Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
An overview of the Fat Wreck Chords compilations: Fat Music for Fat People – (1994) [1] Survival of the Fattest – (1996) [2] Physical Fatness- (1997) [3] Life in the Fat Lane – (1999) [4] Short Music for Short People – (1999) [5] Live Fat, Die Young- (2001) [6] Uncontrollable Fatulence – (2002) [7] Liberation: Songs to Benefit PETA ...
Fat Wreck Chords (pronounced "Fat Records") is an independent record label based in San Francisco focused on punk rock. It was started by NOFX lead singer Michael Burkett (better known as Fat Mike) and his wife at the time, Erin Burkett in 1990. [1] As of 2009, Fat Wreck Chords has released over 300 studio albums. [1]
Hate Songs in E Minor is the debut studio album by British rock band Fudge Tunnel.It was released in May 1991 through Earache Records, [2] and issued in the United States on 20 August 1991 through Relativity Records.
The self-titled debut album quotes "Strawberry Fields Forever" at the end, with the lines "Nothing is real; Nothing to get hung about". According to Ritchie Blackmore and Jon Lord , Vanilla Fudge's organ-heavy sound was a large influence on the British band Deep Purple , with Blackmore even stating that his band wanted to be a "Vanilla Fudge ...
Fat Music is a series of eight compilation albums published by Fat Wreck Chords since 1994. The albums include artists from the label's roster, focusing on then-current and upcoming releases and often including previously unreleased material.
List of musical chords Name Chord on C Sound # of p.c.-Forte # p.c. #s Quality ... 0 3 6 e: Diminished Diminished seventh chord (leading-tone and secondary chord)
The Vanilla Fudge version appears in the series finale of the television show The Sopranos (2007), at the conclusion of episode 1 of season 7 of the television series Mad Men (2015), [43] the film War Dogs (2016), the video game Mafia III (2016), the film Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019) and its soundtrack, and over the closing credits of ...
Songwriter Harlan Howard once said "country music is three chords and the truth." [2] Lou Reed said "One chord is fine. Two chords is pushing it. Three chords and you're into jazz." [3] Reed nevertheless wrote many songs with unique or complex chord progressions himself, such as the material on Berlin.