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The song title "Inoa ʻOle" is Hawaiian for "no name". "Ice House" was inspired by an obscure television play, while single "Miss the Girl" was inspired by the J. G. Ballard novel Crash. "Dancing on Glass" was based on an Indian musical; during the studio session, the sounds of broken glass were created by Siouxsie and Budgie dancing on broken ...
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 11 January 2025. Small, long-tailed, seed-eating parakeet Budgerigar Temporal range: Pliocene–Holocene PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Blue cere indicates male Flaking brown cere indicates female in breeding condition Conservation status Least Concern (IUCN 3.1) Scientific classification Domain ...
Still others require song to have syllabic diversity and temporal regularity akin to the repetitive and transformative patterns that define music. It is generally agreed upon in birding and ornithology which sounds are songs and which are calls, and a good field guide will differentiate between the two.
Between 1954 and 1962, a budgerigar named Sparkie Williams held the record for having the largest vocabulary of a talking bird; at his death, he knew 531 words and 383 sentences. [3] In 1995, a budgerigar named Puck was credited by Guinness World Records as having the largest vocabulary of any bird, at 1,728 words. [28]
Siouxsie and Budgie had purchased a lot of equipment and decided to work at their house near Toulouse. The original title of the album was Gifthorse , then Mount Venus , before the duo changed their minds to finally opt for Anima Animus , which was a reference to Jung's theory of "The Man Inside The Woman and The Woman Inside The Man".
The song was allegedly inspired by the 1973 novel Crash, a story about car-crash fetishists by J. G. Ballard. The main instruments used were marimba and percussion, giving the song a distinctive and original sound. The single peaked at No. 21 on the UK Singles Chart. [1] "Miss the Girl" was the very first record released on Wonderland, a label ...
Wild Things is the first release by British duo the Creatures (singer Siouxsie Sioux and drummer Budgie).It was issued on 25 September 1981 by Polydor Records as two 7" single records in a "double-album" style card cover, and is usually referred to as an EP.
In the late 1990s, they developed a more urban sound on Anima Animus; The Times then described their music as "adventurous art rock built around Siouxsie's extraordinary voice and drummer Budgie's battery of percussion". [4] For their last album Hái! (2003), they returned to their roots while turning to east, with an ode to Japanese minimalism.