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Mondo Bizarro was the Ramones' first studio album in three years, after the band left Sire Records for a new contract with Radioactive Records.The title was taken from the film of the same name, a 1966 sequel to the film Mondo Cane.
Leftöver Crack Rock the 40 oz. (7") Bankshot! Records 2000 Leftöver Crack Mediocre Generica (CD, 12") Hellcat Records 2001 The Crack Rock Steady 7 "Baby Jesus, Sliced Up in the Manger" (CD, 10") Hell Bent Records 2001 Leftöver Crack Fuck World Trade (CD, 12") Alternative Tentacles 2004 Leftöver Crack Actor "Band Member 1" in the film Loren Cass
Electra guitar played by Eddie Kirkland. Electra was a brand of electric guitars and basses manufactured in Japan and distributed in the US by two companies owned by brothers: Saint Louis Music (SLM) and Pacific Coast Music in the 1970s and early 1980s.
Free Crack 2 is the second mixtape of the Free Crack series, following Bibby's debut mixtape Free Crack. [1] The mixtape features guest appearances from Lil Herb, Kevin Gates, Wiz Khalifa, T.I., and Juicy J. The production was handled by DJ L, Black Metaphor, and Sonny Digital, among others.
Modo allows an artist to choose the "pivot point" of a tool or action in realtime simply by clicking somewhere. [9] Thus, Modo avoids making the artist invoke a separate "adjust pivot point" mode. In addition, the artist can tell Modo to derive a tool's axis orientation from the selected or clicked on element, bypassing the needs for a separate ...
Pedulla was an American manufacturer of electric bass guitars from near Boston, Massachusetts.. The catalog included different series of bass guitars: the Rapture (modern Fender bass clones, 4 and 5 strings), the Thunderbass, the Nuance and the Thunderbolt, respectively neck-through and bolt-on modern bass, and the MVP and Buzz bass, respectively fretted and fretless bass who made Pedulla ...
Sega Bass Fishing 2 received generally favorable reviews, according to the review aggregation website Metacritic. [5] Edge cited the game's emphasis on simulation over arcade elements as a downside, compared to the arcade style of the first one. [6] Conversely, GameSpot lauded the game as "a model example of what sequels should be."
In the United States, Trophy Bass was the 10th best-selling computer game of 1997, with 356,280 units sold. [6] The following year, it fell to 21st place, selling an additional 231,901 copies. Its revenue in 1998 alone was estimated at $2.42 million. [7] The first two Trophy Bass games together topped 1.5 million units in sales by July 1999. [8]