 4
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[51] 1
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[52] 1
Dutch Albums (MegaCharts)[53] 2
European Albums (European Top 100 Albums)[54] 1
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[55] 1
French Albums (SNEP)[56] 2
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[57] 2
Greek Albums (IFPI)[58] 1
Italian Albums (FIMI)[59] 3
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[60] 7
Mexican Albums (Top 100 Mexico)[61] 1
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[62] 2
Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[63] 3
Portuguese Albums (AFP)[64] 1
Russian Albums (Russian Music Charts)[65] 1
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[66] 3
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[67] 2
UK Albums (OCC)[68] 1
US Billboard 200[69] 3
US Hard Rock Albums (Billboard)[36] 18
Chart (2008) Peak
position
Spanish Albums (PROMUSICAE)[70] 69
Chart (2013) Peak
position
UK Rock Chart[71] 10

Decade-end charts

Chart (2000–09) Position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[72] 15
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[73] 28
Dutch Albums (Megacharts)[74] 67
U.S. Billboard 200[75] 19

Year-end charts

Chart (2003) Position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[76] 15
Australian Heavy Rock and Metal Albums (ARIA)[77] 2
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[78] 17
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[79] 38
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[80] 17
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[[81] 25
Dutch Albums (MegaCharts)[82] 23
Finnish Albums (Musiikkituottajat)[83] 16
French Albums (SNEP)[84] 10
Hungarian Albums (MAHASZ)[85] 81
New Zealand Albums (RIANZ)[86] 6
Spanish Albums (PROMUSICAE)[87] 15
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[88] 5
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[89] 3
UK Albums (OCC)[90] 16
US Billboard 200[91] 8
Chart (2004) Position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[92] 7
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[93] 15
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[94] 12
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[95] 16
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[96] 52
Dutch Albums (MegaCharts)[97] 10
Finnish Albums (Musiikkituottajat)[98] 59
French Albums (SNEP)[99] 20
Hungarian Albums (MAHASZ)[100] 28
New Zealand Albums (RIANZ)[101] 14
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[102] 39
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[103] 15
UK Albums (OCC)[104] 59
US Billboard 200[105] 6
Worldwide Albums (IFPI)[106] 43
Chart (2006) Position
UK Albums (OCC)[107] 191

Preceded by
Hail to the Thief by Radiohead
UK number-one album
June 28, 2003 – July 4, 2003
Succeeded by
Dangerously in Love by Beyoncé
Preceded by
Just as I Am by Guy Sebastian
Australian ARIA Albums Chart number-one album
January 26, 2004 – February 15, 2004
Succeeded by
That's What I'm Talking About by Shannon Noll

Certifications

Region Certification Certified units/Sales
Argentina (CAPIF)[108] 2× Platinum 80,000*
Australia (ARIA)[109] 6× Platinum 420,000^
Austria (IFPI Austria)[110] Platinum 30,000*
Belgium (BEA)[111] Platinum 50,000*
Brazil (ABPD)[112] 2× Platinum 250,000*
Canada (Music Canada)[113] 7× Platinum 700,000^
Finland (Musiikkituottajat)[114] Platinum 59,679[114]
France (SNEP)[115] 2× Platinum 657,700[116]*
Germany (BVMI)[117] 5× Gold 500,000^
Greece (IFPI Greece)[118] 2× Platinum 40,000^
Italy (FIMI)[119] Gold 25,000
Japan (RIAJ)[120] Platinum 250,000^
Mexico (AMPROFON)[121] Platinum+Gold 225,000^
Netherlands (NVPI)[122] Platinum 80,000^
New Zealand (RMNZ)[123] 5× Platinum 75,000^
Norway (IFPI Norway)[124] Platinum 40,000*
Poland (ZPAV)[125] Gold 35,000*
Portugal (AFP)[126] 2× Platinum 80,000^
Russia (NFPF)[127] Platinum 20,000*
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[128] Platinum 100,000^
Sweden (GLF)[129] Platinum 60,000^
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[130] 2× Platinum 80,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[131] 4× Platinum 1,200,000^
United States (RIAA)[38] 7× Platinum 7,619,000[132]
Summaries
Europe (IFPI)[133] 3× Platinum 3,000,000*
Worldwide 17,000,000[134]

*sales figures based on certification alone
^shipments figures based on certification alone

Release history

Region Date Label Format Catalog
United States[135] March 4, 2003 Wind-up Records CD, digital download 60150-13063-2
Canada[136] April 1, 2003 Wind-up Records, Epic Records EK 91746
Austria[137] April 28, 2003 WIN 510879 2
Germany[137]
United Kingdom[137] WIN 687043 2
Australia[138] May 19, 2003 510879200
France[137] May 20, 2003 WIN 510879 2
Japan[139] July 7, 2003 Epic/Sony Records EICP-253
September 9, 2003 Limited edition CD+DVD EICP-242
Austria[137] January 26, 2004 Wind-up Records, Epic Records CD reissue WIN 510879 9
Germany[137]
France[137] February 4, 2004
United Kingdom[137] February 23, 2004
Austria[137] September 25, 2009 Wind-up Records, EMI WIN 687043 2
Germany[137]
United Kingdom[137] September 28, 2009
France[137] October 5, 2009
Japan[139] October 12, 2011 EMI Music Japan Limited edition CD reissue TOCP-54276
United States[135] May 21, 2013 Wind-up Records Remastered LP (Black and purple) 60150-13359-1

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  83. The first list is the list of best-selling domestic albums of 2003 in Finland and the second is that of the best-selling foreign albums:
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  85. "Összesített album- és válogatáslemez-lista – chart-pozíció alapján 2003". Mahasz.hu (in Hungarian). Retrieved September 3, 2011.
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  89. "Swiss Year-End Charts 2003". Swisscharts.com. Retrieved September 3, 2011.
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  92. "ARIA Charts – End Of Year Charts – Top 100 Albums 2004". ARIA.com.au. Retrieved September 3, 2011.
  93. "Jahreshitparade 2004". Austriancharts.at (in German). Retrieved September 4, 2011.
  94. "Jaaroverzicten 2004" (in Dutch). Ultratop.be. Retrieved September 3, 2011.
  95. "Rapports Annuels 2004". Ultratop.be. Retrieved September 3, 2011.
  96. "Year-end Chart - 2004". Top20.dk. Retrieved September 4, 2011.
  97. "Jaaroverzichten - Album 2004". Dutchcharts.nl. Retrieved September 4, 2011.
  98. The first list is the list of best-selling domestic albums of 2004 in Finland and the second is that of the best-selling foreign albums:
  99. "Classement Albums – année 2004". DisqueenFrance.com (in French). Retrieved September 3, 2011.
  100. "Összesített album- és válogatáslemez-lista – chart-pozíció alapján 2004". Mahasz.hu (in Hungarian). Retrieved September 3, 2011.
  101. "Annual Top 50 Albums Chart 2004". RIANZ.org.nz. Retrieved September 3, 2011. Note: The reader must select "2004" → "Albums".
  102. "Årslista Album – År 2004". Sverigetopplistan.se. Retrieved September 4, 2011.
  103. "Swiss Year-End Charts 2003". Swisscharts.com. Retrieved September 4, 2011.
  104. "UK Year-End Charts 2004" (PDF). UKChartsPlus.co.uk. Retrieved September 4, 2011.
  105. "2004 Year End Charts – Top Billboard 200 Albums". Billboard. December 25, 2004. Retrieved September 3, 2011.
  106. "Top 50 Global Best Selling Albums for 2006" (PDF) (Press release) (in German). Bundesverband Musikindustrie. Retrieved November 8, 2011.
  107. "UK Year-End Charts 2006" (PDF). UKChartsPlus.co.uk. Retrieved September 4, 2011.
  108. "Argentinian album certifications – Evanescence – Fallen". Argentine Chamber of Phonograms and Videograms Producers. Retrieved August 23, 2011.
  109. "ARIA Charts – Accreditations – 2004 Albums". Australian Recording Industry Association. Retrieved May 15, 2007.
  110. "Austrian album certifications – Evanescence – Fallen" (in German). IFPI Austria. Retrieved August 23, 2011. Enter Evanescence in the field Interpret. Enter Fallen in the field Titel. Select album in the field Format. Click Suchen
  111. "Ultratop − Goud en Platina – 2004". Ultratop & Hung Medien / hitparade.ch.
  112. "Brazilian album certifications – Evanescence" (in Portuguese). Associação Brasileira dos Produtores de Discos. Retrieved August 23, 2011.
  113. "Canadian album certifications – Evanscence – Fallen". Music Canada.
  114. 1 2 "Evanescence" (in Finnish). Musiikkituottajat – IFPI Finland. Retrieved August 23, 2011.
  115. "French Chart, Sales & Certification". Fan of Music (in French). Retrieved May 15, 2007.
  116. "Les Meilleures Ventes de CD/Albums depuis 1968". Infodisc.fr. Retrieved July 16, 2013.
  117. "Gold-/Platin-Datenbank (Evanscence; 'Fallen')" (in German). Bundesverband Musikindustrie.
  118. "Greek album certifications – Evanscence – Fallen" (in Greek). IFPI Greece.
  119. "Italian album certifications – Evanescence – Fallen" (in Italian). Federazione Industria Musicale Italiana. Archived from the original on February 27, 2016. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
  120. "Japanese certifications" (in Japanese). Recording Industry Association of Japan. Retrieved November 13, 2010. Select 2003年{{{certmonth}}}月 on the drop-down menu
  121. "Certificaciones – Evanescence" (in Spanish). Asociación Mexicana de Productores de Fonogramas y Videogramas. Retrieved May 15, 2007.
  122. "Dutch Certifications – Evanescence – Fallen". NVPI.nl. Archived from the original on June 18, 2009. Retrieved August 23, 2011.
  123. "Latest Gold / Platinum Albums". Radioscope. 17 July 2011. Archived from the original on 2011-07-24.
  124. "Norwegian certifications – Evanescence" (in Norwegian). IFPI Norway. Retrieved May 15, 2007.
  125. "Polish album certifications – Evanscence – Fallen" (in Polish). Polish Society of the Phonographic Industry.
  126. "Portuguese album certifications – Evanscence – Fallen" (in Portuguese). Associação Fonográfica Portuguesa.
  127. "Russian album certifications – Evanescence – Fallen". 2m-online.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on January 24, 2009. Retrieved August 22, 2011.
  128. "Spanish album certifications – Evanscence – Fallen" (PDF) (in Spanish). Productores de Música de España. Select the "Chart", enter ' in the field "Year". Select ' in the field "Semana". Click on "Search Charts"
  129. "Guld- och Platinacertifikat − År 2003" (PDF) (in Swedish). IFPI Sweden. Retrieved August 23, 2011.
  130. "Edelmetall 2004". Hitparade.ch. Retrieved May 15, 2007.
  131. "British album certifications – Evanescence". British Phonographic Industry. Retrieved August 23, 2011. Enter Evanescence in the field Search. Select Artist in the field Search by. Select album in the field By Format. Click Search
  132. Grein, Paul (March 16, 2012). "Chart Watch Extra: Top Albums Of Last 10 Years". Yahoo! Music. Retrieved March 21, 2014.
  133. "IFPI Platinum Europe Awards – 2004". International Federation of the Phonographic Industry.
  134. "Heading Into the Studio". Evanescence.com. April 4, 2011. Retrieved December 22, 2011.
  135. 1 2 Fallen releases in the United States:
  136. "Fallen". Amazon.ca. Retrieved March 18, 2013.
  137. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Fallen releases in the Europe:
  138. Fallen releases in Australia:
  139. 1 2 Fallen releases in Japan:

External links

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