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The video pictures Lawrence as a ranch hand who is smitten with a "Texas tornado" of a woman, and her young son. Scenes also feature Lawrence performing the song in a barn at dusk. As each clip in the series unfolds, Lawrence appears dressed in the garb from the previous video, as he makes a " quantum leap " into a new time zone and tune.
Hank Schyma was born and raised in Houston, and spent most of his youth in the Pecos River Valley. Schyma stated that he is unsure exactly how storm chasing first began to appeal to him, though he admits an early fascination with the tornado scene from The Wizard of Oz.
The music video was directed by Marc Ball and serves as a solution to the previous five music videos, all of which featured a Quantum Leap theme. After leaving the "Texas Tornado" video, Lawrence flies through a vortex showing scenes from the previous videos. It then features him and a friend using virtual reality helmets. By wearing the ...
This tornado in the video appears to be the long-track EF-3 tornado that held together for more than 48 miles from Anhuac to Port Arthur in southeastern Texas. The cyclone had maximum sustained ...
Suspected tornadoes were spotted and caught on videos in Texas as storms battered parts of the South Saturday. A tornado is believed to have killed at least one person and left four people injured ...
An Oct. 11 Facebook video (direct link, archive link) shows a series of tornado clips. "Tornado in Dallas," reads text superimposed over the video. The post's caption includes the hashtag "#2024."
It is the third single released by the band, with the video released on October 15, 2007. It was featured in the season finale of the CBS show Moonlight titled "Mortal Cure". According to Ronnie Winter, the song is dedicated to the eight students that lost their lives in the March 1, 2007 tornado that destroyed a high school in Enterprise ...
The song is in E-flat minor with a moderate tempo and a main chord pattern of E ♭ m-D ♭. [1] It features lead vocals from Karen Fairchild, and uses a tornado as a metaphor for a woman's anger at her lover being unfaithful. The main accompaniment is guitars in E-flat tuning, along with a distorted bass guitar and drum loops.