Avant | |
---|---|
Birth name | Myron Avant |
Born | Cleveland, Ohio, U.S. |
April 26, 1978
Genres | R&B |
Occupations | Singer-songwriter |
Years active | 2000–present |
Labels | Magic Johnson Music, MCA, Geffen, Capitol (2007–10), Verve Forecast (2010-present) |
Website | https://www.avantmusic.net |
Myron Avant (born April 26, 1978 in Cleveland, Ohio), better known as Avant is an American R&B singer-songwriter. He is best known for hits such as "Separated" (the remix to which features Kelly Rowland), "My First Love," which one version features KeKe Wyatt, and "Read Your Mind" (remix featuring Snoop Dogg on the extended promo vinyl and released September 30, 2003). He was featured in the remix to the Lloyd Banks song "Karma" from the 2004 album The Hunger for More, and has had a cameo appearance in the 2004 feature film BarberShop 2: Back in Business.
His self-titled fifth album, Avant, was released on December 9, 2008. Avant is now signed to Verve Forecast and released his sixth studio album The Letter (formerly titled "Wake Up") on December 21, 2010,[1] featuring production from the likes of The Pentagon; Mike City; Marshall Leathers; and Kajun.[2] Avant cites R.Kelly as his biggest influence and inspiration.
Contents |
Year | Title | Peak chart positions | Certifications[3] | |
---|---|---|---|---|
US[4] | US R&B[4] | |||
2000 | My Thoughts
|
45 | 6 | |
2002 | Ecstasy
|
6 | 2 |
|
2003 | Private Room
|
18 | 4 |
|
2006 | Director
|
4 | 1 | |
2008 | Avant
|
26 | 6 | |
2010 | The Letter
|
114 | 19 |
Year | Chart Positions | Album | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
US Hot 100 | US R&B/Hip-Hop | |||
2000 | "Separated" | 23 | 1 | My Thoughts |
"My First Love" (featuring Keke Wyatt) | 26 | 4 | ||
2002 | "Makin' Good Love" | 27 | 7 | Ecstasy |
"Don't Say No, Just Say Yes" | 96 | 51 | ||
2003 | "Read Your Mind" (featuring Snoop Dogg) | 13 | 5 | Private Room |
2004 | "Don't Take Your Love Away" | 37 | 13 | |
"Can't Wait" | - | 55 | Shark Tale Soundtrack | |
2006 | "You Know What" (featuring Lil Wayne) | - | 58 | Director |
"4 Minutes" | 57 | 9 | ||
"Lie About Us" (featuring Nicole Scherzinger) | - | 101 | ||
2008 | "When It Hurts" | 91 | 15 | Avant |
"Break Ya Back" | - | - | ||
2010 | "Kiss Goodbye" | - | 60 | The Letter |
2011 | "Your Body is the Business" | - | 73 |
Coordinates: 37°23′32″N 122°02′50″W / 37.3921°N 122.0471°W
Synopsys, Inc., an American company, is the leading company by sales in the Electronic Design Automation industry. Synopsys' first and best-known product is Design Compiler, a logic-synthesis tool. Synopsys offers a wide range of other products used in the design of an application-specific integrated circuit. Products include logic synthesis, behavioral synthesis, place and route, static timing analysis, formal verification, HDL (SystemC, SystemVerilog/Verilog, VHDL) simulators as well as transistor-level circuit simulation. The simulators include development and debugging environments which assist in the design of the logic for chips and computer systems.
Founded in 1986 by Dr. Aart J. de Geus and a team of engineers from General Electric's Microelectronics Center in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, Synopsys was first established as "Optimal Solutions" with a charter to develop and market ground-breaking synthesis technology developed by the team at General Electric.
Because ballet became formalized in France, a significant part of ballet terminology is in the French language.
A la seconde (French pronunciation: [a la səɡɔ̃d]) A position of the leg to the side or a movement with the leg held to the side in second position, as in a pirouette à la seconde, in which a dancer turns with the working leg à la hauteur ('elevated') in second position
Also, one of the directions of the body, facing the audience (i.e. en face), arms in second position, with one leg extended to second position.
(French pronunciation: [a la katʁijɛm]) One of the directions of body, facing the audience (en face), arms in second position, with one leg extended either to fourth position in front (quatrième devant) or fourth position behind (quatrième derrière).
(French pronunciation: [a tɛʁ]) Touching the floor.
Italian, or French adage, meaning 'slowly, at ease.'