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The six songs on side two of the album comprise a progressive-jazz/rock suite entitled "Ennea", with lyrics based on Greek mythology. The album's title is the Greek word for nine, a reference to the nine band members. The lyrics to the suite were written by Bill Chase's longtime lady companion Erin Adair. The tune "Cronus" was originally used ...
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Alexandre Batta was born on July 9, 1816, to a Belgian musical family [1] in Maastricht. [2] His father, Pierre, was a cellist. [3] He had two younger brothers: Laurent, a pianist, and Joseph, a composer and violinist. [4] Batta initially studied the violin and his youngest brother was to study the cello.
Chase was the debut album by jazz-rock fusion band Chase.. Bill Chase was already a well-established lead trumpet player when he decided to form his own band. He recruited three other veteran trumpet players and vocalist Terry Richards, backed them with a rock rhythm section, and created a band which merged both jazz and rock styles.
No. Title Length; 1. "It's Out There And It's Gonna Get You" 0:51: 2. "We Know Where You Sleep" 4:23: 3. "The Kids Will Grow Up To Be Assholes" 5:00: 4. "Wait Until I Get My Hands On You"
The music video for "Let You Go" was directed by thirtytwo, made up of Will Lovelace and Dylan Southern, and was released on 29 July 2010. The video features a TV talk show host, a parody of Jeremy Kyle, called Patrick Chase, played by British stage actor Glenn Carter.
Glennis Grace at Cirque du Soleil in Amsterdam in 2010. Batta was born in Amsterdam to a Dutch mother and a father from Curaçao. [4]She was discovered in 1994, at the age of 15, after she won the Dutch TV talent show called Soundmixshow, where she performed the Whitney Houston song "One Moment in Time".
"Come Baby Come" is a song by American rapper K7 featuring vocals by Camille, released by Tommy Boy Records as the first single from the rapper's debut album, Swing Batta Swing (1993). The song peaked at numbers 18 and 15 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and Cash Box Top 100 in December 1993, and number three on the UK Singles Chart in January 1994.