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Tonight. (1987) RetroActive. (1995) Tonight is the sixth album by FM, a progressive rock group from Toronto, Ontario, Canada, released on Duke Street Records in 1987. It was their last studio album for 28 years. Further albums of live and demo material were issued between this period. It reached #87 on the Canadian charts, November 28, 1987 [1]
Steve Augustine. FM Static was a Canadian Christian pop punk duo based in Toronto, Ontario. The band was formed in 2003 as a side project for Thousand Foot Krutch. The band consisted of Trevor McNevan and Steve Augustine. The original lineup included John Bunner on guitar and Justin Smith on bass. [1]
Music video. "FM" on YouTube. " FM (No Static at All) " is a song by American jazz-rock band Steely Dan, the title theme for the 1978 film FM. It made the US Top 40 that year when released as a single, a success relative to the film. Musically, it is a complex jazz-rock composition driven by its bass, guitar and piano parts, typical of the band ...
Trevor McNevan – vocals, guitar, guitar recording, art direction; Steve Augustine – drums; FM Static – producer, additional engineering; Mike Noack at Swordfish Digital Audio – engineering; Zack Hodges at Electrokitty – engineering; JR McNeely – mixing; Brian Gardner at Bernie Grundman Mastering – mastering; Aaron Powell ...
Thousand Foot Krutch (often abbreviated TFK) is a Canadian Christian hard rock [ 5] band formed in Peterborough, Ontario, in 1995. [ 6][ 7] The band has released ten studio albums, two live albums, and three remix albums. The core members consist of founding member Trevor McNevan (vocals, guitar), Steve Augustine (drums), and Joel Bruyere (bass ...
Jesus Freak Hideout. [2] My Brain Says Stop, But My Heart Says Go!, is the fourth studio album by Canadian pop punk band FM Static. The album was released on April 5, 2011, through Tooth & Nail Records. The first two singles from the record are "F.M.S.T.A.T.I.C." and "Last Train Home". [citation needed]
"Boulevard of Broken Dreams" was written during a respite from pre-production on what would eventually become the band's seventh album, American Idiot.Hoping to clear his head and develop new ideas for songs, Green Day frontman Billie Joe Armstrong traveled to New York City alone for a few weeks, renting a small loft in the East Village of Manhattan. [5]
Alternative variants are easy from this tuning, but because several chords inherently omit the lowest string, it may leave some chords relatively thin or incomplete with the top string missing (the D chord, for instance, must be fretted 5-4-3-2-3 to include F#, the tone a major third above D). Baroque guitar standard tuning – a–D–g–b–e