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Galvayne's groove The Galvayne's groove occurs on the upper corner incisor, producing a vertical line, and is helpful in approximating the age of older horses. It generally first appears at age 10, reaches halfway down the tooth by age 15, and is completely down the tooth at age 20.
The method of aging a horse called the Galvayne's Groove which he claimed as his invention was actually promoted by Professor Hamilton Sample [38] in his book, The Horse and Dog: Not as They are But as They Should Be in 1882, [39] where he demonstrated ‘how to tell a horses age up to 21 years’. It can be drawn from this that Frederick was ...
The Japanese CD and US vinyl releases had another live track ("New York Groove"), featuring Eric Carr on drums rather than Peter Criss, which was also released as a promotional single at Blockbuster. The track is also available on the Apple Music version of the album. [7]
The album peaked at number six on the U.S. Billboard 200 and reached the second spot on the R&B albums chart. [5] The album was certified platinum in September 1992. [6]Adam Greenberg of AllMusic gave the soundtrack a mixed review, stating that "the album is a perfect blend for a fan of the early-'90s R&B sound, but doesn't really meet the same standard as music of later years."
56 signs in Gardiner (1957:242–247), with A59 "man threatening with stick" inserted after A25 "man striking with left hand hanging behind back", and two variants A14* "blood interpreted as ax" of A14 "man with blood streaming from his head"; and A17* "child sitting with arms hanging down" of A17 "child sitting with hand to mouth".
"Don't Disturb This Groove" is a song by the synthpop/R&B duo the System, from the 1987 album Don't Disturb This Groove. The song was written by the System's David Frank and Mic Murphy. It was released as the album's first single. In May 1987, the song reached number 1 on the US Billboard R&B Singles chart, spending one week on
"The Groove Line" is a 1977 single by the Dayton, Ohio/European funk-disco group Heatwave. ... Chart (1978) Peak position Canada RPM Top Singles 31 France [2] 10
A song with a message as well as a groove. Sheer class." [4] In 1998, DJ Magazine ranked "Someday" number six in their list of "Top 100 Club Tunes". [5] In 2015, The Daily Telegraph ranked it number 36 in their "Top 50 Dance Songs" list. [6] In 2020, NME ranked it among "The 20 Best House Music Songs... Ever!". [7]