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"Jet Airliner" is a song composed by Paul Pena in 1973 and popularized by the Steve Miller Band in 1977. Pena wrote and recorded "Jet Airliner" in 1973 for his New Train album. [ 4 ] However, New Train was not released until 2000 , [ 5 ] due to conflicts between him and his label.
Soundiiz is a playlist converter/manager for several music streaming sites. It provides automated transfer of playlists, [1] as well as a single interface as which to manage and synchronize between such, such as Deezer, Apple Music, SoundCloud, Amazon Music, YouTube, Qobuz, Spotify, Napster, Tidal, Discogs, as well as others.
Paul Pena (/ p iː n ə /; January 26, 1950 – October 1, 2005) [1] was an American singer, songwriter and guitarist.. Pena's music from the first half of his career touched on Delta blues, jazz, morna, flamenco, folk, and rock and roll.
The band first performed the song in 1973 [5] while performing at New York City's Felt Forum on a bill with The Marshall Tucker Band, Buddy Guy, and Junior Wells. [6]An earlier 1973 version features a more bluesy and less funk-inspired rhythm, with the guitar taking the synthesizer parts (albeit with similar delay effects). [7]
JetAudio’s user interface is similar to earlier versions of Winamp in that it features separate windows for: playback, playlist and music library. Like Winamp, JetAudio can be minimized to a toolbar ( “Windowshade Mode”) by pressing the “Toolbar Mode ON/OFF” button in the upper right portion of the Main Window.
"Jet Airliner" peaked at number 7 in Germany on 22 June 1987, spending four weeks within the top 10 and total of 11 weeks on the singles chart. [1] While the single managed to enter the top 10 in Austria, it entered the top 20 in Switzerland and Sweden, and peaked at number 33 in the Netherlands.
The article currently states that: When the song is played on the radio, "shit" is usually replaced with "kicks". My experience has actually been the opposite; even back in 1990 when I first heard it, the uncensored version was much more common, and these days classic rock radio stations where I live virtually always use it. --☥ Xyzzy Avatar ☥ 09:41, 29 November 2010 (UTC)
Various special effects are employed in the video, such as collage, extreme colours and computer created magical effects. Somewhat primitive now, at that time, the early days of MTV and music videos, such effects were fresh and innovative. The video has since become iconic as has the mysterious girl, whose image is interwoven with the song.