Vivid may refer to:
Vivid is the first full-length studio album by South Korean singer Ailee. It was released on September 30, 2015 by YMC Entertainment.
On September 21, 2015, it was revealed that Ailee will release her first full album on September 30, entitled Vivid. Her title track for the album is "Mind Your Own Business". On September 22, the first music video teaser for "Mind Your Own Business" was released. On September 24, 2015, Ailee released her album Vivid 's tracklist and album jacket cover.
Ailee made her 'comeback stage' on M! Countdown on October 1, following performances on Music Bank, Show! Music Core and Inkigayo. Besides "Mind Your Own Business", she performed the tracks, "Insane" and "Why Are People Like This". She won her first trophy for this promotion in Show Champion on October 7, 2015.
Vivid is the fifth studio album by American contemporary R&B singer Vivian Green, released August 7, 2015. It is Green's first album released on Kwamé's record label Make Noise Records (which is distributed via Caroline Records); and was produced by Kwamé. As of November 2015, the album has not charted on the Billboard 200 but has reached #10 on the Billboard R&B chart.
The album's first single is "Get Right Back to My Baby", which has reached number eight on the U.S. Adult R&B chart.
The album has received positive reviews. Andy Kellman of AllMusic rated the album four out of five stars and called Green's vibe on the album "confident and comfortable". BrentMusicReviews.com called the album "a fine collection" and "a welcome R&B effort".
All lyrics written by Vivian Green and Kwamé Holland, all music composed by Kwamé Holland; except where noted.
Scene is an album by the Japanese noise musician Merzbow. A limited edition version included Early Computer Works and a poster.
All music composed by Masami Akita.
The scene subculture is a contemporary subculture which has been common in the United States, Europe, Asia, and Latin America from the late 2000s until the mid 2010s. People (most often in their teens to 20s) involved in this style are called "scene people," "scene kids," "trendies" or sometimes "scenesters" in the US, "moshers," "chavmos," or "chemos" in the UK, "coloridos" in Latin America, and "shamate" in China.
The scene subculture began in United Kingdom during the late 1990s and early 2000s when some members of the chav subculture began to experiment with alternative fashion, and took fashionable characteristics of indie pop, emo, rave music, and punk fashions. The fashion originally included typical pop punk and skater clothing like tripp pants, stripes, tartan, spiky hair, Chucks, Vans, and trucker hats derived from grunge and skate punk fashion. Older punks and skaters, however, looked down on these young trendies (as they were then called) for their inauthenticity and inability to skate.
Scene is a British television anthology drama/documentary series made by the BBC for teenagers. Featuring plays on topical issues as well as documentaries, sometimes of a controversial nature, and by leading contemporary playwrights, programs were originally broadcast to a school audience as part of the BBC Schools strand. Dramas from the series were also regularly broadcast for a wider adult audience. The series ran episodically from 1968 to 2002 and some of the dramas went on to receive critical acclaim, nominations and awards including five in 1996–97 and a Prix Jeunesse in 1998 under series producer Andy Rowley (see below).
Scene was originally conceived as a series of 30 minute dramas and documentaries suitable for showing to teenage schoolchildren as part of the English and Humanities curriculum. It was envisaged that the dramas shown would stimulate discussion in the classroom about various contemporary issues relevant to teenagers (such as race, drugs, sex, disability etc.). Critical reaction was positive with praise for the high production standards. Some of the actors featured in Scene went onto achieve varying degrees of mainstream success. e.g.: Jemima Rooper (Junk, 1999), Sarah Jane Potts, Jack Deam, Lucy Davis (Alison, 1996), Adrian Lester (Teaching Matthew, 1993), Sean Maguire (A Man of Letters, 1994), Peter Howitt (Stone Cold).