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M.O.B.: The Album is the only studio album by American hip hop collective ByrdGang.It was released through Asylum Records and ByrdGang Records digitally on June 17, 2008, and the physical copies were in stores on July 1, 2008.
The song was officially released on 4 October 2009. An official remix has been made with Boy Better Know. The song reached number one on the UK Singles Chart on 11 October 2009. [1] Chipmunk's love interest in the music video is played by the British actress Red Madrell. [2]
Younger Than Yesterday is the fourth studio album by the American rock band the Byrds, released on February 6, 1967, by Columbia Records. [1] [2] It saw the band continuing to integrate elements of psychedelia and jazz into their music, a process they had begun on their previous album, Fifth Dimension.
Byrdmaniax is the tenth album by the American rock band the Byrds.It was released in June 1971 on Columbia Records [1] at a time of renewed commercial and critical success for the band, due to the positive reception that their two previous albums, Ballad of Easy Rider and , had received.
The song's opening was sampled in Masta Ace's 2001 single "Take A Walk". [8] Gas House Gang, a barbershop quartet, in 2003 on their album "The Gas House Gang's Fifth". [9] A performance by Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass appears on the Lost Treasures CD, Shout DK 32867, released in 2005 as part of "The Herb Alpert Signature Series".
The song features the Bach-influenced organ and electric piano playing of Los Angeles composer, arranger, producer, and session musician, Van Dyke Parks. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] The song was issued as a single on June 13, 1966, and reached number 44 on the Billboard Hot 100 , but failed to chart in the United Kingdom.
"Lifestyles of the Not So Rich and Famous" is a song written by Byron Hill and Wayne Tester, and recorded by American country music artist Tracy Byrd. It was released in April 1994 as the first single from the album No Ordinary Man. The song won an ASCAP Award for being among the most performed country songs of 1994.
The song was inspired by the retired film director John S. Robertson who lived in the small town near San Diego where the Byrds' bassist Chris Hillman grew up. Robertson was an aberrant figure around the rural area, frequently being seen wearing a Stetson hat, and sporting a white handlebar mustache, which gave him the appearance of an American frontiersman out of the Wild West. [4]