"A Little Piece of Heaven" is a song by American heavy metal band Avenged Sevenfold. It is the ninth song from their self-titled fourth album. Though not released as a single, the song is one of the band's most popular. In December 2007, the song received an animated music video. The song was written by the band's drummer, Jimmy "The Rev" Sullivan, and features him on dueling lead vocals with M. Shadows.
Background
"A Little Piece of Heaven" was written by drummer The Rev.[2][3][4] The song's demo was titled "Big Bear", and featured The Rev doing all the instruments and vocals.[5] It was originally intended to be on a Halloween EP, but once the band's record label heard it, they insisted it be on the album.[3]
Lyrics and music
"A Little Piece of Heaven" is about a man who, fearing that his proposal to her will be rejected, murders his girlfriend. He then eats her heart and rapes her corpse. The girlfriend then returns from the dead and murders him and eats his heart. The man then also comes back from the dead to make things right. The two reconcile, get married, and together they begin killing others.[6][7][8]
Members of the band have compared the song to "an eight-minute movie".[6]
Music video
In December 2007, an animated video directed by Rafa Alcantra[12] was made for "A Little Piece of Heaven".[11][13] The video for the song features a man who, after having his marriage proposal rejected, murders his girlfriend. Due to the song's subject matter, Warner Brothers initially only released it to registered MVI users over the internet.[14] However, it was later released to YouTube on October 26, 2009.[15]
Critical reception and legacy
Kerrang and Return of Rock ranked "A Little Piece of Heaven" at number 1 and number 3 respectively on their lists of the greatest Avenged Sevenfold songs,[16][17] while Classic Rock History ranked it at number 5[18] and Louder Sound ranked it at number 11 on their respective lists.[19] It was voted as the best Avenged Sevenfold song in an official song tournament during March Madness.[20]
Choir: Beth Andersen, Monique Donnelly, Rob Giles, Debbie Hall, Scottie Haskell, Luana Jackman, Bob Joyce, Rock Logan, Susie Stevens Logan, Arnold McCuller, Gabriel Mann, and Ed Zajack