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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 22 January 2025. Canadian pop music duo Crash Adams Origin Toronto, Ontario, Canada Genres Pop Years active 2019-present Labels Warner Music Canada Members Rafaele Massarelli Vince Sasso Website crashadamsmusic.com Crash Adams is a Canadian pop music duo from Toronto, Ontario, most noted as Juno Award ...
Crash: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the soundtrack to the 2004 film of the same name.It was released by Superb Records on June 7, 2005, in a double-disc edition [1] [2] The album features 13 tracks from the original score composed by Mark Isham and two tracks—Kathleen York's "In the Deep" and Stereophonics' "Maybe Tomorrow", which appear in the film.
"Enemy (Imagine Dragons and JID song)" Måneskin "Supermodel (Måneskin song)" Rush! Chappell Roan "My Kink is Karma" The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess: John Legend "Waterslide" Legend (John Legend album) Raye "Hard out Here" My 21st Century Blues: Tayla Parx "Rich" TBA: Sofia Carson "Timeless" Sofia Carson: Two Tears in a Bucket: Ari ...
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Individual songs are usually priced at either US$1.99/€1.49/£0.99, or US$1.00/€0.75/£0.59, with a few exceptions priced at £1.19 or £1.49/€1.99; [16] all are available for download through PlayStation Network, Xbox Live and the Wii's online service unless otherwise noted on the list below.
The fictional band Crash and the Boys, which has songs on the soundtrack, is based on Broken Social Scene, with Crash's actor Erik Knudsen also singing; another group in the film is the Clash at Demonhead, based on Metric and fronted by actress and singer Brie Larson as Envy Adams (herself based on Metric's front-woman Emily Haines), with only ...
In 2004, he appeared as a guest in an episode of Cold Case as Lionel Royce, the leader of the "Black Liberation Front" section in Philadelphia in 1969. [5]In 2008, he joined the main cast of Crash, in which he played Anthony Adams, the music prodigy to Dennis Hopper's character Ben Cenders, until the end of the series in 2009. [6]
The EP's title track is an apocalyptic manifesto full of fractured images, [12] whose lyrics were written by Crash in the first person in the name of Adolf Hitler, who proclaims himself a "lexicon devil" in the song, [nb 1] [nb 2] [citation needed] which is featured here in its slower and tamer first version.