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The first song to come out of the signing was the lead single "Gimme That Boom", released on 8 November 2022. [7] A "hard-hitting" " ragga -metal" track, it describes lead singer Benji Webbe's encounter with a selfish fan.
Alfred Jesse Smith (July 26, 1941 – January 3, 2025), known professionally as Brenton Wood, was an American singer and songwriter.Three 1967 singles of Wood's, "The Oogum Boogum Song" (peaking at No. 34 on the US Billboard Hot 100), "Gimme Little Sign" (reached No. 9), and "Baby You Got It" (also peaking at No. 34) were hits.
"Gimme That" was written by Sean Garrett and Scott Storch for Brown's eponymous debut album (2005). Production was helmed by Storch. Garrett was credited as a co-producer. [1] In interviews from 2006, Brown considered choosing the song as the second single from his debut album, but the song "Yo (Excuse Me Miss)" was chosen as the single instead ...
An MP3 file can be edited without transcoding. Cut, copy, paste, and volume change operations are provided; edits can be previewed, including a command that plays a segment without a selected region (previewing a cut) Audio normalization and pause detection; MP3 recording with ACM or LAME encoder (not bundled) Fast MP3 visualization
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"Gimme" is a song by Australian pop rock band Boom Crash Opera. The song was released in September 1994 as the lead single from their fourth studio album, Born (1995), and reached number 14 on the Australian Singles Chart , becoming the band's fourth and final top-20 hit in Australia.
The single was released on the Korova label in the United Kingdom on 14 January 1983 as both a 7" and 12" single. The 7" was available as a limited edition which was packaged with a cassette containing tracks from their August 1979 John Peel session which featured the drum machine that was rumoured to be called "Echo".
Popular audio formats for Internet radio include AAC, AAC+, and MP3. Many AM/FM stations simulcast online use the more efficient AAC format while Internet-only streams more typically use MP3 [citation needed]. The Shoutcast database featured 34,281 [1] online radio stations covering almost every conceivable music genre.