
Singles like "Bully" and "Unity" fared well on the charts, with the former crossing over to the Hot 100. Once again produced by Cavallo, the effort debuted at number four on the Billboard 200, its highest entry to date. The band's fourth studio album, Amaryllis (Atlantic/Roadrunner), was released in the spring of 2012. The trek eventually led to a CD/DVD set, 2011's Somewhere in the Stratosphere, which featured a pair of complete live sets from their Carnival of Madness and Anything & Everything tours. In keeping with its driving sound, the band loaned some of its songs to the WWE to use during their pay-per-view events, as well as a number of other soundtracks, all the while touring for Sound of Madness.

Soon after the album's release, the band parted ways with Perri and continued as a quartet. It yielded six singles including the crossover hit "Second Chances," which rose into the Top Ten of the Hot 100. The set went double platinum in the U.S., peaking at number eight on the Billboard 200. The long-awaited Sound of Madness, featuring Grammy-winning producer Rob Cavallo (Goo Goo Dolls, Green Day), arrived in July. The band underwent a few lineup changes in the years to follow, re-emerging in 2008 as a quintet that included Smith and Kerch along with guitarists Nick Perri and Zach Myers and bass player Eric Bass. The following year the band issued a live album documenting those shows, then returned in October 2005 with its sophomore effort, Us and Them, which went gold. Whisper eventually went platinum, aided by its single, "Fly from the Inside." Shinedown also supported it with a heroic slate of live shows, remaining on tour throughout most of 2004. Snapped up by Atlantic Records during the early-2000s flurry of post-Creed and Nickelback signings, the group released its debut album, Leave a Whisper, in 2003. Hailing from Jacksonville, Florida, the band's founding lineup included vocalist Brent Smith, guitarist Jasin Todd, bassist Brad Stewart, and drummer Barry Kerch. Melodic hard rock outfit Shinedown debuted in the early 2000s with the muscular post-grunge Leave a Whisper, smoothing their sound over the years to incorporate pop-friendly hooks and polished production on top ten hits like Amaryllis and Threat to Survival.
