Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[2] The song opens with the sound of a shotgun blast and a drum roll, with the verses alternating between Walker's vocals and tenor saxophone fills. [2] It does not employ the typical progression, but remains on one chord throughout. [7] Personnel. Junior Walker – lead vocals, tenor saxophone; Willie Woods – lead guitar, harmony vocals
Soundbombing II is the second installment in Rawkus Records' Soundbombing compilation series, released by the label on May 18, 1999. Mixed by DJ Babu and J Rocc of Beat Junkies, the album included tracks from a variety of artists, both Rawkus' signees and popular artists from other labels.
"Shotgun" is a song by American nu metal band Limp Bizkit from their fifth studio album, Gold Cobra (2011). Notable for showcasing the guitar playing of Wes Borland and production by DJ Lethal . Written by Fred Durst , Borland, DJ Lethal, John Otto and Sam Rivers , the song describes sitting at home brandishing a shotgun.
If you wanted to send 2 bits, rather than send them in 2 bytes, you'd compress them into a single byte and unpack it later. Similarly a sound-byte was the smallest (usually political) message that could be clearly spoken to the public, conveying a key message. (It has nothing whatsoever to do with storing sounds digitally in bytes, or storing a ...
"Shotgun" is a song recorded by American singer-songwriter Sheryl Crow. It was released on June 2, 2014 as the third single from her eighth studio album , Feels Like Home . The song was written by Crow, Chris DuBois , Kelley Lovelace and John Shanks .
Street Sounds Electro 2 is the second compilation album in a series released 1983 on the StreetSounds label. The album was released on LP and cassette and contains seven electro music and old school hip hop tracks mixed by Herbie Laidley .
Sound Techniques was a recording studio in Chelsea, London that was operational between 1965 and 1976. Housed in a former dairy, it was founded by recording engineers Geoff Frost and John Wood .
The audible sound of a gun discharging, also known as the muzzle report or gunfire, may have two sources: the muzzle blast itself, which manifests as a loud and brief "pop" or "bang", and any sonic boom produced by a transonic or supersonic projectile, which manifest as a sharp whip-like crack that persists a bit longer.