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It was banned in several US radio markets, because the term 'rumble' was a slang term for a gang fight, and it was feared that the piece's harsh sound glorified juvenile delinquency. [10] The record is the only instrumental single ever banned from radio in the United States. [12] [13]
The opening song of Rush's 2004 tour dates featured an instrumental combining sections of one song from each of the band's first six studio albums. The songs featured in the medley were: "Finding My Way" "Anthem" (Fly by Night) "Bastille Day" (Caress of Steel) "A Passage to Bangkok"
It was aimed at Sir Jimmy Young, the then BBC Radio 1 and Radio 2 DJ who the band supposedly disliked because of his tendency to babble. During early 1970s concerts, they sometimes played a sound collage of clips from Young's radio show that was edited to sound completely nonsensical, thus figuratively "cutting him into little pieces". [7]
The addition of Leavell in particular changed the band's sound and direction, which has often been considered most evident on "Jessica". [2] Guitarist Dickey Betts wrote the song at "the Farm," a 432-acre (175 ha) "group hangout" in Juliette, Georgia. "I really need to have an image in my head before I can start writing an instrumental because ...
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"Flying" is an instrumental recorded by the English rock band the Beatles which first appeared on the 1967 Magical Mystery Tour release (two EP discs in the United Kingdom, an LP in the United States). It is one of the few songs credited to all four members of the band: John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr.
The single's B-side, also titled "Instrumental" and known as "Instrumental No 2" [2] or "Instrumental B" [3] demonstrates My Bloody Valentine's first known experimentation with dance music. [4] "Instrumental No 2" features an uncredited sample of "Security of the First World", a song by Public Enemy from their 1988 studio album It Takes a ...
The Devil's Rejects is the soundtrack for Rob Zombie's film The Devil's Rejects.It was released as a standard CD and as a DualDisc.While both feature the same songs, the DualDisc also includes sound clips from the film, as well as including the album in high-resolution stereo, a behind-the-scenes documentary about the film and a photogallery on the DVD side.