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Food for Thought (Pink Cream 69 album) Food for Thought (Young Rome album) Food for Thought, a 1972 album by the band The J.B.'s; Food for Thought, a 2004 album by the band Santana; Food for Thought, a 2005 Iron Maiden tribute album; Food for Thought/Take It Back, a 1990 album by American band Gray Matter
Food for Thought/Take It Back consists of Gray Matter's remastered material that combines, in its entirety, the 1985 Food for Thought studio album [nb 1] [1] [2] and the six-song 1986 Take It Back EP; [nb 2] plus three bonus tracks: two previously unreleased demo recordings, and the first version of "Walk the Line", originally featured on Alive & Kicking, a various artists 7-inch EP compiled ...
"Food for Thought" was released as a double A-side single with "King" on local independent label Graduate Records. [A] The single lists "King" as the first A-side and Bob Lamb has explained that "Food for Thought" was originally the B-side and that "King" "was always gonna be the main song".
Many, many people have carried out this exercise on an annual basis for years; it has helped them to create a fundamental shift in their lives and the satisfaction of achieving the results that really matter to them. As one friend said so eloquently, “I saw that I wasn't living the way I want to
Food for Thought is the only studio album by American rapper and singer Jerome Jones of the group Immature/IMx (credited as Young Rome). The album was released in the U.S. on June 22, 2004. Two singles were released from the album: "After Party" and "Freaky".
Thought for Food is the debut studio album by American musical duo the Books. It was released on June 3, 2002 by Tomlab. [ 4 ] The album exhibits the duo's characteristic sampling from a variety of mundane and instrumental sources.
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A full back who could play on either side but was more frequently used on the left, Mills spent his late teens in and out of the Ipswich first team but became an established regular in 1969, the year after the club achieved promotion to the First Division. [4] It was also the year that Bobby Robson arrived as manager. [4] Mick Mills in 1978