X-Nico

unusual facts about music store



The Just Us

They also recruited a new singer, former Mynah Birds singer Jimmy Livingstone (born 28 February 1938), who Neilson had befriended in Long & McQuade’s music store where he worked in the backroom as an amplifier and guitar repairman.


see also

African Americans in Davenport, Iowa

Another white Quad Cities musician, Louie Bellson (born "Luigi Ballasoni") of nearby Moline, Illinois, the son of a music store owner, played drums for the Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey and Duke Ellington bands, and married Pearl Bailey.

Campaign for an English Parliament

In June 2010, the CEP controversially made a complaint to Fife Police about music store, HMV's "Anyone but England" promotion during the World Cup.

CD One Stop

But Meltzer was rumored to have invested heavily in a startup called CD Now, an early online music store, which later sold to Amazon becoming its music arm.

Duke Tumatoe

When not on the road he teaches guitar lessons at The Music Station music store in Avon, Indiana.

Harmony House

Although most of the stores ceased operations in 2002, a location in Berkley remained until 2004 when it was converted to an f.y.e. music store.

Jon Jerde

The project is a five story outdoor retail complex, with the main passage being diagonally oriented to the street grid and at the time anchored by Nordstrom, Macy's, and a Sam Goody music store; and connected to a Westin Hotel and the Balboa Theatre, resulting in an urban mixed-use center.

Kerrang!/XFM UK Acoustic Sessions

Kerrang!/XFM UK Acoustic Sessions is the third EP by rock quartet Coheed and Cambria and it was released exclusively for iTunes music store.

Markman

Gerry Markman, guitarist and a manager of Steve's Music Store, Toronto

Online music store

In 1998, Miami entrepreneur Ivan J. Parron, president of successful web development company Internet Marketing Consultants, Inc., founded and launched Ritmoteca.com as one of the early online music store business models.

Self Against City

Take It How You Want It finally hit music store shelves on April 5, 2005, while the band embarked on their first nationwide co-headlining tour with Houston Calls the same month.

SharpMusique

SharpMusique was a rewrite in C# of PyMusique, which was an iTunes Music Store client written in Python by Travis Watkins, Cody Brocious, and Jon Lech Johansen for the purpose of allowing downloading songs from the iTunes Music Store before DRM was applied to them from a Mac, Linux, or Windows computer.

Tennessee Slim Is the Bomb

Later released on March 28, 2006, Tennessee Slim Is the Bomb was originally supposed to be for sale via live shows and her official website, but after first day sales surpassed close to the amount of CDs printed it was made available to retailers which included Amazon.com, CD Baby, Rhapsody/Real Media Music Store, Napster, & iTunes.

The Andrew Lloyd Webber Collection

In April 2008 after Andrew Lloyd Webber appeared at the seventh season of the American program, American Idol and also by a little promotion made by the iTunes music store, the album peaked to the number-one at the store's Top 100 Vocal albums.

This Is Somewhere

The album's cover art appeared on the season four episode of "Ace of Cakes," Volcano Cakes and Mix Tapes, appearing on a cake for The Sound Garden, an indie music store.

Walking Concert

The band takes its name from the line "Boy, you're gonna be a Walking Concert!", spoken by a music store clerk to Ralph Macchio's character in the 1986 film, Crossroads.

Want Two

Four of the tracks on this album were released in the summer of 2004 as the EP Waiting for a Want on the iTunes music store.

WKBT-DT

callsign meaning = Derived from sister radio station WKBH, which was owned by a music store that sold Kimball Pianos (the store's slogan: Kimball Brings H

Wonderland Village

By the end of the decade, the company relocated some stores from a wing to add entertainment-oriented tenants such as an f.y.e. music store and an indoor amusement park called Jeepers!

Yorkville Sound

Yorkville Sound began in 1963 in the back room of Long & McQuade, a music store on Yonge Street at the edge of the Yorkville neighborhood across the termination of Yorkville Avenue.