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"The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind) " is a house music track by Kenny Dope's musical production team The Bucketheads , released in February 1995 by Positiva and Henry Street Music. It was later dubbed into the project's sole album, All in the Mind (1995).
The Bucketheads. 1994 "Whew" 1995 "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" [4] [5] 1995 "Come and Be Gone" 1995 "Got Myself Together" 1995 "The Dungeon Tapes EP" 1995 "Time and Space" 2000 "The Bomb (2000 Remixes)" The Untouchables. 1991 "The Untouchables EP" 1991 "The Swing Doctor EP" 1991 "Take a Chance" 1993 "Go Bah" 1994 "Just the Way ...
An E-mu SP-1200, as used in the album's production.. Brooklyn-based producer Kenny "Dope" Gonzalez, one half of house duo Masters at Work, founded the Bucketheads in the mid-1990s as a studio project that would allow him to fuse his populist musical influences: house, hip hop, freestyle, disco and Latin street music.
It should only contain pages that are The Bucketheads songs or lists of The Bucketheads songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Bucketheads songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
"Macarena" - Los del Mar "I Like to Move It" - Reel 2 Real "Groovin' in the Bleachers" - The Jock Jams Cheerleaders "Party" - Dis N' Dat "Get Down Tonight" - KC and the Sunshine Band "Give It Up" - The Goodmen "Action, Boys, Action" - The Jock Jams Cheerleaders "The Bomb" - The Bucketheads "Boom Boom Boom" - The Outhere Brothers "What's Up ...
A bomb cyclone is a storm that strengthens so fast that the central atmospheric pressure plunges 0.71 of an inch (24 millibars) or more in 24 hours or less. The central pressure in Tuesday's bomb ...
Fireworks the diameter of bowling balls were among over 75 tons of illegal fireworks seized by authorities in the South Bay.
The Los Angeles Times noted at the time: "The birthplace of the talkies is disappearing into dust in Hollywood. Demolition crews are razing the older buildings of the old Warner Bros. Sunset Blvd. studio where the nasal voice of Al Jolson recorded on Vitaphone, first made talking pictures a commercial reality."