Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Tell No Tales is the third studio album by the Norwegian rock band TNT. It was the best-selling TNT album in the U.S., according to their bass guitarist Morty Black. [2] This album diverted from the power metal style of Knights of the New Thunder into a more glam metal direction. [3] Rock Candy Records reissused a remastered CD of the album in ...
TNT, the Power Within You (with Claude Bristol; 1957) How To Turn Failure into Success (1958) How to Use the Power of Prayer (1958) How To Make ESP Work For You (1964) How to Solve Mysteries of Your Mind and Soul (1965) Wonder Healers of the Philippines (1967) Your Mysterious Powers Of ESP (1969) How to Foresee and Control Your Future (1970)
Knights of the New Thunder is the second studio album by the Norwegian rock band TNT. It was the first TNT album recorded with their new vocalist Tony Harnell, who had replaced their original singer Dag Ingebrigtsen. [2] It was their last album playing traditional heavy metal, as their later releases have a more commercial/glam metal style.
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
The New Territory is the tenth studio album by the Norwegian rock band TNT, and was released on 30 June 2007. It is their first album with Tony Mills on vocals. Track listing
Durden, Robert F. James Shepherd Pike.Republicanism and the American Negro, 1850–1882 (Duke University Press, 1957).ISBN 0-313-20168-4; Durden, Robert F. "Pike, James Shepherd"; American National Biography Online February 2000
TNT can be detonated with a high velocity initiator or by efficient concussion. [22] For many years, TNT used to be the reference point for the Figure of Insensitivity. TNT had a rating of exactly 100 on the "F of I" scale. The reference has since been changed to a more sensitive explosive called RDX, which has an F of I rating of 80. [23]
Payne and Amsbury's Bridge: TNT and Competitive Bidding (1981) may have been the first major book on the topic. [1] In the introduction, [1]: 7 the authors acknowledge Jean-René Vernes as the first writer to investigate TNT (Total Number of Tricks) Theory. Page 19 includes a key table that may not have been printed elsewhere.