All at Once is the second studio album by American indie-rock band The Airborne Toxic Event. The album was released on April 26, 2011, by Island Records..
The band contrasted the material on the album with the material on its first album, which songwriter Mikel Jollett described as consisting entirely of "sad songs about girls." All at Once, by contrast, contains "only three sad songs about girls." The material features expanded use of keyboards and is louder in many parts, but also contains acoustic songs. All the songs were described as autobiographical except "Welcome to Your Wedding Day," which was penned in response to the Deh Bala wedding party bombing. "All those people died and then everyone was on the news like, 'I don't understand why they don't appreciate our presence,'" Jollett said. "That's not really autobiographical as much as it is about how it's stupid to think people would be thankful for you bombing them."
All songs written and composed by Mikel Jollett, except where noted.
All at Once may refer to:
"All at Once" is a song written by Michael Masser and Jeffrey Osborne and recorded by Whitney Houston. It was released as a single in Japan and several European countries in 1985–1986. While it did not receive an official single release in the United States, the song did receive significant radio airplay there.
It became the first hit for Whitney Houston in the Netherlands in April 1985.
The song is a heartbreak ballad about a lover who leaves without warning and the damage it does. Houston performed the song at the 1987 American Music Awards.
Arista released a promotional music video exclusive to Germany. Another video was release for some European countries. It features Houston singing the song on a stage.
"All at Once" is a song by Denver-based rock band the Fray and is the fourth track and fourth single from their debut album, How to Save a Life.
The music video for the song premiered on VH1's VSpot Top 20 Countdown, and consists of live footage of the band playing the song, as well as miscellaneous footage of the band on the road. Footage was shot for the video at the band's June 23 show at the Tweeter Center in Mansfield, Massachusetts.
The video reached #6 on the VH1 Top 20 Video Countdown.
Although the song had not yet been released as a single, it charted for national airplay, entering Billboard magazine's Hot Adult Top 40 Tracks chart in June 2007. The song lasted 18 weeks on the chart and peaked at #20, the band's lowest position on the chart to date. It became the band's first single to miss the Billboard Hot 100 chart and is the band's least successful single to date.