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"Don't Want Another Man" is a 2000 song recorded by the American group Dynamix featuring vocalist Tina Ann, taken from the Dynamix debut album Rhythm Beatdown, and later featured on Tina Ann's 2003 album Situations. The track marked the act's first number-one single on Billboard's Dance Club Songs Chart. [1]
Dynamix is an electronic and dance music duo consisting of producers Jeremy Skaller and Eddie Cumana. Their first hit, "Don't Want Another Man" [1] (featuring singer Tina Ann) hit #1 on the Billboard Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart in 2000. [2] They followed this with "Never Get Me", [3] a #17 dance hit featuring singer Nina Eve. [4]
Group dynamics is a system of behaviors and psychological processes occurring within a social group (intragroup dynamics), or between social groups (intergroup dynamics). The study of group dynamics can be useful in understanding decision-making behaviour, tracking the spread of diseases in society, creating effective therapy techniques, and ...
Carrollton (formerly, Mosteller) was an American contemporary Christian music band from Cincinnati, Ohio and Louisville, Kentucky, United States. They formed in 2008, as Mosteller. They formed in 2008, as Mosteller.
Dynamix was an American video game developer from 1984 to 2001. Dynamix may also refer to: Dynamix (band), an electronica and dance music duo; Mark Dynamix, an Australian DJ; Dynamix (video game), a 2014 Hong Kong music game developed by C4Cat
Dynamix, Inc. was an American developer of video games from 1984 to 2001, best known for the flight simulator Red Baron, the puzzle game The Incredible Machine, the Front Page Sports series, Betrayal at Krondor, and the online multiplayer game Tribes.
This is a list of fictional sports teams, athletic groups that have been identified by name in works of fiction but do not really exist as such.Teams have been organized by the sport they participate in, followed by the media product they appear in. Specific television episodes are noted when available.
The group released more than these two songs, but "The Roof Is on Fire" (1984), which charted at #5 on the Billboard Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales was the main focus at the time. The A-side track "Request Line" reached #21 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks chart.