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The Greatest @Home Videos [1] (formerly The Greatest #AtHome Videos) is an American video clip television series for CBS. Executive produced and hosted by Cedric the Entertainer , the series was produced to fill in primetime broadcast hours due to production shutdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic.
A Basement Tapes original covered by the Band on Music From Big Pink, and also released on the official 1975 album. "Tears of Rage" (takes 1, 2, 3) Dylan, Richard Manuel: The first take of one of the most famous Basement Tapes songs. The song has gone on to be one of the most covered tunes from the basement sessions.
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
"Be Here Now" is a song by English rock band Basement. It is their single off of their fourth studio album, Beside Myself . It peaked at number 38 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Songs chart in May 2019, and stayed on the chart for 3 weeks.
"Bingo Bango" is a song written and recorded by English electronic music duo Basement Jaxx for their debut album, Remedy (1999). The track, which contains a sample of Bolivar's "Merengue" and as a result, Jose Ibata and Rolando Ibata are credited as songwriters, combined dance music with various elements of Latin music.
The song has two different music videos, one for the UK and the other for the US. In the UK version, which was directed by Dawn Shadforth, Basement Jaxx work at a truck stop diner that is entered by a group of androids, who causes a meteor that was flying above to crash into the diner, which turns everyone into a group of rave-themed
A basement show is a musical performance, often of the punk rock or hardcore punk variety, that is held in the basement of a residential home, rather than at a traditional venue. These are also sometimes referred to as house shows as they can happen anywhere in a residential house, not just in the basement. [1] [2]
The band, at the time a three-piece named Sound Garden, composed of guitarist Kim Thayil, bassist Hiro Yamamoto, and Chris Cornell on drums and vocals, [1] recorded the demo, in Jack Endino's basement four-track studio [nb 1] on April 24, 1985, for their friend Bruce Pavitt, [3] hence the name of the tape, which features a rare early version of "Tears to Forget" sung by Yamamoto, and, as a ...