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Record 1 - 10 of 1188 [Total 119 Pages]
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S Club 7 The British teen-pop band S Club 7 was created in 1999 by pop impresario Simon Fuller, who chose the group's seven members -- Rachel Stevens, Hannah Spearritt, Bradley McIntosh, Paul Cattermole, Jon Lee, Jo O'Meara and Tina Barrett -- from nearly 10,000 hopefuls. S Club 7 then recorded their debut album S Club and began work on a BBC series, Miami 7, which featured the band as an aspiring group living in Florida; it became the top-rated kids' program in the U.K. around the time their debut si... |
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S'Express Performing under the name S'Express, young British DJ Mark Moore scored a number one hit in his homeland in 1988 with "Theme From S'Express," a record that helped pave the way for the subsequent hegemony of the sampladelic acid house sound on the pop charts. Moore released an album, Original Soundtrack, in 1989, strongly influenced by 1970s disco. He followed one year later with Intercourse. |
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S*M*A*S*H When S*M*A*S*H summoned the spit and snarl of classic British punk in the early '90s, the U.K press labeled them as part of "the New Wave of the New Wave," a nonexistent movement that the British weeklies used to describe young acts resurrecting the sounds of the late-'70s and early-'80s underground scene in England. S*M*A*S*H was formed by Ed Borrie (vocals, guitar), Salvador Alessi (bass), and Rob Haigh (drums) in Welwyn Garden City in Hertfordshire, England. British conservatives blasted t... |
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Saafir From the Bay Area, Saafir first appeared on Casual's Fear Itself, Digital Underground's The Body-Hat Syndrome, and the Menace II Society soundtrack. With a deal from Qwest Records, the rapper recruited the Hobo Junction production team (J Groove, J.Z., Rational, Big Nose, and Poke Marshall) for his freestyle debut, Boxcar Sessions (1994). He appeared in the film Menace II Society and recorded an album (Trigonometry) under the alias Mr. No No before returning as Saafir in 1999 for The Hit List. |
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Sabicas Sabicas (born: Agustin Castellon Campos) was respectfully known as "the king of Flamenco." Credited as the first guitarist to take flamenco out of Spain, Sabicas toured the world, amazing audiences with his technical abilities, lightning-fast speed and "perfect" tone. |
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Sabine Meyer |
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Sabrosos Del Merengue Sabrosos del Merengue is a popular merengue group who released their first recordings in the late '80s. It wasn't until the '90s, however, that the group's popularity soared as a result of constant touring and a series of records for Musical Productions including 1998's Mejor del Merengue and the following year's Rompiendo el Milenio. |
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Sabu Martinez Louis "Sabu" Martinez was one of the most prolific conga players in the history of Afro-Cuban music. In addition to his own albums, Martinez recorded with such influential jazz musicians as Dizzy Gillespie, Horace Silver, Buddy DeFranco, J.J. Johnson, Louis Bellson, Art Farmer, and Art Blakey, and jazz vocalists including Tony Bennett and Sammy Davis, Jr. Emigrating to Sweden in 1967, he continued to apply his highly melodic rhythms to a lengthy list of recordings by top-notch Swedish perform... |
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Saccharine Trust Although Greg Ginn's record label SST was, early on, associated with the angry, overamped guitar rant of SoCal hardcore (some of which came courtesy of Ginn's own band Black Flag), SST was also recording bands that pushed the limits of hardcore. Bands like the Minutemen, Universal Congress Of, and especially Saccharine Trust gleefully tossed in chunks of '70s progressive rock, avant-garde jazz, and funky kicks and pops into a stew already percolating with heavy(ish) metal riffing, shouted voc... |
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Sachiko M |
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