Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Peter James Hollens [2] is an American singer-songwriter, producer and entrepreneur. He has been involved with a cappella music since 1999 when he and Leo da Silva founded the University of Oregon's a cappella group, On The Rocks, known as the first official collegiate a cappella group in Oregon.
The band fell apart, and a few years later, Gleason decided to do more music. He began rapping about video games, and he gradually moved to a cappella music. [4] Gleason has recorded music from many popular video game series, including The Legend of Zelda, [5] Super Mario, Sonic the Hedgehog, Final Fantasy, [6] Mega Man, [7] Undertale and ...
Straight No Chaser (SNC) is a professional American a cappella group that originated in 1996 at Indiana University. Originally a student group at Indiana University, they recorded a video in 1998 of a comical version of "The 12 Days of Christmas". The founding members all graduated, to be replaced by other students, in 1999.
The band has been actively posting videos to their Youtube channel since 2009. In May 2020, they announced that they had reached 1 million subscribers to their channel. [15] Home Free was also an early adopter of Patreon, where they crowdfund to raise money to produce their videos. [16] The band cultivates a fan base, known as Home Fries. [17 ...
Noteworthy began operating under the direction of the Performing Arts Management (PAM) at BYU in 2014. One of their most popular music videos is a cover of Amazing Grace, which won the Contemporary A Cappella Society (CARA) award for Best Religious Video and has garnered millions of views on YouTube since its release. [when?
Members are Sang-in(S.I.) Jang, Soo-kyung(Soo) Kang, Young-hoon(Hoony) Kwon, Won-jong Kim, and Su-yeon(Erika) Lim. The group's members compose and arrange most of their songs. From 2021, they released numerous sound effect a cappella videos such as Squid Game medley on YouTube and TikTok, which have made them popular.
The video, a parody of Mike Tompkins' a cappella music video for "Dynamite", [1] [8] was intended for the group's target audience in the New York Orthodox Jewish community [3] [7] but it quickly went viral, being viewed more than 2 million times in ten days. [2] [4] As of December 2018, it had logged more than 14 million views. [9]
[1] [2] Since this inaugural release, the group have gone on to produce other recordings and music videos of a cappella covers. [3] [4] In terms of structure, the group resembles a small male-voice chamber choir of approximately 14 members, featuring bass, baritone, tenor and countertenor parts in addition to a vocal percussionist.