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The song "Tonight" had accumulated over seventy million hits on YouTube as of November 2011, while "Moment of Truth" had more than fifty million. [2] [3] On April 7, 2009, FM Static released their third studio album Dear Diary. Written as a concept album, it details the fictional story of a boy facing the difficulties of life, love and faith ...
Trevor McNevan – vocals, guitar, guitar recording, art direction; Steve Augustine – drums; FM Static – producer, additional engineering; Mike Noack at Swordfish Digital Audio – engineering
Tonight is the sixth album by FM, a progressive rock group from Toronto, Ontario, Canada, released on Duke Street Records in 1987. It was their last studio album for 28 years. Further albums of live and demo material were issued between this period. It reached #87 on the Canadian charts, November 28, 1987 [1]
"Tonight" by Michael Mazochi, from the TV series The Shield "Tonight" by Monni "Tonight" by Mötley Crüe, from the album Too Fast for Love "Tonight" by NEFFEX "Tonight" by Nick Lowe, from the album Jesus of Cool "Tonight" by Ozzy Osbourne, from the album Diary of a Madman "Tonight" by Paddy Casey, from the album Addicted to Company (Part One)
It should only contain pages that are FM Static songs or lists of FM Static songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about FM Static songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Yellowstone timeline explained. While the hit show Yellowstone may have come out first, the Dutton family tree goes back much further than the Paramount show’s premiere. The series has two ...
Family Channel: 3-7 3.7 Retro TV: 3-8 3.8 KTSF: 3-9 3.9 Heartland: 3-10 3.10 AUN KRON: Nexstar Media Group: San Francisco: 4-1 7.1376 50 Sutro Tower @ 1664 ft. The CW: ATSC-3 / 4K resolution 4-1 31.7 1000 Sutro Tower @ 1680 ft. The CW: KTVU transmitter 4-2 13.8 95 San Bruno Mountain @ 1375 ft. Antenna TV: KNTV transmitter 4-3 28.9 1000 Sutro ...
The A.C. Nielsen company, which continues to measure television ratings today, took over American radio's ratings beginning with the 1949–50 radio season and ending in 1955–56. [40] During this era, nearly all of radio's most popular programs were broadcast on one of three networks: NBC Red , NBC Blue , or CBS ' Columbia network.