Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Los Angeles Is Burning. " Los Angeles Is Burning " is a single by the punk rock band Bad Religion from their 2004 album The Empire Strikes First. "Los Angeles Is Burning" was released to radio on April 27, 2004. [1] The song reached number 40 on the Modern Rock Tracks in July 2004. [2]
Into the Unknown. (1983) How Could Hell Be Any Worse? is the debut studio album by American punk rock band Bad Religion, released on January 19, 1982 by Epitaph Records. [3] [4] Released almost a year after their self-titled EP, it was financed from the sales of the self titled EP and partly by a $1,000 loan by guitarist Brett Gurewitz 's father.
S. "Safe in LA" by Gold Motel. "Saint Joseph High School Dance" by York Brothers. "Saints of Los Angeles" by Mötley Crüe. "Salute" by Slaughterhouse. "Samba De Los Angeles" by Gilberto Gil. "Samba L.A." by Chick Corea. "San Fernando" by Mary McCaslin.
The video for "Where the Streets Have No Name" was directed by Meiert Avis and produced by Michael Hamlyn and Ben Dossett. The band attracted over 1,000 people during the video's filming, which took place on the rooftop of a liquor store in Downtown Los Angeles on 27 March 1987. [27] The band's performance on a rooftop in a public place was a ...
Los Angeles Is Burning" was released to radio on April 27, 2004. They toured Europe in May 2004, where they debuted several new songs from the album. The Empire Strikes First was released on June 8, 2004. The following day, the music video for "Los Angeles Is Burning" was posted on the label's website.
A burning body found Tuesday afternoon hanging from a tree in Griffith Park in Los Angeles is an apparent suicide, according to police. A witness spotted the blaze and the remains near the merry ...
Los Angeles. (X album) Los Angeles is the debut studio album by American rock band X, released on April 26, 1980, [1] by Slash Records. It was produced by ex- Doors keyboardist Ray Manzarek and includes a cover of the 1967 Doors song "Soul Kitchen". Los Angeles placed at No. 16 in The Village Voice ' s 1980 Pazz & Jop critics' poll. [2]
California’s largest wildfire of the year has burned an area larger than the size of the entire city of Los Angeles, destroyed dozens of buildings and forced thousands of residents to flee their ...