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Steps: Reunion premiered on Sky Living at 9pm on Wednesday, 28 September. Steps said in a 2011 interview with Digital Spy that they believed there was a gap in the market for their brand of "happy pop". Scott-Lee said: "Times have changed, but we are in a recession and Steps' music was very light-hearted and fun, so there could be a place for ...
Phat Farm was established in 1992 by Russell Simmons, co-founder of Def Jam Recordings. [1] The brand was initially a men's clothing line and sold clothing items such as T-shirts, jeans, and jackets. The brand's early success was attributed to its association with hip-hop culture, which was growing in popularity at the time. [ 3 ]
Peter Seeger (May 3, 1919 – January 27, 2014) was an American folk singer-songwriter, musician and social activist. He was a fixture on nationwide radio in the 1940s, and had a string of hit records in the early 1950s as a member of The Weavers, notably their recording of Lead Belly's "Goodnight, Irene," which topped the charts for 14 weeks in 1950.
However, another band had already claimed the right to use this name, so the Zone brothers became known as Man 2 Man. Man 2 Man performed live in some of NYC's larger dance spaces: The Funhouse, The Limelight, & The Saint. They also appeared live at Heaven in London, UK. The duo recorded self-produced 12-inch dance singles through 1985.
The band began in 1969 in Boulder, Colorado at the University of Colorado with Kris Moe as the keyboardist, Linn Phillips on guitar, Warren Knight on bass, Harold Fielden on drums, and Mick "Flash" Manresa also on guitar and as the group's front man. The band got its name, "Flash Cadillac & the Continental Kids" from Hughey Plumley who spent ...
One of the most memorable, if infamous and incongruous, moments in Joel Schumacher’s 1987 vampire classic The Lost Boys is that crazy concert scene, when a hulking, shirtless, and most ...
Banas said he began to dance at age five. "I would immediately run and stand in a doorway pretending it was a frame for a small stage. I then would jive, moving my body to and fro, trying to keep up with the beat of the music, knowing that when the music would crescendo I’d leap in the air defying gravity, only to land in a heap.
Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images for SCAD It wasn’t a barnyard, but a “Bey-yard” when Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick performed Beyonce’s No. 1 song on the farm.