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"St. Chroma" is a song by American rapper Tyler, the Creator featuring Canadian singer Daniel Caesar, released on October 28, 2024 as the opening track from his eighth studio album Chromakopia. Background and composition
Inspired by West Coast and southern hip hop sound, [1] the song revolves around the pressures of fame on Tyler, the Creator [2] and his paranoia. [2] [3] Tyler also references the singer Usher and fellow Odd Future member Lionel Boyce's turn to acting, [4] before proclaiming himself as the biggest rapper out of Los Angeles after Kendrick Lamar.
The single "Noid" and the track "St. Chroma" peaked at No. 10 and 7 on the Billboard Hot 100, respectively, marking his first top 10 hits on that chart. [ 87 ] In Chromakopia ' s second week, the album earned 160,000 equivalent album units in the United States, securing a second consecutive week at number one on the Billboard 200 chart. [ 88 ]
Dead Air for Radios is a studio album by Kevin Moore, under the musical moniker Chroma Key.It was released through Fight Evil Records on December 16, 1998. [3] The album was recorded by Steve Tushar at Bill's Place Rehearsal Studio in Hollywood, mixed by both Steve Tushar and Kevin Moore with final mastering by Eddy Schreyer.
In September 2005, Chroma was released through independent label The Militia Group. [3] Within a year, the group signed to major label Epic, [4] and their debut album had sold over 100,000 copies. [5] Sometime in 2006, Mediaedge:cia and True Entertainment contacted Dr Pepper with the concept of placing a band inside a bubble to record an album. [6]
Chroma dot colour recovery Cultural historian James Chapman has written about connections between this Doctor Who serial and earlier science-fiction TV programmes. [ 9 ] The Quatermass Experiment (1953), for example, has a similar storyline concerning astronauts endangering humanity after coming into contact with extraterrestrials. [ 9 ]
The telerecording of episode one does not contain chroma dot information as it was filtered out at the time it was made, so was recoloured using colour referenced from the other restored episodes. Keyframes, including the first frame of a shot and every fifth frame thereafter (approximately 7,000 in total) were hand coloured by Stuart Humphryes .
Dot crawl (also known as chroma crawl or cross-luma) [1] [2] is a visual defect of color analog video standards when signals are transmitted as composite video, as in terrestrial broadcast television. It consists of moving checkerboard patterns which appear along horizontal color transitions (vertical edges).