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Bo on the Go! (stylized Bo on the GO!) is a Canadian-animated children's television series created by Jeff Rosen, Michael Donovan, and Cheryl Wagner and produced by Halifax Film in association with CBC Television. It emphasizes the importance of movement for children through a plot element called "animoves" (animations showing specific body ...
Open E tuning also lends itself to easy barre-chording as heard in some of these songs. Chris Martin of Coldplay also uses this tuning live in the song "Hurts Like Heaven", but puts a capo on at the sixth fret. Open E tuning is often used for slide guitar, as it constitutes an open chord, which can be raised by moving the slide further up the neck.
Easy" is a progressive house song. [6] An anime-like music video [6] to accompany the release of "Easy" was first released onto YouTube on 8 March 2013 at a total length of three minutes and thirty-four seconds. [7] The creators of this video were the animation group, The Line. [8] The video follows a pop star by the name of Maki.
Bobby Sherman's version was released as a single in January 1970, [3] and appeared on the album Here Comes Bobby, which was released in March of the same year. [ 4 ] Sherman's version spent 14 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, peaking at No. 9, [ 5 ] while reaching No. 2 on Billboard ' s Easy Listening chart.
In 1998, "Bo Diddley" received a Grammy Hall of Fame Award [7] and it is included on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's list of "500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll". [8] In 2011, the A and B-side pair were added to the Library of Congress 's National Recording Registry list of "culturally, historically, or aesthetically important" American sound ...
Peggy Jones (later Malone, July 19, 1940 – September 16, 2015), known on stage as Lady Bo in recognition of her relationship with Bo Diddley, was an American musician.A pioneer of rock and roll, Jones played rhythm guitar in Bo Diddley's band in the late 1950s and early 1960s, becoming one of the first (perhaps the first) female rock guitarists in a highly visible rock band, and was ...
The "Bo Diddley beat" is essentially the clave rhythm, one of the most common bell patterns found in sub-Saharan African music traditions. [110] One scholar found this rhythm in 13 rhythm and blues recordings made in the years 1944–55, including two by Johnny Otis from 1948. [111] Bo Diddley gave different accounts of how he began to use this ...
An earlier version, "Rosin the Bow" (not "Beau") refers to rosin with the bow of a violin, but both cover the same general subject (see below: Full lyrics). There are many variations of the song(s), and the tune has been re-used in other songs for political campaign jingles, slave songs, comedy songs, or other folk songs.