JJ Grey & Mofro

JJ Grey & Mofro (formerly billed just as Mofro) is a Southern rock/soul/funk/blues jam band from Jacksonville, Florida composed of JJ Grey (vocals, electric piano, acoustic guitar and electric guitar, harmonica), Andrew Trube (electric guitar and slide guitar), Anthony Farrell (Hammond organ), Anthony Cole (drums), Dennis Marion (trumpet), Jeff Dazey (tenor saxophone) and Todd Smallie (bass guitar).

History

Early career

The early days of Mofro can be traced back to the mid-nineties when John “JJ” Grey and Daryl Hance signed with a United Kingdom label and played shows in Europe as Mofro Magic. Grey and Hance met in their hometown of Jacksonville, Florida while working for an air conditioning company and developed a friendship through music. The deal with the record label in London fell through, and Grey and Hance returned to their native Jacksonville and formed Mofro, then signed with Fog City Records in 2001.

The name “Mofro” was coined by JJ Grey as an explanation of the sound that the band made. Grey says the word was originally a nickname that a co-worker gave him and Grey adopted it as the band name because it "sounded southern." Grey later changed the band name to "JJ Grey & Mofro" when his grandmother asked him if he was ashamed to use his own name.

.gal

.gal (Galician pronunciation: [ˈpunto ˈɡal]) is a sponsored top-level domain intended to highlight the Galician people, Galician language, and Galician culture. It was approved on 14 June 2013 by ICANN, and the first 93 domains went online on July 25, 2014.

The initiative was backed by more than 13,700 people and 110 institutions in Galicia, including relevant agencies of culture such as the Royal Galician Academy, the Galician Culture Council, and the three Galician universities. Asociación PuntoGal is committed to establishing a foundation to reinvest the money in projects that promote Galician language and culture in the field of new technologies.

See also

  • List of Internet top-level domains
  • Top-level domain
  • References

    External links

  • Asociación PuntoGal
  • Dominio .gal, the first domain, which became operational on May 16, 2014
  • The news on Sermos Galiza

  • Gal

    Gal, an alteration of girl, is a casual term for a woman.

    Gal may also refer to:

    People

    Surname

  • Gál, a list of people with the Hungarian surname
  • Edward Gal (born 1970), Dutch dressage rider
  • Gedalia Gal (born 1933), Israeli farmer and former politician
  • Igor Gal (born 1983), Croatian footballer
  • Jenny Gal (born 1969), Dutch-Italian judoka
  • Riki Gal, Israeli singer
  • Sandra Gal (born 1985), German LPGA golfer
  • Șandor Gal (born 1955), Romanian former ice hockey player
  • Shmuel Gal, Israeli mathematician and professor
  • Udi Gal (born 1979), Israeli Olympic sailor
  • Uziel Gal (1923-2002), German-born Israeli gun designer, designer and namesake of the Uzi submachine gun
  • Yehoshua Gal (born 1951), Israeli former footballer
  • Zehava Gal, Israeli operatic mezzo-soprano
  • Given name or nickname

  • Gal I (Bishop of Clermont) (c. 489–c. 553), Christian saint and Bishop of Clermont
  • Gal Alberman (born 1983), Israeli footballer
  • Gal Arel (born 1989), Israeli footballer
  • Gal Barel (born 1990), Israeli footballer
  • Gal Costa (born 1945), Brazilian pop singer
  • Gal (unit)

    The gal, sometimes called galileo, (symbol Gal) is a unit of acceleration used extensively in the science of gravimetry. The gal is defined as 1 centimeter per second squared (1 cm/s2). The milligal (mGal) and microgal (µGal) refer respectively to one thousandth and one millionth of a gal.

    The gal is not part of the International System of Units (known by its French-language initials "SI"). In 1978 the CIPM decided that it was permissible to use the gal "with the SI until the CIPM considers that [its] use is no longer necessary." However, use of the gal is deprecated by ISO 80000-3:2006.

    The gal is a derived unit, defined in terms of the centimeter-gram-second (CGS) base unit of length, the centimeter, and the second, which is the base unit of time in both the CGS as well as the modern SI system. In SI base units, 1 Gal is equal to 0.01 m/s2.

    The acceleration due to Earth’s gravity (see Standard gravity) at its surface is 976 to 983 Gal, the variation being due mainly to differences in latitude and elevation. Mountains and masses of lesser density within the Earth's crust typically cause variations in gravitational acceleration of tens to hundreds of milligals (mGal). The gravity gradient (variation with height) above Earth's surface is about 3.1 µGal per centimeter of height (3.1×10−6 s−2), resulting in a maximum difference of about 2 Gal (0.02 m/s2) from the top of Mount Everest to sea level.

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