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Pretty on the Inside is the debut studio album by American alternative rock band Hole, released on September 17, 1991, in the United States on Caroline Records.Produced by Sonic Youth's Kim Gordon, and Gumball frontman Don Fleming, the album was Hole's first major label release after the band's formation in 1989 by vocalist, songwriter, and guitarist Courtney Love and lead guitarist Eric ...
4. “The Boy Is Mine” by Brandy and Monica. Notable lyrics: "When will you get the picture.You're the past, I'm the future. Get away, it's my time to shine. If you didn't know, the boy is mine."
Kim Althea Gordon was born April 28, 1953, [2] in Rochester, New York, the second child of Althea (d. 2002) and Calvin Wayne Gordon (1915–1998). [3] [4] [5] At the time of her birth, Gordon's father, a native of Kansas, [5] was a professor in the sociology department at the University of Rochester.
"Karaoke Queen" was released as the third single on 1 November 1999, and entered at number 36 on the UK Singles Chart. Cerys wrote the track after a night out in Ibiza with Dai Morris of Dai's Cwtch and relates the tale of her falling off the stage while performing karaoke at Murphy's Irish Bar in San Antonio. [citation needed]
The song was inspired by an incident that occurred on August 16, 1991 at the Queen Margaret Union in Glasgow, Scotland, where Love stage-dived and was molested by members of the audience. Speaking of the incident in a 1995 interview, Love said: We had just gotten off tour with Mudhoney, and I decided to stage-dive.
Live Through This is the second studio album by the American alternative rock band Hole, released on April 12, 1994, by DGC Records.Recorded in late 1993, it departed from the band's unpolished hardcore aesthetics to more refined melodies and song structure. [4]
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Sam Batra of The Guardian wrote of the band's London date in December 1991: "There's no pretending that [Love] is in control. This is the sound of living on the edge and consequently working it out in splurges of furious noise seems to be the only articulation that has any authenticity," adding that "it's as if every flurry of noise unravels itself, breaks down as it struggles within the ...