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"Never Say Never" is a 1982 song by the new wave band Romeo Void. One of their best-known songs, "Never Say Never" was a favorite on early MTV, featuring a black-and-white music video that spoofs Jean-Luc Godard's Breathless.
Romeo Void was an American new wave/post punk band from San Francisco, California, formed in 1979. [1] The band primarily consisted of saxophonist Benjamin Bossi, vocalist Debora Iyall, guitarist Peter Woods, and bassist Frank Zincavage.
"Never Say Never" (Romeo Void song), 1982, covered by Queens of the Stone Age "Never Say Never" (T. Graham Brown song) , 1989 "Never Say Never" (The Fray song) , 2009
Romeo Void parted ways in 1985, and the following year Iyall released her debut solo album Strange Language on Columbia Records. After a lukewarm reception of the album, Iyall returned to her first love, as an artist and art instructor. Throughout the 1990s she taught art at the 29 Palms Cultural Center and for the Arts Council for San Bernardino.
*2-player co-op in Tag Battle mode only. Dead or Alive 3: Xbox: Fighting: 2001 4 Local Full Yes* *2-player co-op in Tag Battle mode only. Dead or Alive Ultimate: Xbox: Fighting: 2004 4 Local, Online Full Yes* *2-player co-op in Tag Battle mode only. Dead or Alive 4: XB360: Fighting: 2005 4 Local, Online Full Yes* *2-player co-op in Tag Battle ...
Benefactor is the second studio album by the American band Romeo Void, released in 1982. [2] [3] It was released on CD in 2006 by Wounded Bird Records, with their Never Say Never EP as four bonus tracks. The version of the song "Never Say Never" is a shorter, "clean" edit suitable for general radio broadcast.
It's a Condition is the first studio album by American new wave band Romeo Void, released in 1981. It was released on CD by Wounded Bird Records , together with Strange Language , Debora Iyall 's 1986 solo album, in July 2007, and digitally in 2011.
In Creative Computing, David Busch wrote, "Those who have played hundreds of games of Space Invaders on many different computer systems will probably tire of this rather quickly." [ 2 ] Reviewing the German release under "Alpha-Alarm" title, TeleMatch magazine compared the gameplay with Space Invaders from Atari as easy and not so thoughtful.