Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Tenacious D is an American comedy rock duo formed in Los Angeles in 1994 by the actors Jack Black and Kyle Gass. Their music showcases Black's theatrical vocal delivery and Gass' acoustic guitar playing. [1] Critics have described their fusion of vulgar absurdist comedy with rock music as "mock rock".
The song received two official music videos. The first one was a live-action music video directed by Cole Bennett, depicting Jack Black wearing a Bowser-inspired costume and playing the song on the piano while in a room with windows overlooking computer-animated landscapes from the film.
"Wonderboy" is the debut single by American rock-comedy duo Tenacious D. It was released in September 2001 on the same day as their self-titled debut album.The song peaked at number 36 in the UK and number 44 in Australia; the video, directed by Spike Jonze, was also well received.
The music video for "Tribute", directed and edited by Liam Lynch, features Jack Black, and Kyle Gass, in a cheap shopping mall karaoke booth, rewired to record their song. As they sing, the video cuts between footage of the pair walking down the "long, lonesome road" and their encounter with the demon, played by Dave Grohl .
Jack Black is patiently waiting for Universal Pictures and Illumination to greenlight a sequel to the animated box office smash “The Super Mario Bros. Movie.” “It has been radio silence ...
Kyle Gass (left) and Jack Black (right), the founding members of Tenacious D, have written the majority of the band's material.. Tenacious D is an American comedy rock band formed in 1994 by Jack Black and Kyle Gass.
In a video titled "Peaches by Jack Black is Unironically Really Good," musician/YouTuber Charles Connell explained that "Peaches" is performed in the key of D-flat minor. "This is the simplest ...
School of Rock is the soundtrack album of the film of the same title starring Jack Black.It was released on September 30, 2003. The film's director Richard Linklater scouted the country for talented 11-year-old musicians to play the rock music that features on the soundtrack and in the film.