Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A music video was produced for the song and was directed by Roboshobo. [4] The video was uploaded to the band's official YouTube account on September 20, 2011. [5] The video focuses on a man (played by Bill Oberst Jr.) who chops down a tree carrying a warning sign, snorts a rough powder made of its wood, and becomes intoxicated.
A voice change or voice mutation, sometimes referred to as a voice break or voice crack, commonly refers to the deepening of the voice of men as they reach puberty.Before puberty both sexes have roughly similar vocal pitches, but during puberty the male voice typically deepens an octave, while the female voice usually deepens only by a few tones.
The video was also meant as an homage to the band's hometown, Atlanta, which was one of the cities pivotal to early hip hop music. [4] One of the dancers in the video, Jade, defended it, saying "it's not a satirical video, but rather one with an inclusive message."
STORY: The mammoth-branded social network is seeing a surge in new signupsMastodon was founded five years ago by German programmer Eugen RochkoIt looks much like Twitter, with short posts often ...
‘There is a part of the world that isn’t familiar with what it takes to transform your voice,’ she says Ariana Grande calls backlash to her voice change sexist: ‘When it’s a male actor ...
William Brent Hinds (born January 16, 1974) is an American musician best known as the lead guitarist of the Atlanta, Georgia heavy metal band Mastodon, in which he shares guitar duties with Bill Kelliher and vocal duties with Troy Sanders and Brann Dailor.
Ariana Grande has responded to the online discourse about her apparent voice change throughout theWicked press tour.. Speaking to Variety, the 31-year-old, who’s up for her first Golden Globe ...
"High Road" is a single by American heavy metal band Mastodon. The song was released as the debut single from their sixth album, Once More 'Round the Sun.The song was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Metal Performance, but lost to Tenacious D's cover of Dio's "The Last in Line."