Much (formerly and commonly known as MuchMusic) is a Canadian English language Category A specialty channel owned by Bell Media.
The channel first launched on August 31, 1984, under the ownership of CHUM Limited, as one of the country's first ever specialty channels. Upon its launch, and for much of its life, the network primarily aired music programming, including blocks of music videos and original series focusing on musicians and artists. However, in recent years, especially under its current owner, the channel increasingly downplayed its music programming in favor of teen dramas and comedies.
MuchMusic was licensed on April 2, 1984 by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) to CHUM/City-TV. It had faced competition from two other proposed services. One of them, CMTV Canadian Music Television, was deemed not to have sufficient financial resources. The third applicant was Rogers Radio Broadcasting. The CRTC believed that the Canadian market could only support one music video service and CHUM's proposal was chosen because of various commitments it had made and the company's expertise in music programming.
Loud is an album by Timo Maas released in 2001. Maas had previously released albums of other performers' material he remixed but Loud is his own debut album.
Allmusic's John Bush gives the album four out of five stars but other reviews were more mixed.Lunar Magazine's Sean Meddel writes that Maas "gets it mostly right" but Entertainment.ie complains that, except for "Help Me", the album contains "far more perspiration than inspiration" and that the "result is a confusing mix of electronic genres that throws up a few exciting moments but largely fails to set the pulse racing".
In the United Kingdom, the album hit #41 on the UK Albums Chart on 16 March 2002 and three singles from the album hit the UK Singles Chart that same year: "To Get Down" (#14), "Shifter" (#38), and "Help Me" (#65). In the United States, the album hit #47 on the Billboard Heatseekers Albums chart and #7 on the Top Electronic Albums chart. Two songs from the album, "To Get Down" and "Shifter", hit the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart.
"Loud" is a song by American hip hop artist Mac Miller, and the first single from his mixtape Macadelic. The Big Jerm and Sayez-produced track was released digitally on April 12, 2012, however, the music video was released on March 23, 2012.
The music video for "Loud" was released on Mac Miller's official YouTube channel TreeJTV on March 23, 2012, the same day Macadelic was released. The video was released while Mac was hosting a release party for Macadelic at Shadow Lounge in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
The video for "Loud" includes Mac Miller rapping his verse alongside several masked dancers in a dark-lit studio. At the beginning of the video, Miller sips from a glow-in-the-dark cup that says "Don't Do Drugs".
An upcoming hip-hop artist that goes under the name of "JWTM" (short for "Jack Worthy Topp Martian" or mostly nicknamed "JoeySideFire" on his YouTube channel), had actually dropped a cover to Mac Miller's "Loud" on March 13, 2013 as the lead single to his debut mixtape, Fast Kid Rapper. This is not relevant to this article, however, and is actually just a way for this no-name artist to shamelessly promote himself on the page of an artist who has already established himself in the hip-hop industry.
Free: The Future of a Radical Price is the second book written by Chris Anderson, Editor in chief of Wired magazine. The book was published on July 7, 2009 by Hyperion. He is also the author of The Long Tail, published in 2006.
Free follows a thread from the previous work. It examines the rise of pricing models which give products and services to customers for free, often as a strategy for attracting users and up-selling some of them to a premium level. That class of model has become widely referred to as "freemium" and has become very popular for a variety of digital products and services.
Free was released in the United States on July 7, 2009, though the night before, on his blog, Chris Anderson posted a browser readable version of the book and the unabridged audiobook version. Anderson generated controversy for plagiarizing content from the online encyclopedia Wikipedia in Free. Anderson responded to the claim on his The Long Tail blog, stating that there were disagreements between him and the publisher over accurate citation of Wikipedia due to the changing nature of its content, leading him to integrate footnotes into the text. Also on his blog, he took full responsibility for the mistakes and noted that the digital editions of Free were corrected. The notes and sources were later provided as a download on his blog.
Free is an album by jazz bassist Marcus Miller, released in 2007.
The album's title track is a cover of the 1977 Deniece Williams song. UK soul singer Corinne Bailey Rae provided lead vocals. "Higher Ground" is a song originally recorded by Stevie Wonder, and "What Is Hip" was originally performed by Tower of Power. "Jean Pierre" was originally performed by Miles Davis (On "We Want Miles", 1982). Blues singer Keb' Mo' performs lead vocals and co-wrote with Marcus Miller the track entitled "Milky Way".
The album's US version has not only a new title, Marcus, but the tracks have been remixed/recut. Four additional tracks have been added to the album as well.
All tracks produced by Marcus Miller and David Isaac.
"Free" is a song written by Robert Lamm for the rock band Chicago and recorded for their third album Chicago III (1971), with Terry Kath singing lead vocals. It was the first single released from this album, and peaked at #20 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100.
She walked right into my life.
What can I say?
She looks at me through brown eyes, lookin that way.
Teasing me to fall in love for free.
For free…
Free from all societies burdens
Free from hurtin
Free from worse and burn your curtains by forcing musical sermons.
Free from your prisons.
Free from racism, classism and all attentions.
Flee from all suspicion under jeeps and flying ammunition.
Free from competition.
Now he’s just on his mission and she’s just fantasizing.
There’ll be no dramatizing this eve.
The harmonizing we’ll breed.
We’ll leave it on in our seeds.
The rebel’s rising. Don’t weep.
In heavy climates just breath.
Girl you can get it for free if you can see me for me.
You’ll never change me you see.
Coz I’ve been deep in this fight.
There’s something deep in her eyes that’s got me speaking my cries.
And sometimes deep in the night, well I’ll just stay up and write.
And she’s the light by your side that’s come to mellow you down.
Suckas hate on you now but there is hate all around.
So keep your roots in the ground young soul.
So keep your leaves in the breeze old tree.
Fall in love for free.
She walked right into my life.
What can I say?
She looks at me through brown eyes lookin that way.
Teasin me to fall in love for free.
Standin tall in the midst of all of this attention.
Feelin small in the hands of all this manic depression.
Over-indulging in anything that I was given
But tossin blessins like confetti was never in my attention.
So I’m off to andi end a place of serenity when I bask in the aftermath of being me.
Forever existing in the heart of mediocrity coz look in a mirror, you’ll see a little part of me that’s
Never eluding anyone coming to stop me.
I’m one of them soldiers you often catch on the brink of a revolution that’s on the same mission as anyone changing a sense of complacency keeping people from dreamin because I…
I’ve seen it happen. Them superfluous masses who couldn’t fathom greatness adding to the horde of nameless faces.
Humanity’s wilting. Reality sink in. Emancipating them people from being indoctrinated theoretically speakin.
Tears from the sky, rollin down the street as we walk by feeding into the scheme now.
Another grand illusion. Small pockets of truth.
Children want us to listen but we’re the ones confused now.
So here’s something different just for numbing your pain coz the world is confusing if you’re trying to stay sane and you’ll be stressing.
And learning lessons you wish I never mentioned. Twenty million times you’ll stand in the face of pure humiliation.
Walkin in circles and circles and circles and circles and circles sayin over and over and over and over in your head thinking…
“I don’t know where to go. I don’t know what to do when I’m feeling this way. I don’t know where to go…”