Calling All Angels (Train song)
It was included on the band's third studio album, My Private Nation, and produced by Brendan O'Brien."[1] The song received mixed reviews from rock critics, with Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly giving the song a B+ and calling it "an anthemic hymn to commitment...that builds steadily to a gloriously clanging climax."[2] Matt Lee of the BBC was less impressed, describing the track as "pedestrian, the vocals soulless, even more so than" the band's biggest hit single, "Drops of Jupiter (Tell Me)".In the category Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group, it lost out to "Disorder in the House" by Bruce Springsteen and Warren Zevon.The tempo was slowed, several lyrics were changed, and the third verse was entirely cut to fit the theme of the scene.