Ingenting

Ingenting may refer to:

  • "Ingenting" (single), a 2007 single CD by the band Kent
  • Ingenting (album), a 2002 bob Hund album

  • Ingenting (album)

    Ingenting is an album by bob hund released in 2002. It contains demos recorded in 199293. Originally the album was limited to 1003 copies on vinyl but was later made available as free digital downloads on the band's website.

    Track list

  • "Hippodromen" 6:14 ("The hippodrome")
  • "Kompromissen" 3:21 ("The compromise")
  • "Allt på ett kort" 2:58 ("All-in"/"All in one photo")
  • "Den ensamme sjömannens födelsedag" 4:10 ("The lonesome sailor's birthday")
  • "Ett ja som låter som ett nej" 2:16 ("A yes that sounds like a no")
  • "Jacques Costeau" 5:01
  • "Telefonsamtal till mor" 4:50 ("Phone call to mother")
  • "Vem vill bliva stor?" 5:35 ("Who wants to grow up?")
  • "Tack och godnatt" 2:23 ("Thank you and goodnight")
  • References


    Ingenting (song)

    "'Ingenting" is a song by Swedish alternative rock band Kent from their seventh studio album, Tillbaka till samtiden. It was released as the album's lead single on September 17, 2007 through RCA Records and Sony BMG.

    This is the first new release from Kent as a quartet and the band has chosen to work with a new producer; the Dane Jon "Joshua" Schumann. The result is a brand new electro based sound and this first single contains two songs with hard and up tempo beat along with dance and club rhythms. It feels like a step towards the more broad albums like Vapen & Ammunition or Hagnesta Hill compared to the previous more low key and narrow songs on Du & jag döden and The Hjärta & Smärta EP. References to Hagnesta Hill are made in the lyrics to Ingenting and you can still hear the echoes of the two previous productions on these two single tracks although it's mixed with a new sound in more direct songs. This maxi cd single also contains three remixes of the title track made by Italian DJ duo Alex Dolby and Santos, the Danish DJ duo Copyfokking and a third by Kent's bassist, Martin Sköld, under the pseudonym Shieldster. The single was released September 17 but people that bought Sony Ericsson mobile phones with a special Kent-package after September 10 could download the song already on the 16th. No promo copies was sent out before the release. The single was released in Germany on September 21 through the Sony BMG subsidiary Red Ink/RoughTrade (same pressing as the Nordic release).

    Ha

    Ha may refer to:

    Science and measurement

  • Hahnium, an element now called Dubnium
  • Hartree, an atomic unit of energy
  • Hectare (ha), a unit of area
  • Hectoampere, a unit of electric current
  • Hour angle, in astronomy, one of the coordinates of the equatorial coordinate system
  • Hyaluronan (Hyaluronic acid), a carbohydrate structure
  • Hydroxylapatite, a mineral
  • High availability, systems design and implementation with a view to maximising service
  • Medicine

  • Hyperandrogenic anovulation, also called polycystic ovary syndrome
  • Hemagglutinin (influenza) (HA), an antigenic glycoprotein from Influenza viruses
  • Hemagglutination assay, a measurement of viruses or bacteria
  • Linguistics

  • Hausa language, ISO 639-1 code HA
  • Ha language, the language of the Ha people in eastern Africa
  • Ha (kana), in syllabic Japanese script
  • Hāʼ, a letter in the Arabic alphabet
  • Ha (Javanese) (ꦲ), a letter in the Javanese script
  • Mathematics

  • ha (function prefix) (half), a prefix for some trigonometric functions in mathematics
  • Media

  • Ha (Talvin Singh album), 2002
  • Home and Away

    Home and Away is an Australian television soap opera. It was created by Alan Bateman and commenced broadcast on the Seven Network on 17 January 1988. Bateman came up with the concept of the show during a trip to Kangaroo Point, New South Wales, where he noticed locals were complaining about the construction of a foster home and against the idea of foster children from the city living in the area. The soap opera was initially going to be called Refuge, but the name was changed to the "friendlier" title of Home and Away once production began. The show premiered with a ninety-minute pilot episode. Since then, each subsequent episode has aired for a duration of twenty-two minutes and Home and Away has become the second-longest drama series in Australian television. In Australia, it is currently broadcast from Mondays to Thursdays at 7:00 pm (on Thursdays, two episodes are played in a one-hour block).

    152 H 88

    152 H 88 is the name of a series of modernized 152 mm towed heavy howitzers with 32 caliber barrels. The guns of the series share the same barrel as well as other similar qualities, but differ slightly in appearance, since they consist of three different, older (modernized) versions. The modernization was carried out by Vammas Oy from 1988 to mid-1990s. The modernization project consisted of numerous modifications to the guns, some of which had already undergone earlier smaller modifications. The most important change was the replacement of the original barrels by a Finnish-made 152 mm barrel. Also the gun carriages were subjected to various modifications. After the modernization, increased towing speeds were made possible. The breech mechanism is manually operated in all the guns. All the 152 H 88 series artillery pieces are being withdrawn from service and scrapped (as of 2007).

    Versions

    There are three different main versions of the gun:

    The two Soviet models were either taken as war booty during the Continuation War or bought from the Germans. The German 15 cm sFH 18 guns were bought during the Interim Peace and saw service during the Continuation War.

    Podcasts:

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