Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Townshend produced the single, [7] arranged the strings, and played bass under the pseudonym Bijou Drains. [8] Originally titled "Revolution" but later renamed to avoid confusion with the Beatles' 1968 song of the same name, "Something in the Air" captured post-flower power rebellion, combining McCulloch's acoustic and electric guitars, Keen's drumming and falsetto vocals, and Newman's piano solo.
Esteghlal fans performed the Viking clap immediately after the end of the UEFA Euro 2016; With each clap, they call their team nickname "S.S". [8] [9] Persepolis supporters began using the Viking clap immediately since Branko Era. [10] [11] Canberra Raiders fans began using the chant in 2016 after the Icelandic version came to prominence. [12 ...
Thunderclap Newman was a British rock band that Pete Townshend of the Who and Kit Lambert formed in 1969 in a bid to showcase the talents of John "Speedy" Keen, Jimmy McCulloch, and Andy "Thunderclap" Newman.
The group's first single, "Something in the Air", was a UK number 1 hit and is the song for which Thunderclap Newman are best known. [8] [9] The single also reached #37 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the U.S. The album was recorded after the initial U.K. success of the first single.
Thunder clap, a dance move. Thunderclap headache, an intense headache that can be a sign of a medical emergency. Thunderclap plan, a canceled German attack that was planned for August 1944. The Delft Thunderclap, the 1654 explosion of the Delft gunpowder magazine. Thunderclap (security vulnerability), related to computer flaws.
"Thunder Clatter" is a song by Nashville-based indie rock quintet Wild Cub. The song was released as the lead single from the band's debut album Youth on January 14, 2013, but did not chart until it featured in a Bose advertising campaign later that year.
"Some Loud Thunder" "Emily Jean Stock" "Mama, Won't You Keep Them Castles in the Air and Burning?" "Love Song No. 7" "Satan Said Dance" "Upon Encountering the Crippled Elephant" "Goodbye to Mother and the Cove" (Ounsworth, Tyler Sargent, Sean Greenhalgh) "Arm and Hammer" "Yankee Go Home" "Underwater (You and Me)" "Five Easy Pieces"
The thunder crash bomb (Chinese: 震天雷; pinyin: zhèntiānléi), also known as the heaven-shaking-thunder bomb, was one of the first bombs or hand grenades in the history of gunpowder warfare. It was developed in the 12th-13th century Song and Jin dynasties. Its shell was made of cast iron and filled with gunpowder.