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"Marcy & Hunson" is the seventh episode of the tenth season of the American animated television series Adventure Time. The episode was written and storyboarded by Graham Falk and series showrunner Adam Muto , from an outline by Muto, Jack Pendarvis , head writer Kent Osborne , and Julia Pott .
Baltimore-based oratorio society that specializes in baroque, classical and early romantic music [15] Harmony Express Men's Chorus: 4-part a cappella men's chorus based in Germantown, Maryland. Have Mercy: An American rock band from Baltimore, Maryland currently signed to Hopeless Records. The Hidden Hand
Finn and Jake awake in a prison cell full of bananas, confused and unaware of how they arrived at their location. A demonic prison guard tells them that they are in the Nightosphere, the hellish realm ruled by Marceline's (voiced by Olivia Olson) father, Hunson Abadeer (voiced by Martin Olson). The two set off to locate Marceline's father and ...
Marceline details her recollection of these events via highly allegorical language to BMO in the ninth-season episode "Ketchup".) [50] In the tenth-season episode "Marcy & Hunson", Marceline's father returns to Ooo and attends one of her concerts. While he initially embarrasses his daughter and eventually causes a ghost fight to break out, by ...
The band's second album Sins was released April 10, 2012. Sins was recorded at Sound Kitchen Studios in Nashville and produced by Grammy Award -winning producer Skidd Mills . "Unstoppable" was used by WWE as the official theme song to the returning No Way Out 2012 pay-per-view event, [ 3 ] and reached #36 on Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks.
Hammerjacks was a music venue in downtown Baltimore which operated from 1977 to 2006. It was founded by Louis J. Principio III. It was founded by Louis J. Principio III. The club attracted many big-name national acts, but also showcased many rising stars in the music world.
It was held at Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium in Washington, D.C. from 1993 to 2004; at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore in 2005; and at Merriweather Post Pavilion in Columbia, Maryland, in 2006. Though not originally called HFStival, two earlier concerts held on the Fourth of July were the foundation for the first festival and are considered ...
Local music in Baltimore can be traced back to 1784, when concerts were advertised in the local press. These concert programs featured compositions by locals Alexander Reinagle and Raynor Taylor, as well as European composers like Frantisek Kotzwara, Ignaz Pleyel, Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf, Giovanni Battista Viotti and Johann Sebastian Bach. [1]