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Dive bomb is a guitar technique in which the tremolo bar, or whammy bar is used to rapidly lower the pitch of a note, creating a sound considered to be similar to a bomb dropping.
Drop D1 ♯ /Drop E1 ♭ – D ♯-A ♯-D ♯-G ♯-C ♯-F-A ♯ / E ♭-B ♭-E ♭-A ♭-D ♭-F-B ♭ Three full steps down from standard Drop A. A variation of this tuning is used by Northlane since the Alien album (E ♭ -A ♭ -E ♭ -A ♭ -D ♭ -F-B ♭ ) and also used by Invent, Animate on the song "Absence Persistent", as well as ...
The group consisted of Orlando and featured a revolving roster of female session singers and models. Under The Flirts name, Orlando churned out hits "Passion", "Danger", "Helpless" and "Jukebox (Don't Put Another Dime)". While many of the girls were just models for the group, Andrea Del Conte, Rebecca Sullivan, Debra Gaynor, Tricia Wygal, and ...
Drop C tuning (CGCFAD) Drop C tuning (CGCFAD) (listen) Drop C tuning is an alternative guitar tuning where at least one string has been lowered to a C, but most commonly refers to CGCFAD, which can be described as D tuning with a 6th string dropped to C, or drop D tuning transposed down a whole step.
In this spectrogram of Disparition's track Glass Tiger, the buildup and drop are visible leading up to 2:05. A drop or beat drop in music, made popular by electronic dance music (EDM) styles, is a point in a music track where a sudden change of rhythm or bass line occurs, which is preceded by a build-up section and break.
Somebody Loan Me a Dime is a 1974 studio album by blues singer and guitarist Fenton Robinson, his debut under the Alligator Records imprint. Blending together some elements of jazz with Chicago blues and Texas blues , the album was largely critically well received and is regarded as important within his discography.
"Let the Jukebox Keep On Playing" is a 1955 country song written by Carl Perkins. It was released on October 22, 1955 by Sun Records as a 78 and 45 single, 224, b/w "Gone, Gone, Gone". [ 1 ] The song was a follow-up to "Turn Around", released on Flip.
"Don't Rock the Jukebox" is a song by American country music artist Alan Jackson. It was released on April 29, 1991, as the lead single from the album of the same name . It was his second consecutive Number One single on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks charts.