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Fossils is a compilation album by indie rock band Dinosaur Jr., released in August 1991 on SST Records.It contains three 7" singles the band had previously released on SST, including a version of the song 'Keep The Glove' which is different from the version on the reissue of Bug, as well as three covers. [1]
The discography of Dinosaur Jr., an Amherst, Massachusetts-based alternative rock band, consists of 12 studio albums, two live albums, 15 extended plays (EP), seven compilations, and several singles. [1] The band's first album Dinosaur was released under Homestead Records, and the majority of the band's albums were released under Blanco y Negro ...
Disco Not Disco is a compilation album from the Disco Not Disco series ... but the liner notes provide a story behind each song, ... Dinosaur L: 6:52: 8. "I Walk" ...
"Dinosaur" (stylized as "D.I.N.O.$.A.U.R.") is a song by American recording artist and songwriter Kesha, taken from her debut studio album Animal (2010). The song was written by Kesha in collaboration with Max Martin and Shellback; the latter two also produced the song, while all three are responsible for the instrumentation. The song's ...
"I'm Gonna Catch You" (3:26) "We Are the Dinosaurs" (2:19) "Victor Vito" (2:28) "Walk Along the River" (2:19) "Under a Shady Tree" (2:50) "Bumblebee (Buzz Buzz)" (2:53)
The song reached No. 7 on the US chart on April 1, 1989, [2] two years after its UK success and became the band's biggest hit single in their home country. According to an interview with co-writer Randy Jacobs , it "was an infectious sing-along with a Flintstonesque video that probably got played on MTV way too much.
Dino: The Essential Dean Martin is a 2004 compilation album by Dean Martin, released on September 6, 2004. It contains thirty tracks, twenty from Capitol and ten from Reprise . It has since been reissued in two separate special editions, one in 2005 (augmented with a live disc) and one in 2011 (featuring six bonus tracks). [ 3 ]
David's mother Elizabeth Elkin Weiss, an actress and radio pioneer in their native Detroit, provided the outré vocals. The track was later included on the 2000 compilation album Disco Not Disco. Their first album Was (Not Was) (1981) was an amalgam of rock, disco, Weiss's beat poetry, Reagan-era political-social commentary, and jazz. [3]