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In 2019 the American Red-Dirt Country band Shane Smith and the Saints, released in 2015, their second studio album Geronimo [98] was released on Geronimo West Records. This album has the title track Geronimo. Geronimo in a 1905 Locomobile Model C, taken at the Miller brothers' 101 Ranch located southwest of Ponca City, Oklahoma, June 11, 1905
Don Geronimo broadcast out of Washington D.C. WJFK 106.7 The Fan for a brief stint in 2013. In April 2014, Geronimo joined former D&M partner Buzz Burbank's RELM Network to host his own podcast, The Don Geronimo Show, lasting only four months, citing RELM did not pay him. Burbank denied the claim, saying Geronimo "was paid every penny he was ...
The music video was directed by Nolan Bernardino who directed Geronimo's previous music video for her song "Minamahal." It was premiered on MYX and MTV Pinoy on September 26, 2016. It was posted on Viva Records' official YouTube channel on the same day and as of March 2017, the music video was viewed 1,400,000 times.
There’s also a legend that Geronimo himself came up with the battle cry, yelling his own name as he leapt down a nearly vertical cliff on horseback to escape American troops at Fort Sill, Oklahoma.
Geronimo and his people were sent to the Fort Apache Reservation. In May 1885, Geronimo led a group of approximately 140 men, women, and children out of the reservation, fleeing once again to Mexico. [5] In February 1886, it had been mistakenly reported that Geronimo had surrendered in New Mexico, to a Lieutenant Marion Maus. [6]
This 15 Me is a promotional world tour for Sarah Geronimo's thirteenth studio album of the same name. It also celebrates Geronimo's fifteenth year in the showbiz industry. She kicked off the tour in Manila which set the record for Highest Grossing Local Concert held in Smart Araneta Coliseum in histo
It was released as the lead single from Geronimo's platinum album The Great Unknown. The single won “Song of the Year” at the 2017 Myx Music Awards. [2] In 2018, Geronimo performed the song at the ASEAN-Japan Music Festival held in Tokyo. [3] In 2019, CNN Philippines named the song as the Best OPM song of 2010s. [4]
At the conclusion of the surrender, Geronimo turned to Gatewood and said to him, in Apache, "Good. You told the truth". [18] The following day Naiche surrendered, he had been in a nearby canyon mourning his brother, who had been killed by Mexican soldiers, bringing the Apache wars to an official end in the Southwest. [19]