Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
B ^ "The People That We Love" did not peak on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart, but peaked at number 14 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 chart, which acts as a 25 song extension of the Hot 100. [ 32 ] C ^ "The Sound of Winter" did not peak on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart, but peaked at number 4 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 chart, which acts as a ...
The music video begins with Bush performing in an alley with a white monolith beside them, then Rossdale comes inside the monolith in a white background surrounded by a Japanese-inspired island. Later, the scene becomes interspersed with Rossdale doing karate blindfolded and Parsons doing martial arts as well.
"Little Things" is a song by rock band Bush, released to radio in the United States in 1994 and physically released on 30 May 1995 as the second single from their 1994 debut album, Sixteen Stone. [ 1 ]
In the summer of 2009, the Black Eyed Peas dominated the music charts with their album “The E.N.D.” and went all the way to No. 1 with “I Gotta Feeling,” knocking out their other song ...
"Everything Zen" is a single by British rock band Bush. The song was released to radio in the fall of 1994 before being physically released on 17 April 1995. The single comes from their 1994 debut album, Sixteen Stone. [3] It was the band's first single released under the name "Bush", [4] and their second overall.
The album's musical direction of integrating electronic elements into a rock sound was, according to drummer Robin Goodridge, influenced by Deconstructed, a 1997 remix album of Bush's music. [ 3 ] Rossdale stated in 1999 that The Science of Things was so-named because the phrase was "a mixture of the specific, science, and the non-specific ...
Man on the Run is the sixth studio album by the British rock band Bush, released on 21 October 2014, through Zuma Rock Records. [2] It marks the band's second studio album to be recorded under its current incarnation (Gavin Rossdale, Robin Goodridge, Chris Traynor, Corey Britz), which reformed in 2010 after an eight-year hiatus and released The Sea of Memories in 2011.
"Army Dreamers" was released on 22 September 1980 [citation needed] and peaked at number 16 in the UK Singles Chart. [1] The song is about the effects of war and about a mother who grieves for her young adult son, who was killed on military manoeuvres.