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"When Your Heart Stops Beating" is a song by American rock band +44, released on November 14, 2006 as the second single from the group's debut studio album, When Your Heart Stops Beating (2006). "When Your Heart Stops Beating" was released to radio on October 3, 2006. [ 2 ]
The numbered musical notation (simplified Chinese: 简谱; traditional Chinese: 簡譜; pinyin: jiǎnpǔ; lit. 'simplified notation', not to be confused with the integer notation) is a cipher notation system used in mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and to some extent in Japan, Indonesia (in a slightly different format called "not angka"), Malaysia, Australia, Ireland, the United Kingdom ...
"No, It Isn't" is a song by American rock band +44, released on December 13, 2005 as their debut track. The song was written about bassist Mark Hoppus and drummer Travis Barker 's previous musical outfit, Blink-182 , and the group's breakup.
When Your Heart Stops Beating is the only album by the American rock supergroup +44, released on November 14, 2006, by Interscope Records. [1] Mark Hoppus and Travis Barker of Blink-182 formed +44 as an experimental electronic outfit following the breakup of Blink-182.
44 has an aliquot sum of 40, within an aliquot sequence of three composite numbers (44, 40, 50, 43, 1, 0) rooted in the prime 43-aliquot tree. Since the greatest prime factor of 44 2 + 1 = 1937 is 149 and thus more than 44 twice, 44 is a Størmer number. [3] Given Euler's totient function, φ(44) = 20 and φ(69) = 44.
45 is an odd number and a Størmer number. 45 degrees is half of a right angle. It is also the smallest positive number that can be expressed as the difference of two nonzero squares in more than two ways: 7 2 − 2 2 {\displaystyle 7^{2}-2^{2}} , 9 2 − 6 2 {\displaystyle 9^{2}-6^{2}} or 23 2 − 22 2 {\displaystyle 23^{2}-22^{2}} .
Sykes added lyrics to the tune and recorded it as "44 Blues" on June 14, 1929, for Okeh Records. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] According to blues historian Paul Oliver , Sykes' lyrics "played on the differing interpretations of the phrase 'forty-fours'—the train number 44, the .44 caliber revolver and the 'little cabin' on which was the number 44, presumably a ...
Poetic Justice is a studio album by the American glam metal band Lillian Axe, released in 1992. [4] It was the first featuring drummer Gene Barnett and bassist Darrin DeLatte; they replaced Danny King and Rob Stratton. It was also the band's first release on I.R.S. Records, after being dropped by MCA Records.