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Word: singeing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...music is kind of spacy and movie--oriented, lots of percussion and reverb. A friend who has heard to this U2 says they sound a little like U2, especially the percussive guitar parts. One problem is their tendency to tell the story of the movie. I hate hearing people sing the plot to me. "In the name of the father and his wife the spirit/You said you did not they said you did it." Come on! Reminds me of that stupid Robin Williams movie where he plays a fireman who moves to Jamaica, and the theme song, a reggae...

Author: By Jake S. Kreilkamp, | Title: In the Name of God, Bono | 2/3/1994 | See Source »

Brooks has plenty to sing about. His wife Holly, their three young children and their Brentwood home were relatively unscathed by last Monday's earthquake. His Anything ordeal is over. His new cartoon series The Critic -- created by Simpsons swamis Al Jean and Mike Reiss -- premieres on ABC this week, preceded by reviewers' raves. The show, with its post-Woody Allenish wit and deft movie parodies, looks like a winner...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Still Lucky Jim? | 1/31/1994 | See Source »

...Brooks is less likely to sing than sigh. Just ask Polly Platt, executive vice president at Brooks' Gracie Films (which also produced Say Anything and The War of the Roses). "If I'll Do Anything fails," she says, "Jim will be unhappy for a month. If it succeeds, he will be unhappy for a year." So maybe it is not the best news to hear Brooks say, "I'm beginning to feel like myself. I'm seeing that there is a self -- that I'm a person who does exist, a step away from the movie." And does he, finally...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Still Lucky Jim? | 1/31/1994 | See Source »

...Elvis. The King is not dead -- we know that from reading Weekly World News -- but soon he will live, and sing, on the CD-ROM Virtual Graceland. Due out this summer, the Crunch Media disk allows users to roam freely through Presley's haunted mansion, room by room, in 360 degrees shots. Wander into the TV room and play Elvis' hits on his personal phonograph. Noodle on Elvis' piano, strum his guitar, open drawers by clicking on them. Just don't try peeking into Elvis' medicine chest; the bathroom is not open to the public...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rock Goes Interactive | 1/17/1994 | See Source »

Revelatory and, in Rundgren's solo concerts, running amuck. Perched on a small platform beneath 24 blinking video monitors, he sings and "plays" his Apple Powerbook 170 laptop computer, a synthesizer and occasionally even a guitar. Audience members can sing along or swat drum pads and see their images recorded and played back at them, mixed, enhanced and amplified in a potentially infinite variety of ways by Rundgren. There is no set list or running order, no lighting or sound technician; Rundgren, a New Age Wizard of Oz, does...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rock Goes Interactive | 1/17/1994 | See Source »

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