"Are You Ready" is a song by Joanne, released as the third single from her 2001 debut album, Do Not Disturb. It was released on 8 November 2001. It debuted and peaked at No. 41 on the ARIA chart, her second lowest charting single.
Track 3 on the single is featured as an extended version on the album Do Not Disturb on track 10. An alternative version is featured on the debut album on track 14 titled; Hot Hot Crazy. The front of the Are You Ready single describes Joanne as an ARIA Award Winner for her highest selling Australian single in 1999.
The music video was filmed in November 1999, at Dance World 301 in a ballet studio. Joanne's management team and crew built the set with their own hands. Their aim was to create a mysterious location to set the scene for the video.
Australian CD Single:
Are You Ready is the second album by British pop group Bucks Fizz. It was released in April 1982 and features the UK No.1 singles "The Land of Make Believe" and "My Camera Never Lies" as well as the follow-up "Now Those Days Are Gone". It was produced by Andy Hill and released on RCA records. It remains the group's most successful album.
By the end of 1981, Bucks Fizz had proved that they were not destined to be another one-off Eurovision act by cracking the UK Top 20 with their first three singles and their debut album. In November, the group released the first single from their forthcoming second album. "The Land of Make Believe" became a big hit over Christmas 1981 and in the early weeks of January made number one in the UK Charts. The record eventually outsold "Making Your Mind Up" to become their biggest selling single in the UK.
Buoyed by this success, the group concentrated on recording the second album. A second single was released in March 1982, entitled "My Camera Never Lies". Well regarded in the press for its production values and intricate vocals, the song also made number one in the UK Charts. This became the peak of the group's career, bolstered by an award for best group at the Daily Mirror Rock and Pop Awards and a nomination at the Brit Awards.
"Are You Ready?" is a song written by Charlie Allen and John Hill and performed by Pacific Gas & Electric. It reached No. 14 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 49 on the R&B chart in 1970. The song was featured on their 1970 album, Are You Ready?
The song was produced by John Hill and featured the back-up band The Blackberries.
The single was ranked No. 93 on Billboard's Year-End Hot 100 singles of 1970.
The Welcome Metro Station is located on the Red Line of the Delhi Metro.
Under Phase III, Welcome station is proposed to become an interchange with the Inner Ring Road line. The work for the same has been started.
Lick is the third album by The Lemonheads and the last to feature founding member Ben Deily. It was released in 1989 and was the group's last album before signing to major label Atlantic. A typo on the album itself erroneously states its release date as 1988. As with their first two albums, it was re-released as a CD in 1992, with two bonus tracks.
As would become something of a trademark, the Lemonheads' lineup featured some significant differences on Lick from both previous and later albums. Although the band had officially broken up after recording their second album, Creator, in 1988, they were offered a chance to play a European tour, so in early '89 the band reformed with Evan Dando on drums, Corey Loog Brennan and Ben Deily on guitars, and Jesse Peretz on bass. Deily and Dando, the Lemonheads' two singers, were still not getting along, and their personality clashes and technical difficulties in the studio meant that only five new original songs were recorded. To fill out Lick, several earlier unreleased tracks, B-sides, and covers were added to the album.
Lick was a band on Chicago's Invisible Records in the 1990s. Members have played with Pigface, The Final Cut, Project Elf, Sister Machine Gun and more.
Alex Welz, Furly aka John Quesenberry, James Conterberry aka Big Man, Brain aka Brian Chrisman, Jason McNinch, cr33py aka Kurt Komraus, Uncle G aka Gerald Dowd and: Timothy R Zuellig, Yvette Lera, Bob Jones, Martin Atkins, Mike Carnahan, Vincent Grech
KOLL (106.3 FM, "La Zeta") is a radio station licensed in Lonoke, Arkansas, broadcasting to the Little Rock, Arkansas, area. KOLL airs Regional Mexican music format. The station's studios are located in West Little Rock, and the transmitter tower is located near Pettus.
Prior to their current format, the station was named "The River" and played and All Favorites Hits English Format. Also prior to their current call letters, the station was "KLEC" which featured a modern rock format from the summer of 1998 until the fall of 2004. The station was known as "Lick 1063".
On-air personalities were chosen from the local public through a series of studio interviews, then on-air interviews in a type of sink-or-swim competition of sorts.
The station logo was chosen through an internet poll on their website. Lick 1063 moved around on the radio dial several times, starting out at 101.1 FM in a "format" of a variety of about 35 compact discs, some home-recorded from the head engineer's (Steve Gimbert's) vinyl collection, then to 96.5 FM, when the station adopted a harder sound with groups such as Type O Negative, Marilyn Manson, Rob Zombie, Korn and Pantera.
Welcome into my house, come along and follow me
To a place that you've never been, a mystic fantasy
Take a ride and go with me in a time and a space
I'll show you things that you never knew, existed in another place
Ah aaaah... I wanna know
Ah aaaah... I wanna know
Are you ready, are you ready
You ready, are you ready
Are you ready, are you ready
You ready, are you ready
Welcome to tomorrow, welcome to tomorrow
Welcome to tomorrow, welcome to tomorrow
Welcome to tomorrow, welcome to tomorrow
Welcome to tomorrow, welcome to tomorrow
Welcome into my world
Welcome into my world
Welcome into my world
Welcome into my world
My world
Welcome into my world
Welcome into my world
Hokus Pokus turn around, ain't no magic act around
Hokus Pokus turn around, ain't no magic act around
Hokus Pokus turn around, ain't no magic act around
Hokus Pokus turn around, ain't no magic act around