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Having established that the call was genuine, Van Halen used a rented Marshall amplifier, set up to use alongside his Frankenstrat guitar and an Echoplex, then recorded two takes of the solo free of charge. [25] [26] "I did it as a favor", the musician later said. "I was a complete fool, according to the rest of the band, our manager and ...
A music video to accompany the release of "Beat It" was first released onto YouTube on April 29, 2013, at a total length of four minutes and sixteen seconds. The video features Kingston, Brown, and Khalifa partying poolside at an estate, and features a guest appearance by NicNac, the producer. [2] Main credits
At BC Studios, Beinhorn used a new Oberheim DMX drum machine to lay down a basic beat, and Laswell brought in Daniel Ponce to augment this with Afro-Cuban batá drums. Ponce played the three drums one at a time during three recording passes, to make it sound like three drummers invoking a Santería spirit. [4]
The song has been performed twice with The Roots on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, once in 2016 as a guitar performance with Mario series creator Shigeru Miyamoto, and once in 2023 as an acapella cover along with other themes from the game with the cast of The Super Mario Bros. Movie, Shigeru Miyamoto and Illumination CEO Chris Meledandri.
In 1988, shortly after the release of their second album It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, Public Enemy were preparing for the European leg of the Run's House tour with Run–D.M.C. [4] Before embarking on the tour, film director Spike Lee approached Public Enemy with the proposition of making a song for one of his movies. [4]
"Chase" (also known as "The Chase") is a 1978 instrumental composition by Italian music producer Giorgio Moroder. It was released as a single during 1978 from his Academy Award-winning soundtrack album Midnight Express (1978), and was a disco instrumental that was subsequently extended and released as a maxi single.
Composed by Brian Wilson, it was originally called "Run James Run", as Wilson intended it to be used as the theme of a James Bond film. It was then titled "Pet Sounds", the title of the album on which it appears. It is the second instrumental to feature on Pet Sounds, the other being "Let's Go Away for Awhile".
Cover of the score edition by Boosey & Hawkes. Short Ride in a Fast Machine is a 1986 orchestral work by John Adams.Adams applies the description "fanfare for orchestra" to this work and to the earlier Tromba Lontana (1986). [1]