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"Chalk Dust – The Umpire Strikes Back" is a satire of American tennis player John McEnroe and lampoons his infamous angry behaviour on the tennis court to a synthesizer beat. The entire song is a conversation between McEnroe (played by Roger Kitter) and the referee (played by Kaplan Kaye). They bicker until the referee finally loses his ...
The promotional video for "Empty" was helmed by Samuel Bayer, who also directed the first Garbage videos from their debut album. [15] [16] The video shows each member of the band playing in an empty room alone on a platform with various flashing colored light effects as well as confetti occasionally raining down from the ceiling. There are many ...
"Finest Hour" Single by Cash Cash featuring Abir; from the album Say It Like You Feel It; Released: April 12, 2018 () Genre: Dance-pop [1] Length: 3: 35: Label: Big Beat: Songwriter(s) Abir Haronni; Alex Makhlouf; Dave Dalton; Frank Hendler; Jean Paul Makhlouf; Nathanial L John; Samuel Frisch; Producer(s) Cash Cash: Cash Cash singles chronology
Absolute Garbage is a greatest hits album by American rock band Garbage.It was released worldwide on July 23, 2007, through Warner Music imprint A&E Records with a North American release through Almo Sounds, Geffen Records, and Universal Music Enterprises the following day.
All the bass guitar parts on "Shut Your Mouth" were performed on a Music Man Sabre bass. [4] Butch Vig recorded a funk jam for the middle of the song on a Drum Workshop kit; he then cut and pasted random beats using Pro Tools editing software to create a jarring percussive effect. [1] "It was just sort of a straight pattern, and without even ...
The music video for the song was filmed at Elstree Studios [7] and directed by David Mould. It features the whole band performing in a crowded, up-market bar decorated in garish primary colours among people in glamorous, high-end fashions of the day. The video also marks the first appearance of a new band member, keyboard player Neil Codling.
Being an MLB umpire is a thankless job, both emotionally taxing and physically strenuous. But Hernández’s outwardly standoffish attitude and penchant for comically bad calls did him no favors.
In addition to building the dummies he uses in his act, Dunham restores antique dummies as a hobby, one of which is The Umpire, a 6-foot-tall (1.8 m) mechanized dummy built in 1941 to work the plate at a girls' softball game. The Umpire was unused and was packed away for 50 years before Dunham acquired it in early 2008.