Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The album's title track began a string of hits starting in March 1981. The group's next album Let the Music Play (1981) [2] featured the single "Knock! Knock!" which reached the top 50. Dazz Band's breakthrough came with the hit "Let It Whip", [2] written and produced by Reggie Andrews, from their Keep It Live (1982) album. [2] "
"Let It Whip" is a 1982 single by Dazz Band and their biggest hit, peaking at number one on the R&B chart for five non-consecutive weeks. [2] The single also reached number two on the Dance chart [ 3 ] and number five on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. [ 4 ]
Terry Riley is a seminal composer and performer of the loop- and ostinato-based music who began using tape loops in 1960. For his 1963 piece Music for The Gift he devised a hardware looper that he named the Time Lag Accumulator, consisting of two tape recorders linked together, which he used to loop and manipulate trumpet player Chet Baker and ...
"Whip It!" is a single by American rapper LunchMoney Lewis featuring Chloe Angelides. It was released on August 7, 2015. It was released on August 7, 2015. The song contains samples from the 1980s song, " Let It Whip " by the Dazz Band .
DEV-O Live stems from a 16-track promotional album called Devo Live: Warner Bros. Music Show, recorded for broadcast on the King Biscuit Flower Hour. [3] The broadcast was so popular that four songs ("Freedom of Choice Theme Song", "Whip It", "Be Stiff" and "Gates of Steel") were released as a promotional EP in November 1980, titled DEV-O Live, followed by the more widely available EP of the ...
"Whip It" is a song by American rapper BigXthaPlug from the deluxe edition of his debut studio album Amar (2023). Produced by BandPlay and Tony Coles, it contains a sample of " Let It Whip " by the Dazz Band .
The information in the specific section Concert_pitch#Controversial_claims_for_432_Hz first redirected to was not a good representation of the subject. 432 Hz is not only a controversial claim, but also has uncontroversial historical use. Much more info on explicitly 432 Hz exist in both articles Concert pitch and Scientific pitch.
Wilton was born in San Francisco, California, [1] but his family moved to Seattle, Washington when he was 6 years old. [3] His father took him to concerts from an early age and introduced him to many musical styles, especially jazz, [3] including John McLaughlin, Larry Coryell and Al Di Meola, [4] but also to rock music like Led Zeppelin, The Allman Brothers Band, and Eric Clapton. [4]