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Blaze of Glory is the 1982 debut album from Game Theory, a California power pop band founded by guitarist and singer-songwriter Scott Miller.After Miller's death in 2013, the album was reissued by Omnivore Recordings in a remastered edition with 15 bonus tracks which was released on CD and vinyl in 2014.
An incredibly awkward and weird, yet mesmerizing 1989 video took the Internet by storm in January featuring a young boy playing the kazoo and playing with his friends in the woods.
A kazoo then comes in, which some people mistook for a fuzz guitar, to play a solo in the E major scale over the same F ♯ m7, G ♯ m7 chord progression. [2] Another verse featuring the same previous structure, and another kazoo solo in the same E major scale return again.
[1] Between 1982 and 1990, Game Theory released five studio albums and two EPs, which had long been out of print until 2014, when Omnivore Recordings began a series of remastered reissues of the entire Game Theory catalog. Miller's posthumously completed Game Theory album, Supercalifragile, was released in August 2017 in a limited first pressing.
From 1982 to 1990, Game Theory released five studio albums and two EPs. The early Game Theory was described as a "pseudo-psychedelic pop quartet" for which Miller sang and wrote "almost all of the material." [13] The group, a college-rock favorite associated with the Paisley Underground scene of Los Angeles and Davis, developed a strong cult ...
"San Francisco Bay Blues" is an American folk song and is generally considered to be the most famous composition by Jesse Fuller. [1] Fuller first recorded the song in 1954, which was released by the World Song label in 1955. A "one-man band" rendition of the song featuring a kazoo solo was recorded by
Real Nighttime is the second full-length album from Game Theory, a California power pop band founded by guitarist and singer-songwriter Scott Miller.Released in 1985, the album is cited as "a watershed work in '80s paisley underground pop."
"Mah Nà Mah Nà" is a popular song by Italian composer Piero Umiliani. It originally appeared in the Italian film Sweden: Heaven and Hell (Svezia, inferno e paradiso).On its own it was a minor radio hit in the United States and in Britain, but became better known internationally after it was used by The Muppets and on The Benny Hill Show.