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"If You're Lookin' for a Way Out" is a 1980 song by group Odyssey from their album Hang Together. It was the second consecutive UK top 10 single in a row for the band, both gaining a silver certification in the UK. It featured Lillian Lopez on lead vocals and spent a total of fifteen weeks on the chart.
"Use It Up and Wear It Out" is a song by US-based dance and soul group Odyssey that was released as a single in 1980. It was originally released as the B-side of "Don't Tell Me, Tell Her". It was originally released as the B-side of "Don't Tell Me, Tell Her".
A strange loop is a hierarchy of levels, each of which is linked to at least one other by some type of relationship. A strange loop hierarchy is "tangled" (Hofstadter refers to this as a "heterarchy"), in that there is no well defined highest or lowest level; moving through the levels, one eventually returns to the starting point, i.e., the original level.
The first dedicated loop device was the Paradis LOOP Delay. [6] The Paradis and other models had volatile memories, forcing composers to develop fresh loops live in front of their audiences — and thus, live looping came into existence. Roland and DigiTech loop pedals entered the market in 2001, around the same time DJ mixing gained popularity ...
“The Odyssey” has been brought to the big screen a few times before, first with a 1911 silent film by Giuseppe de Liguoro, and later with 1954’s “Ulysses” starring Kirk Douglas.
An engineer, whose invention causes time to loop during a home invasion, attempts to save his former lover while learning who has targeted him and why. [45] Doctor Strange: 2016: Aided by the powers of The Eye of Agamotto, Stephen Strange traps himself and Dormammu in a time loop in order to bargain against him consuming the Earth. [46] Erased ...
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Andrew Stanton, the director of WALL-E (2008), revealed in an interview with Wired magazine that his film was in many ways his homage to Space Odyssey, Alien, Blade Runner, Close Encounters and several other science-fiction films. [43] The reviewer for USA Today described the resemblance of the spaceship's computer, Auto, to HAL. [44]