Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Copy/Paste is a compilation album by Scottish-American rock band Garbage released on November 29, 2024, as part of Record Store Day's Black Friday event. [1] The album features covers of ten classic songs, including a previously unreleased track, "Love My Way". [2] [3] An abridged version of the album was released digitally on December 6.
An in-depth study of MP3 audio quality, sound artist and composer Ryan Maguire's project "The Ghost in the MP3" isolates the sounds lost during MP3 compression. In 2015, he released the track "moDernisT" (an anagram of "Tom's Diner"), composed exclusively from the sounds deleted during MP3 compression of the song "Tom's Diner", [ 78 ] [ 79 ...
[6] [7] The lyrics includes, "¿Por qué no tengo un corazón así? / Así como el que te dieron a ti / Porque el que me tocó a mí es frágil / Por eso lo rompiste fácil / Y yo queriendo un corazón así / Así como el que te dieron a ti / Porque el que me tocó a mí es frágil / Por eso lo rompiste fácil".
This Stupid World is the seventeenth studio album by American indie rock band Yo La Tengo, released on February 10, 2023 by Matador Records.It was recorded and produced by the band in their studio space intermittently between 2020 and 2022, during the COVID-19 pandemic and represents their first effort self-producing.
Lyrics unrelated to the Moby story were added later. [16] Most of the lyrics on I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One deal with melancholy emotions. [17] The track "Stockholm Syndrome", which is the first Yo La Tengo song sung by McNew, [15] is about captives eventually expressing empathy toward their captors and vice versa. [17]
In the celebrations marking the return of democracy in 1990 at Santiago's Estadio Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos, the anthem was played in its present melody, raised to F Major, which is the original melody of the second anthem by Carnicer, but using the 1847 lyrics as text, save for the original chorus of the 1819 anthem. This was the ...
And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out received acclaim from music critics.AllMusic reviewer Heather Phares felt that the album "isn't as immediate as some of the group's earlier work, but it's just as enduring, proving that Yo La Tengo is the perfect band to grow old with". [5]
The songs were recorded by the band placing a single mic in the center of their rehearsal space. The improvised songs are reminiscent of ambient music, with slowly moving, droning sounds. The digital version of the album includes recolored versions of the main cover art attached to each track.