Three in-game video clips of the playable songs from Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock Companion Pack are now available. The clips can be downloaded from the following links:

Putting Holes in Happiness - Marilyn Manson (Nick Zinner remix)
hdam.dvs.tv/IGA/guitarheromanson.mpg

Tina - Flyleaf
dam.dvs.tv/IGA/guitarheroflyleaf.mpg

Carcinogen Crush - A.F.I.
dam.dvs.tv/IGA/guitarheroafi.mpg
Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock Companion Pack (Interscope Records) features not only the key songs on Activision's Guitar Hero III: Legends Of Rock, but also exclusive access to more gameplay with three previously unreleased expansion songs to play with Legends of Rock on Xbox 360. Included in each Companion Pack is a unique code users may input at interscope.com/guitarherocode to receive a unique Xbox Live code. Users may then input the Xbox Live code into their Xbox 360 console when logged into Xbox Live, to download the expansion songs. Known for his outrageous stage persona, Marilyn Manson released his sixth studio record, Eat Me, Drink Me, in June 2007. Written following an introspective year, the new release was called "his most honest work ever" by Rolling Stone magazine. Over the years, Manson's heavy-metal sound has incorporated elements including spoken-word poetry, glam rock and vaudeville, and he tends toward unconventional and experimental music and recording techniques. While many loud rockers reopen old wounds by singing about their broken homes and broken hearts, Belton, TX quintet Flyleaf (Lacey Mosley, vocals; Sameer Bhattacharya, guitar; Jared Hartmann, guitar; Pat Seals, bass; James Culpepper, drums) confronts past injuries to heal old scars and in the process prove that hope shines brighter than despair. Flyleaf's self-titled debut album is filled with songs about abuse, neglect, addiction, dysfunction, and overcoming adversity. The band's wide array of brooding beats, atmospheric textures and lunging riffs compliment Mosley's emotionally charged vocals, which range from breathy and beautiful to scathing and aggressive.

The documented origins of AFI stretch back to 1991 when California teens Davey Havok and Adam Carson formed the band and released a debut split 7" the following year with fellow Ukiah High students Loose Change (whose lineup at the time featured future AFI guitarist Jade Puget). Twelve years later, AFI would make the decision to brave major label waters, releasing sixth album Sing the Sorrow on Dreamworks in 2003. Girl's Not Grey would be the band's single most infectious pop moment to date, while Death of Seasons incorporated lockstep industrial rhythms and mournful choruses before dissolving into a cacophony of screaming anguish. Now with the new DecemberUnderground, AFI invite Despair Faction and other fans new and old (and yet to be made) to experience their most accomplished and labour-intensive work to date.