Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Dangerous Dreams is the debut studio album by American dance-punk band Moving Units. It was released on October 12, 2004, by Palm Records. [9] It was their second release, after their 2002 Moving Units EP. The track "Between Us & Them" was used in Leo Romero's opening part in Foundation's skateboarding video That's Life.
The song is 7 minutes and 49 seconds, the longest on the album. "Us and Them" was released as the second single from The Dark Side of the Moon in the United States, peaking at No. 72 on the Cash Box Top 100 Singles chart in March 1974. [3] The single peaked at No. 85 in the Canadian chart. [4]
Moving Units is the first release by the band of the same name, Moving Units. It was first released early 2002 on Festival Of Dead Deer's former label, Three One G, in 12" vinyl; the first pressing was on pink vinyl and the second on green. After the band moved to Palm Records, it was reissued on February 4, 2003, on CD.
Dangerous and Moving is the second English-language (third overall) studio album by Russian musical group t.A.T.u. and the English-language equivalent of the album Lyudi Invalidy. The album was first released on 5 October 2005 in Japan then on 10 October in the UK, 11 October in North America, and in Europe and Latin America, on 14 October.
Moving Units released their second studio album, Hexes for Exes in 2007 on Metropolis Records. The first single, "Pink Thoughts", was released through the band's MySpace page. So Sweet released a one-off limited edition 7 inch vinyl single "Crash N Burn Victims" in the UK coupled with a remix of the same track by Felix Cartal in November 2007.
Us and Them is the second studio album by American rock band Shinedown, released on October 4, 2005, by Atlantic Records.Recorded in Jacksonville, Florida and Sanford, Florida, the album had three singles, two of which, "Save Me" and "I Dare You," were used as themes for WWE pay-per-view events No Mercy 2005 and WrestleMania 22 respectively.
Andrew Jernigan, 51, has moved with his family between the US and Brazil multiple times. The last time he lived in Brazil, his children were teenagers and found the move difficult.
The song is Usher's lowest-peaking song on the Hot 100. [17] It fared better on the US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, where it peaked at number eighteen and spent seventeen weeks on the chart. [16] It placed at number eighty-four on the end-of-year R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. [18] "Moving Mountains" reached number fifty-six on the Pop 100. [19]