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Stop Drop and Roll!!! is the debut studio album by the American rock band the Foxboro Hot Tubs.The full album was first available for digital download on April 22, 2008, and was released on CD on May 20, 2008.
Carlson left academia in 1994 and founded the Society for Amateur Scientists. [ 2 ] [ 5 ] He contributed to the columns "Science on Society" on The Humanist from 1990-1992, [ citation needed ] " The Amateur Scientist " in Scientific American from 1995 to 2001, [ 2 ] and "The Citizen Scientist" for Make magazine from 2005 to 2007. [ 6 ]
Foxboro Hot Tubs is the garage rock side project of Green Day, formed in 2007. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The band includes all members of Green Day, as well as their touring members Jason White , Jason Freese , and Kevin Preston, who is also in Prima Donna . [ 3 ]
Last Train to Paris is the only studio album by American musical trio Diddy – Dirty Money, composed of rapper Diddy, and R&B singers Kaleena Harper and Dawn Richard.It was released on December 14, 2010, by Bad Boy Records and Interscope Records.
Dirty Little Rabbits' musical style is considerably different from Crahan's most notable band, Slipknot. Crahan explained in an interview in 2008 that he is an "alternative person in art and music" and that he did not grow up obsessed with metal. [1]
Hot was a vocal trio based in Los Angeles, California, whose membership was Gwen Owens (born June 19, 1953), Cathy Carson (née Catherine Sue Fiebach) (October 8, 1953 – June 26, 2014), and Juanita Curiel (born February 25, 1953). [1] The group had a million-selling hit single in 1977 entitled "Angel in Your Arms".
Hazeldine were an American alternative country four-piece band based in Albuquerque, New Mexico. [1] Members were Shawn Barton (vocals, guitar), Tonya Lamm (guitar, vocals), Anne Tkach (bass), and Jeffrey Richards (guitar, banjo, drums).
Its executive director, Shawn Carlson, Ph.D., was a physicist and established science writer who had left academe a year earlier to devote his career to advancing amateur science. Dr. Carlson took over the column in November of that year and immediately returned its focus to cutting-edge science projects that amateurs can do inexpensively at home.