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"Black and Gold" was made available as a digital download on 31 March 2008 as the lead single from Sam Sparro. [4] It was released by Island UK Records through a licensing deal with independent Los Angeles based label, Modus Vivendi Music, owned and operated by Jesse Rogg, who also produced and co-wrote the song with Sparro.
Signals is the ninth studio album by Canadian rock band Rush, released on September 9, 1982 by Anthem Records. [3] After the release of their previous album, Moving Pictures, the band started to prepare material for a follow-up during soundchecks on their 1981 concert tour and during the mixing of their subsequent live album Exit...Stage Left.
Artwork for the cover of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Book 2 3 vol. 10, June 1986. With the prototype of April O'Neil. (third print). In the original Mirage Comics storyline for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, April O'Neil was a skilled computer programmer and assistant to a famous yet nefarious scientist, Baxter Stockman. She helped program his ...
Judith Hoag (/ h oʊ ɡ /; born June 29, 1963 [1] [better source needed]) is an American actress.She is known for playing April O'Neil in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990) and Gwen Cromwell Piper in the Disney Channel television film series Halloweentown, from 1998 to 2006.
In a similar vein to the band's 1978 album D.o.A: The Third and Final Report, the album features four tracks each created by each individual member of the group. Bryin Dall was the co-writer and performer on the track by Genesis P-Orridge.
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"Cottonmouth" was Sparro's first single from the album, released one year before the album, on 10 June 2007. [1] "Black and Gold" was the second single from the album, meant to act as a lead single for the album's release soon thereafter. The song went on to become a hit in the U.K., as well as in several other countries worldwide.
The original photograph of the dress. The dress was a 2015 online viral phenomenon centred on a photograph of a dress. Viewers disagreed on whether the dress was blue and black, or white and gold. The phenomenon revealed differences in human colour perception and became the subject of scientific investigations into neuroscience and vision science.