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David Rose (standing on the right) in AFRS Radio Show, c. 1946 "The Stripper" is an instrumental composed by David Rose, recorded in 1958 and released four years later.It evinces a jazz influence with especially prominent trombone slides, and evokes the feel of music used to accompany striptease artists.
Flash Mob is the fifth album by jazz saxophonist and composer Anton Schwartz on his own Antonjazz label, released in 2014. It received limited press [ 1 ] [ 2 ] including a feature article in the San Francisco Chronicle [ 3 ] an artist profile in DownBeat magazine [ 4 ] and a feature story on NPR 's Morning Edition [ 5 ] as well as positive ...
The Glitch Mob remix of the song was used in a trailer for the 2013 film G.I. Joe: Retaliation. It appears as a playable track in Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock and in Guitar Hero Live ' s online GHTV mode. [131] [132] In 2016, video game company EA used the Glitch Mob remix of the song in a trailer advertising Battlefield 1. A surge in streams ...
Rose was discharged from the project at the end of 1955 after the producers heard the electronic music of Louis and Bebe Barron and hired them to provide the final all-electronic soundtrack. A 7" single of Rose's unused theme from the film, backed by Bronislaw Kaper 's theme for the MGM film The Swan (1956), was released during 1956 on MGM ...
The term American folk music encompasses numerous music genres, variously known as traditional music, traditional folk music, contemporary folk music, vernacular music, or roots music. Many traditional songs have been sung within the same family or folk group for generations, and sometimes trace back to such origins as the British Isles ...
In a new viral video, shared by Storyful, bride Katherine Martineau can be seen at her wedding in Montreal, Canada, where her family members and friends broke out in a choreographed dance to ABBA ...
Originally, only Rose and Jolson were credited, and DeSylva's name was added later. [2] A popular jazz standard, the song has been recorded by many artists, including Cab Calloway (1934), Coleman Hawkins (1935) and Eddie Durham (1936). The Benny Goodman Quartet played the song in their famous 1938 Carnegie Hall concert. [2]
Ease into one of the leather banquettes and glance at your table setting. To the left, across a folded napkin on top of a plate from Utsuwa-no-Yakata in L.A.’s Little Tokyo: a pair of chopsticks ...