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The Magic Numbers in 2006, left to right: Angela Gannon, Romeo Stodart, Michele Stodart (not pictured: Sean Gannon behind drum kit.) On the back of releasing just one commercially available single, "Forever Lost", and even before their debut album was released, they played a sold-out show to a crowd of over 2,000 at The Forum in Kentish Town ...
The Magic Numbers is the debut album from English pop rock band the Magic Numbers. It was nominated for a Mercury Music Prize in 2005. Songwriting duties were taken by Romeo Stodart as was much of the musical composition and arrangement. It incorporated the earlier single release of "Hymn for Her" as a hidden track.
Those the Brokes is the second album from The Magic Numbers. The album was partly recorded in New York at Allaire Studios in Spring 2006, a venue which has also been used in the past by David Bowie , The Strokes and Ryan Adams , and was recorded and engineered by Richard Wilkinson.
Magic Number (game), a pricing game on The Price is Right "Magic Number" (song), a song by Maaya Sakamoto "The Magic Number", a 1990 song by De La Soul from 3 Feet High and Rising; The Magic Numbers, a British rock band; Magic Numbers or Hannah Fry's Magic Numbers, a 2018 series of episodes about Mathematics, presented by Hannah Fry.
In 1978, it was covered by Jack Clement on his album All I Want to Do in Life. [ 1 ] [ 3 ] In his book on Johnny Cash , who recorded this song on a Jack Clement–produced album in the 1980s, John M. Alexander describes "We Must Believe in Magic" as a "whimsical piece of sound advice to hold on to our ability to always believe in magic and the ...
Forever Lost may refer to: "Forever Lost" (song), the debut single by rock band The Magic Numbers Forever Lost, a 2012 album by Norwegian recording artist A-Lee "Forever Lost", a song by God Is an Astronaut on the album All Is Violent, All Is Bright
These numbers may be around us every day, but the magic is when you feel like you are grabbed to look up, look right, look left, or you ask for a sign and it shows up in a way that lets you know ...
[51] [nb 4] The single peaked in June at number two, [20] and Do You Believe in Magic re-entered the Top LPs chart that month. [54] The album spent 16 more weeks on the chart, reaching a new peak in August at number 32. [20] Do You Believe in Magic was first released in the United Kingdom in March 1966. [55]