Confusion Bay — Studio album by Raunchy Released 2004 … Wikipedia
Noise (music) — Noise music Stylistic origins Modernism 20th century classical music Electronic art music Musique concrète Electroacoustic music Performance art Free improvisation Cultural origins Early 1910s Europe Typical instruments … Wikipedia
confusion — con|fu|sion W3S3 [kənˈfju:ʒən] n 1.) [U and C] when you do not understand what is happening or what something means because it is not clear confusion about/over/as to ▪ There was some confusion as to whether we had won or lost. create/lead to… … Dictionary of contemporary English
confusion — noun (U) 1 a state of not understanding what is happening or what something means because it is not clear (+ about/over/as to): There was some confusion as to whether we had won or lost. | create/lead to confusion: This complicated situation has… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
noise — Synonyms and related words: ALGOL, Aesopian language, Babel, Bedlam let loose, COBOL, EDP, FORTRAN, Greek, aimlessness, alphabetic data, alphanumeric code, amplitude, angular data, argot, assembler, atmospherics, auditory effect, auditory… … Moby Thesaurus
…There and Then — est un film mixant des prestations du groupe Oasis lors du (What s the Story) Morning Glory? tour. Il comporte des extraits des concerts aux stades Maine Road (Manchester) le 28 avril 1996, et à Earl s Court (Londres) les 4 et… … Wikipédia en Français
Cigarettes and Alcohol — Single par Oasis extrait de l’album Definitely Maybe Sortie 10 octobre 1994 Durée 4:49 Genre rock Parolier Noel Gallagher … Wikipédia en Français
Noise Pop — Shoegazing Stilistische Ursprünge: Psychedelic Rock, Noise Rock, Post Punk, Ethereal, Gothic Rock Kultureller Ursprung: Mitte der 1980er in Großbritannien Typische Instrumente … Deutsch Wikipedia
noise — [13] Unlikely as it may seem, the ancestor of English noise meant ‘sickness’. It comes from Latin nausea, source also, of course, of English nausea. This was used colloquially for the sort of ‘hubbub’ or ‘confusion’ which is often coincident with … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
noise — [13] Unlikely as it may seem, the ancestor of English noise meant ‘sickness’. It comes from Latin nausea, source also, of course, of English nausea. This was used colloquially for the sort of ‘hubbub’ or ‘confusion’ which is often coincident with … Word origins