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"In the Meantime" is the debut single of English alternative rock band Spacehog, from their debut album, Resident Alien (1995). It samples the Penguin Cafe Orchestra song "Telephone and Rubber Band". Released in 1996, the single peaked atop the US Billboard Mainstream Rock chart and the UK Rock Chart.
Spacehog is an alternative rock band formed in 1994 in New York City by four British men who were living in the city. Their music is heavily influenced by David Bowie , Queen , and T. Rex . The band's best-known single is " In the Meantime ".
Royston Langdon playing in the meantime on the tfi friday with his band Spacehog. Langdon was born on 1 May 1972 in Leeds. [2] When he was young, he and his older brother Antony joined the Leeds Parish Church choir; the two of them would later found Spacehog in 1994, with Antony playing rhythm guitar in the band.
Resident Alien is the debut studio album by the English rock band Spacehog.Released by Sire Records and Elektra Records on 24 October 1995, the album was certified gold on 29 July 1996 and included the hit single "In the Meantime", which reached the top of the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart in the US, and remained there for four weeks.
This song features two years earlier on the soundtrack for the film Nadja. Is there any reason for this. I can find no research for it, but think it would add to the article This site [1] shows the song was on the soundtrack Montalban 10:51, 11 November 2019 (UTC)
Fido; The Hillclimb; The Legend of Simon Conjurer; Mee-Shee: The Water Giant; The Projectionist; Say Yes & Marry Me; The Scarecrow and The Rainbow Kid; A Sister's Nightmare
Leon Botha (4 June 1985 – 5 June 2011) was a South African painter and disk jockey. He was known for his close association with the hip hop group Die Antwoord, as well as for being the second of the world's longest-lived persons with progeria before Sammy Basso who was one of the oldest survivors of the disease.
The Hogyssey is the third album from rock band Spacehog. The album was released on compact disc by Artemis Records on 10 April 2001. The title track is a rock arrangement of Richard Strauss's Also Sprach Zarathustra, similar to Eumir Deodato's "Also Sprach Zarathustra (2001)". The album was recorded at Ardent Studios in Memphis, Tennessee.