- published: 29 Oct 2010
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Fantasy was a British pulp science fiction magazine which published three issues in 1938 and 1939. The editor was T. Stanhope Sprigg; when the war started, he enlisted in the RAF and the magazine was closed down. The publisher, George Newnes Ltd, paid respectable rates, and as a result Sprigg was able to obtain some good quality material, including stories by John Wyndham, Eric Frank Russell, and John Russell Fearn.
The first U.S. science fiction (sf) magazine, Amazing Stories, was imported into the U.K. from its launch in 1926, and other magazines from the U.S. market were also available in the U.K. from an early date. However, no British sf magazine was launched until 1934, when Pearson's launched Scoops, a weekly in tabloid format aimed at the juvenile market. Soon Haydn Dimmock, Scoops' editor, began to receive more sophisticated stories, targeted at an adult audience; he tried to change the magazine's focus to include more mature fiction but within twenty issues falling sales led Pearson's to kill the magazine. The failure of Scoops gave British publishers the impression that Britain could not support a science fiction publication.
"Fantasy" is the debut single by Canadian rock musician Aldo Nova and is his most popular work to date. Released on his eponymous debut album in 1981, the song climbed to #3 on the Mainstream rock chart, and #23 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. The song was featured in a flashback sequence in the final episode of the popular television series Rob & Big. A cover version of the song, performed by Steel Panther, is the current theme song for the MTV show Rob Dyrdek's Fantasy Factory.
VH1 listed it at #78 on its countdown for the 100 Greatest One Hit Wonders of the 80s.
The video shows Aldo performing with his band at a concert. It is best remembered for its intro, which starts out with a man holding an electric guitar and two bodyguards holding machine guns, waiting for someone. Then comes a helicopter, landing from the sky, and Aldo comes out in a very contoured leopard-print suit, being escorted to the stage. When they encounter a locked door, which the bodyguards can't open, Aldo grabs his guitar and fires a laser into the door and it opens.
Fantasy is an urban pop vocal group based in New York who scored several hits on the Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart, including "You're Too Late", which hit number one in 1981.
Group members include Ken Roberson, Fonda Rae, Tami Hunt, Rufus Jackson and Carolyn Edwards. The groups' producer, Tony Valor, continued to use the name in 1985 when they released an Italo disco-influenced single called "He's My Number One."
"You're Too Late" was a number-one dance hit in the United States. It had a five week reign at the top of the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart in early 1981. It also reached the top 30 on the Soul Singles chart.
In 1982, the band released a pop-soul number entitled "Hold On Tight", which peaked at number 35 on the Dance Club chart, followed by "Live the Life I Love", boogie song that had reached #41 position on the same chart by 1983.
Their last successful track titled "He's Number One" reached #37 on the Dance chart in 1986.
A gnome (Greek: γνώμη gnome, from γιγνώσκειν gignoskein "to know") is a type of saying, especially an aphorism or a maxim designed to provide instruction in a compact form (usually in the form of hexameter).
The term gnome was introduced by Klaus Berger in the Formgeschichte des Neuen Testaments. He used this traditional term from the antique rhetoric and attempted to identify this rhetorical method in the New Testament.
"Only a giant is able to create a felicitous gnome,
that could be well comprehensible for even an asinine gnome."
(Volodymyr Knyr)
Ming or Song is a category of typefaces used to display Chinese characters, which are used in the Chinese, Japanese, and Korean languages. They are currently the most common style of type in print for Chinese and Japanese.
The names Song (or Sung) and Ming correspond to the Song Dynasty when a distinctive printed style of regular script was developed, and the Ming Dynasty during which that style developed into the Ming typeface style. In Mainland China, the most common name is Song (the Mainland Chinese standardized Ming typeface in Microsoft Windows being named SimSun). In Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan and Korea, Ming is prevalent. In Hong Kong and Taiwan, “Song typeface” (宋體) has been used but “Ming typeface” (明體) has increased currency since the advent of desktop publishing. Some type foundries use "Song" to refer to this style of typeface that follows a standard such as the Standard Form of National Characters, and “Ming” to refer to typefaces that resemble forms found in the Kangxi dictionary.
A song is a musical composition for voice or voices.
Song or songs or The Song may also refer to:
Song is the third and final album of Lullaby for the Working Class. It was released October 19, 1999 on Bar/None Records.
Fantasy - Paint A Picture (1973) Progressive Rock
Buy my music here : iTunes : https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/lost-pathways/id1112372271 Bandcamp : https://dbfiechter.bandcamp.com/album/lost-pathways Amazon mp3 : https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01FFHYK44 Listen to my music on Spotify: Spotify : https://play.spotify.com/artist/2XDOBQOobSTxtmFhWKdm6x *** Fantasy music about dark gnomes who live deep underground in the mines. This music I composed is called Gnomes of the Lost Mines. I hope you enjoy it! *** Song: Gnomes of the Lost Mines Album: Lost Pathways Year: 2016 Music Copyright © Brandon Fiechter *** Great picture was taken by Kecko. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dark_Place_%286443718075%29.jpg Great thumbnail is taken from this site: http://www.deviantart.com/art/Underground-mines-259323699
Classic/Prog (2:40 - 4:14)
A new look to a song I wrote some years ago, with extra vocals by Evie and Grace. Download song: https://music.apple.com/us/album/a-storybook-of-childrens-songs/947776445 Yes, the original 'The Gnome Song'. Evie and Grace raid the studio to help out with a brand new version of the Miles Wootten song with lots of new words, a new tune, and the same old Singing Gnome. I'm standing by the pond in my little Noddy suit Sparrows on my fishing rod and frog spawn in my boot It's pouring down with rain, I'm here all on my own It's not much fun being a gnome. Long ago I used to be a king upon a throne But I met a wicked fairy and she turned me into stone And that is why you will find me in the garden all alone It's not much fun being a gnome. My ears are full of cobwebs and my doublet doesn't fit...
Fantasy (15) - Paint A Picture - 1973 Polydor - 843 263-1, Second Battle - 843 263-1 -1990 - my own vinyl rip
Provided to YouTube by CDBaby Gnome Song · Shealee Head to the Stone ℗ 2019 Shealee Cousino Released on: 2019-05-17 Auto-generated by YouTube.
Buy my music here : iTunes : https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/ancient-legends/id724869964 Bandcamp : http://brandonfiechter.bandcamp.com/album/ancient-legends Amazon mp3 : http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00FRYC2LY Listen to my music on Spotify: Spotify : https://play.spotify.com/artist/2XDOBQOobSTxtmFhWKdm6x *** Cheerful happy music about a gnome cottage that leads underground where the gnomes are hard at work in the mines, busy crafting tools, or sitting back and relaxing. This music I composed is called Gnome Cottage. *** Song: Gnome Cottage Album: Ancient Legends Year: 2013 Music Copyright © Brandon Fiechter *** Amazing artwork is done by © Jon Hodgson! http://jonhodgson.deviantart.com/ © 2008 Eden/Hachette, from "Beasts and Beings"
This is the new version of the original gnome song with special guests Eirin and Annie Download song: https://music.apple.com/us/album/a-storybook-of-childrens-songs/947776445 It's Not Much Fun Being A Gnome is based on 'The Gnome' by one England's great songwriters, Miles Wootton.
Fantasy was a British pulp science fiction magazine which published three issues in 1938 and 1939. The editor was T. Stanhope Sprigg; when the war started, he enlisted in the RAF and the magazine was closed down. The publisher, George Newnes Ltd, paid respectable rates, and as a result Sprigg was able to obtain some good quality material, including stories by John Wyndham, Eric Frank Russell, and John Russell Fearn.
The first U.S. science fiction (sf) magazine, Amazing Stories, was imported into the U.K. from its launch in 1926, and other magazines from the U.S. market were also available in the U.K. from an early date. However, no British sf magazine was launched until 1934, when Pearson's launched Scoops, a weekly in tabloid format aimed at the juvenile market. Soon Haydn Dimmock, Scoops' editor, began to receive more sophisticated stories, targeted at an adult audience; he tried to change the magazine's focus to include more mature fiction but within twenty issues falling sales led Pearson's to kill the magazine. The failure of Scoops gave British publishers the impression that Britain could not support a science fiction publication.