Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"It's Going to Happen!" was the eighth single released by the band and the second single released to be co-written by lead guitarist Damian O'Neill and bassist Michael Bradley. Unlike any of the previous singles released by the Undertones, the majority of which focused on teenage angst and romance, "It's Going to Happen!"
Positive Touch is a 1981 album by the Undertones.The album, the third to be released by the band and the last to be produced by Roger Bechirian, was recorded between January and February 1981 at Wisseloord studios in The Netherlands. [7]
The Undertones "Here Comes the Summer" 34 — — "You've Got My Number (Why Don't You Use It!)" 32 25 — Non-album single "My Perfect Cousin" 1980 9 9 — Hypnotised "Wednesday Week" 11 — — "It's Going to Happen!" 1981 18 10 49 Positive Touch "Julie Ocean" 41 30 — "When Saturday Comes" [B] — — — "Beautiful Friend" 1982 ...
The Undertones formed in Derry, Northern Ireland in 1974. [12] The band members were five friends from Creggan and the Bogside, who originally drew inspiration from such artists as the Beatles, Small Faces and Lindisfarne [13] and who decided in part to form their own band due to both their common interest in music and the fact that—because of the Troubles—many entertainment venues in the ...
The single was released on 5 July 1980 and peaked at #11 on the UK Singles Chart three weeks later, making the song the band's second highest charting single. [4] Wednesday Week was the Undertones' final single to be released on the Sire label before the band left the label in December 1980.
It’s “Unlimited,” which just comes back as a sub-theme, or interpolation, as people would say today, repeatedly. Schwartz: Well, you used the term motif, and I think that’s accurate.
Inhale for four seconds, hold that breath for seven seconds and breathe out for eight seconds. Make this evidence-backed practice a habit in the morning when you wake up and right before you go to ...
Seconds later, Meyer sulked about his most painful recruiting loss: when running back C.J. Spiller spurned his hometown Gators for Clemson that same year. “Terrible recruiting job on him, 30 ...