Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Shockwave is the fourth studio album by American DJ and record producer Marshmello, self-released through Marshmello's Joytime Collective label on June 11, 2021. The ...
The music video to "Shockwave" was uploaded onto Gallagher's YouTube channel on 13 June 2019. The video, directed by François Rousselet [2] is mostly set in America’s Deep South, though much of it was actually filmed in Budapest. Scenes show Gallagher walking away from a burning building, standing in a train carriage and walking through a ...
"Shockwave" is a song featured on American electronic music producer and DJ Marshmello's fourth studio album Shockwave. It was released on June 11, 2021 via Joytime Collective/ Geffen Records . [ 1 ]
The 9:37 song, the fourth and final track of the album, was Rush's first entirely instrumental piece. The multi-part piece was inspired by a dream guitarist Alex Lifeson had, and the music in these sections correspond to the occurrences in his dream. The opening segment was played on a nylon-string classical guitar.
Shockwave Assault (originally released as Shock Wave on the 3DO) is a science fiction combat flight simulation video game developed by Advanced Technology Group and published by Electronic Arts for various home video game consoles and PCs. The player takes control of a futuristic fighter plane to defeat extraterrestrial ships and tripods.
Chaos Laboratory (1997) The Growly Family (1998) GMS vs Systembusters (1999) Tri-Ball University (2000) The Hitz (2000) No Rules (2002) Emergency Broadcast System (2005) The G.M.S. Experiment (2021) Remix albums. Top of The TIPs 94-98 (TIP Records, 1998) The Remixes (Spun, 2003) The Remixes Vol2 (Starbox, 2009) Tampered Diversity (Future Music ...
"Shockwave" is a song by American heavy metal band Black Tide. It is credited to Gabriel Garcia, Alexander Nuñez and Raul Garcia Jr. It was the first track and first single from their 2008 debut album Light from Above, with the other two singles being "Warriors of Time" and "Shout".
Shockwave supports raster graphics, basic vector graphics, 3D graphics, audio, and an embedded scripting language called Lingo. [3] [4] During the 1990s, Shockwave was a common format for CD-ROM projectors, kiosk presentations, and interactive video games, and dominated in interactive multimedia. [5]