Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Bower is CEO and chairman of the Board of Numedeon Inc. a company he founded in 1998 to develop educationally related virtual worlds. The company's flagship effort, Whyville .net is now one of the largest education sites for young adults on the World Wide Web, with a player base of more than 7 million in 2006. [ 16 ]
Title Year Director(s) "Crutch" 2011 Eric Boatright, Alli Richards & Anthony Mattox [5] "Try To Fight It" 2012 Adam Shewmaker [6] [7] "My Addiction" 2014 "Stand Up"
James Bower may refer to: Jamie Campbell Bower (born 1988), English actor, singer and former model; James Bower (agrarian leader) (1860–1921), farmer and farm leader in western Canada; James M. Bower (born 1954), American neuroscientist; James Paterson Bower (1806–1889), Scottish Royal Navy admiral
العربية; বাংলা; Беларуская (тарашкевіца) Čeština; Cymraeg; Deutsch; Español; فارسی; Français; Galego; 贛語; 한국어
While Jimmy Bower was busy playing drums for Down, the other four members of Eyehategod formed a side-project called Outlaw Order (abbreviated to OO%). The band released a limited edition 7" EP in 2003 called Legalize Crime , which has since been re-released on CD with a bonus live track and is available through Eyehategod's webstore.
Bower was born in London. [7] His mother Anne Elizabeth Roseberry (b. 28 June 1954) is a music manager and his father David Bower works for the Gibson Guitar Corporation. [8] [9] His maternal great-great-great-great-grandfather was Sir John Campbell, of Airds, Lieutenant Governor of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.
Counterfeit (stylised as COUNTERFEIT.) were an English punk rock band from London, England, formed in 2015, consisting of lead vocalist and guitarist Jamie Campbell Bower, guitarist Sam Bower, guitarist Tristan Marmont, bassist Roland Johnson and drummer James Craig.
That soundtrack contains three songs which he composed, as well as music from the band Mountain and from Big Mama Thornton. The three Bowen pieces are an incidental theme called "Love Theme", credited to Jimmy Bowen Orchestra, and two others, "Super Soul Theme" and the hard-rock piece "Freedom of Expression", credited to The J.B. Pickers. [ 8 ]