Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Azalea uploaded the song's music video on YouTube in August 2011, where it went viral, helping to propel the young rapper to prominence. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Azalea has performed the track regularly since its release as a part of her live shows setlist , including on her 2014 The New Classic Tour .
No Fools, No Fun is the debut full-length album by Brooklyn-based alt-country trio Puss n Boots, released on July 15, 2014, through Blue Note Records.It is a collection of five original and seven cover songs originally performed by artists including Johnny Cash, Wilco and Neil Young. [1]
The band released an EP called Dead Songs in 2015 which was a collection of song versions recorded at the Exercise Your Demons sessions but not previously released. Third album Ain't No Pussy was released in 2017. Vive Le Rock scored the album 8/10 with reviewer Lee Cotterell commenting that the band were "on feisty form. The roar of a big cat ...
Discover the latest breaking news in the U.S. and around the world — politics, weather, entertainment, lifestyle, finance, sports and much more.
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
Thunderpussy performing at the 2018 Sasquatch!Music Festival. The band met and befriended Pearl Jam's lead guitarist Mike McCready at Sasquatch! Music Festival. [8] McCready was an immediate fan of the band, and Thunderpussy's first single, "Velvet Noose", was released on McCready's HockeyTalkter Records.
In other parts of the music video, Latto raps the lyrics to the song while surrounded by cats. [2] Lacombe stated that "this video is symbolic that we can be both hard (her lyrics) and soft (the world we placed her in) at the same time." [4] Dora Segall of Spin called the video "excellent" and "unexpectedly adorable". [6]
A Pew Research survey of the most popular news videos on YouTube in 2011–12 found RT to be the top source with 8.5 percent of posts, 68 percent of which consisted of first-person video accounts of dramatic worldwide events, likely acquired by the network rather than created by it.