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"Abracadabra" is a song by American rock group the Steve Miller Band, written by Steve Miller. The song was released as the first single from the 1982 album of the same name that year. In the U.S., it spent two non-consecutive weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 , the biggest hit of Steve Miller's career to date, as well as their last US ...
Lady Gaga's Mayhem era is in motion!. The 38-year-old pop superstar debuted the music video for her new single, "Abracadabra," during a commercial break of the 2025 Grammy Awards broadcast on ...
Since Sunday night’s 2025 Grammys, the talk of TikTok, the dolls at any gay bar, and the music industry at large is Lady Gaga’s “Abracadabra,” a record-shattering third single off her ...
Abracadabra is the 22nd studio album by the Japanese rock band Buck-Tick, released on September 21, 2020 by the label Lingua Sounda, subdivision of Victor Entertainment [1] [2] and November 20, 2020 internationally by JPU Records. It was released in two editions in Japan: regular and limited in three formats: CD + Blu-ray, cassette and vinyl. [3]
In the mid 1990s Hanson wrote the best-selling guitar instructional book and CD set Shred Guitar [6] published by Warner Bros., and now available from Alfred Publishing. He also created Arpeggios for Lead Guitar (Video, Hal Leonard). In 1999 he started working for Roland and Boss giving music clinics.
[8] "abracadabra's space and colours are a mind-expanding experience, well worth the backwards time travel." according to The Quietus. [9] "...this album is a collection of songs with elements of no wave, dub, and disco which falls somewhere between the music of Tom Tom Club and Lizzie Mercier or maybe a minimal Eurythmics attempting to play ...
Abracadabra charted in nine countries, including Germany where the record reached No. 1 for a week. [6] Four singles were released from the album in various countries: the title track, "Cool Magic" (#57 on the Billboard Hot 100), [7] "Keeps Me Wondering Why", and "Give It Up", with the title song charting the highest at #1 on the pop chart.
The original "up to eleven" knobs in the 1984 film This Is Spinal Tap "Up to eleven", also phrased as "these go to eleven", is an idiom from popular culture, coined in the 1984 film This Is Spinal Tap, where guitarist Nigel Tufnel demonstrates a guitar amplifier whose volume knobs are marked from zero to eleven, instead of the usual zero to ten.