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According to the song's credits, Pio Dumayas was on vocals, King on bass, Yuhico on keyboard, Angelo Mesina on trumpet, Jeff AAbue on tenor saxophone, Manu Dumayas on trumpet, Raffy Perez on drums, and Zoe Gonzales on electric guitar. [2] It also features strings, percussion, [4] piano chords, syncopated brass riffs, [5] and saxophone solos. [6]
"The Hardest Part" is a song by British rock band Coldplay. It was written by all four members of the band for their third album, X&Y. A piano-based ballad song, it begins with a piano melody, followed with electric guitar lines, that accompanies slow-tempo drumming. It was released on 3 April 2006 as the fourth and final single from X&Y. The ...
Loud, Fast Ramones: Their Toughest Hits is a compilation of Ramones songs. Curated by Johnny Ramone, the initial 50,000 copies of the album include the 8-song bonus disc Ramones Smash You: Live ’85. The bonus disc features previously unreleased live recordings made on February 25, 1985 at the Lyceum Theatre in London.
"The Black Page #1" is a piece by American composer Frank Zappa known for being extraordinarily difficult to play. Originally written for the drum kit and melodic percussion (as "The Black Page Drum Solo"), the piece was later rearranged in several versions, including the "easy teenage New York version" (commonly referred to as "The Black Page #2") and a so-called "new-age version", among others.
"A Bar Song" earned true star status this month, becoming one of only 45 songs in Hot 100 history to spend more than 10 weeks at number one. (Harry Styles' "As It Was," and Adele's "Easy On Me ...
The song is a playable track on Rock Band 2, as the most difficult song in the vocal section, ... Howie Wyeth: drums, piano; Luther Rix: drums, percussion, ...
Flanagan revisited "Giant Steps" on several recordings, including an album named after the song, which he dedicated to Coltrane. [8] In some of the alternate takes, Cedar Walton is at the piano, declining to take a solo and playing at a slower tempo than the takes with Flanagan. Coltrane had shown Walton "Giant Steps" a few weeks beforehand ...
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