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Steve Zing (born Steven Paul Grecco; June 29, 1964) is an American drummer and bassist. He has performed with Implosion, Mourning Noise , and The Undead before joining Samhain . He graduated in 1982 from Lodi High School in Lodi, New Jersey together with Eerie Von and Doyle Wolfgang von Frankenstein .
"Zing! Went the Strings of My Heart " is a 1935 popular song with words and music by James F. Hanley . It was introduced by Hal Le Roy and Eunice Healey in the Broadway revue Thumbs Up! .
Zing! is an American barbershop quartet, which won the Sweet Adelines International Quartet Championship for 2010 in October 2009 in Nashville, Tennessee. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Sweet Adelines, "one of the world's largest singing organizations for women", has members over five continents who belong to more than 1200 quartets. [ 3 ]
May La Than Zin (Burmese: မေလသံစဉ်; MLCTS: me la san. cany, also known as May Melody; born 23 May 2003) is a Burmese singer best known for her acoustic cover songs. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Early life
The Legendary Zing Album, a 1972 album by the Trammps "Zing a Little Zong", a popular song from the 1952 movie Just for You; Zing It, an audio game; Cherry Zing, a yogurt flavour; Lemon Lime Zing, a Crayola crayon color
The track "Rubber Band" was 30 years later sampled and used by rap artist the Game for his 2005 hit "Hate It Or Love It", and again the same year by Mary J. Blige on her song "MJB Da MVP". The song also appears in Grand Theft Auto V in the in-game radio station The Lowdown 91.1.
Current members of Danzig performing live in 2010 (top) and 2013 (bottom) Danzig is an American heavy metal band from Lodi, New Jersey. Formed in 1987, the group evolved from Samhain and originally included eponymous vocalist and keyboardist Glenn Danzig, guitarist John Christ, bassist Eerie Von and drummer Chuck Biscuits. The band's current lineup includes Danzig, guitarist Tommy Victor (from ...
The song is a "playlet," a word Stoller used for the glimpses into teenage life that characterized the songs he and Lieber wrote and produced. [4] The lyrics describe the listing of household chores to a kid, presumably a teenager, the teenager's response ("yakety yak") and the parents' retort ("don't talk back") — an experience very familiar to a middle-class teenager of the day.