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    The Fray - How to Save a Life Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of The Fray - How to Save a Life? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for The Fray - How to Save a Life from 2000s Music and what is the personality traits.

    The Fray - How to Save a Life
    INFJ

    INFJ (6w5)

    The Fray - “How to Save a Life” personality type is INFJ, the “Mystery” type.

    The Fray describes a high-energy, high-maintenance extrovert who uses a quiet, understated manner to get what they want.

    They are a self-described “introvert with a girlfriend,” who is driven by a need to connect with people.

    In the Fray’s music, it is clear that they are introverts who have found a way to express themselves through other people.

    The Fray is a band of introverts. Their lyrics describe the loneliness and isolation that introverts often feel.

    In their song “How to Save a Life,” they sing: “You don’t know me, you don’t know me, you don’t know me, you don’t know me/I don’t even know myself.”

    The Fray is a band composed of four introverts. Singer Isaac Slade sings in a low, quiet voice that is at times almost inaudible. He also does not appear on stage or speak in interviews.

    How to Save a Life is the debut studio album by American alternative rock band The Fray. Released on September 14, 2005, through Epic Records, the record charted in the top 15 on the Billboard 200 and was a top ten hit in Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand and the UK. The first two singles from the album, “Over My Head (Cable Car)” and “How to Save a Life“ helped the album become a commercial success and brought the band mainstream popularity.

    AllMusic, whilst giving the album a modestly positive review, stated that the band "lacked originality" and the album itself lacked any "inspiration and excitement". Stylus Magazine gave the album a negative review, stating, "The Fray, as a rule, are moribund, emotionally strained, uninvolving, and have a tendency to sound like The Cranberries fronted by a man." Rolling Stone and Blender echoed many of these statements, both giving the album three stars out of five.

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