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The Western moose [2] (Alces alces andersoni) is a subspecies of moose that inhabits boreal forests and mixed deciduous forests in the Canadian Arctic, western Canadian provinces and a few western sections of the northern United States. It is the second largest North American subspecies of moose, second to the Alaskan moose.
Music group [4] Brave Girls: Fearless Music group [36] B.A.P: BABY Music group [37] Baby Tate: Tater Tots Musician [38] Babymetal: The One Music group Named from their English-language song "The One" [1] Babymonster: Monstiez Music group [39] Band-Maid: Goshujin-sama, Ojō-sama Music group Based on the names used to greet patrons at maid cafés ...
The game was conceived and created as a more fleshed-out version of an earlier Roblox game called Prison Life. [52] It accumulated over US$1 million in revenue during its first year of operation. [53] Jailbreak was featured in Roblox ' s Ready Player One event, based around the release of the film. [54]
This is a list of music genres and styles. ... Western classical music. Early music. Medieval music (500–1400) Ars antiqua (1170–1310) Ars nova (1310–1377)
These are lists of songs.In music, a song is a musical composition for a voice or voices, performed by singing or alongside musical instruments. A choral or vocal song may be accompanied by musical instruments, or it may be unaccompanied, as in the case of a cappella songs.
Western music is a form of music composed by and about the people who settled and worked throughout the Western United States and Western Canada.Western music celebrates the lifestyle of the cowboy on the open range, along the Rocky Mountains, and among the prairies of Western North America.
Cowboy Songs may refer to: Cowboy Songs and Other Frontier Ballads by John A. Lomax, 1920; Cowboy Songs (Bing Crosby album), 1939; Cowboy Songs (Michael Martin Murphey album), 1990; Cowboy Songs (Riders in the Sky album), 1996 "Cowboy Songs" (song), by George Birge, 2024
"Jingle Jangle Jingle", also known as 'I've Got Spurs That Jingle Jangle Jingle", is a song written by Joseph J. Lilley and Frank Loesser, and published in 1942. [1] It was featured in that year's film The Forest Rangers , in which it was sung by Dick Thomas .