Sidewinder

Sidewinder may refer to:

  • Crotalus cerastes, a venomous pit-viper species found in the southwestern United States
  • Bitis peringueyi, a venomous adder species found in Namibia and southern Angola
  • Aircraft

  • Smyth Sidewinder, a two seat experimental aircraft developed in 1969
  • Bell Sidewinder, a clone of the Phantom X1 aircraft
  • Automobiles

  • Dodge Sidewinder, a 1997 concept car
  • Kia Sidewinder, a 2006 concept car
  • Computing

  • Microsoft SideWinder, a family of digital game controllers
  • Secure Computing's Sidewinder firewall, which has since been re-branded McAfee Firewall Enterprise, after its acquisition by McAfee
  • Fiction

  • Sidewinder (comics), a fictional supervillain in comic books published by Marvel Comics
  • Code name for Budd (Kill Bill), a character in the Kill Bill films
  • Sidewinder, a Thunderbirds machine in the British TV series
  • Sidewinder, a racing team in Initial D
  • Military

  • AIM-9 Sidewinder, a heat-seeking, short-range, air-to-air missile
  • Music

  • Sidewinder (band), an Australian band
  • Sidewinder (band)

    Sidewinder was an Australian rock band founded in 1991 in Canberra by brothers Martin and Nick Craft with Pip Branson and Shane Melder. Sidewinder were staples of the Australian alternative rock scene in the 1990s. They played their first live shows in 1991 and in 1992 signed to Half A Cow, the record label owned by ex-Canberran musician Nic Dalton (Lemonheads, Plunderers), which was later purchased by the multinational label Universal Music.

    Sidewinder played their first live shows in 1991, when most of the members were still in high school. Within a year they had signed to Half A Cow, which was later taken over by the multinational label Universal Music.

    Sidewinder released two albums and three EPS between 1992 and 1998, all of which were critically acclaimed and received solid Triple J and commercial airplay. These albums ‘traversed a broad sonic terrain, from Beatlesesque psychedelia to eardrum shattering ballsy rock’. Their second album, Tangerine (1997) made many top ten lists for the best album of the year, and is sometimes considered to be one of the finest Australian rock records of the 1990s.

    City of Evil

    City of Evil is the third studio album by Avenged Sevenfold released on June 6, 2005 by Warner Bros. Records. Co-produced by Andrew Murdock, City of Evil contains a more traditional heavy metal and hard rock sound than Avenged Sevenfold's previous two albums, which showcased a predominantly metalcore sound. The album is also notable for the absence of screaming vocals. M. Shadows worked for months before the album's release with vocal coach Ron Anderson, whose clients have included Axl Rose and Chris Cornell, to achieve a sound that had "grit while still having the tone". In order to increase stamina and strength on the pedals, The Rev would sit for hours practicing until he could get up to 210 beats per minute. The album was ranked No. 63 on Guitar World magazine's "100 Greatest Guitar Albums of All Time". City of Evil also appears in Kerrang's "666 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die" and "50 Albums You Need To Hear Before You Die" The album was ranked No. 35 in Kerrang's list of "50 Greatest Metal Albums Ever" in 2016.

    Direct

    Direct may refer to:

  • Direct current, a direct flow of electricity
  • Direct examination, the in-trial questioning of a witness by the party who has called him or her to testify
  • Direct sum of modules, a construction in abstract algebra which combines several vector spaces
  • Direct (Vangelis album), 1988 album by Vangelis
  • Direct (EP), a 2002 EP by The 77s
  • Direct (Tower of Power album), 1981
  • DirectX, a proprietary dynamic media platform
  • Mars Direct, a proposal for a manned mission to Mars
  • DIRECT, a proposed space shuttle-derived launch vehicle
  • Computing

  • Direct access (disambiguation), a method of accessing data in a database
  • Direct connect (disambiguation), various methods of telecommunications and computer networking
  • Direct memory access, access to memory by hardware subsystems independently of the CPU
  • Mathematics

  • Directed set, in order theory
  • Direct limit of (pre), sheaves
  • See also

  • Direction (disambiguation)
  • Director (disambiguation)
  • Indirect (disambiguation)
  • All pages beginning with "Direct"
  • Direct (Tower of Power album)

    Direct is a 1981 live in-studio album by Tower of Power. It was their only album for the direct-to-disc record label Sheffield Lab. It also marked the return of original guitarist Willie James Fulton, not heard from since 1972's Bump City, and the last album to feature saxophonist Lenny Pickett. Mark Sanders plays drums on this album. Between this album and their 1987 comeback album Power they would record the sessions that later became the Dinosaur Tracks CD. Besides that, save for the original single release of "Simple As That" (from the same Dinosaur Tracks sessions), this would be their last new release until 1987. It contained mostly songs from their previous albums but included new stuff as well.

    Direct would later be released with alternate takes on CD as Direct PLUS in 1997.

    Track listing

    Side One

  • "Fanfare/And You Know It" (Greg Adams/Emilio Castillo, Stephen Kupka) originally recorded for Back on the Streets
  • "You're Gonna Need Me" (Albert King) New track
  • Direct (EP)

    Direct is the title of The 77s' second EP, released in 2002 on the band's own Fools of the World label.

    Track listing

  • "Born On Separate Days"
  • "Perfect"
  • "Roesbud"
  • "Dig My Heels"
  • "Lifeline"
  • "Take Your Mind Off It"
  • The band

  • Mike Roe - guitars and lead vocals.
  • Mark Harmon - bass guitars and background vocals.
  • Bruce Spencer - Drums, keyboards, percussion and vocals.
  • Production notes

  • Art & Design - Brian Heydn.
  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Latest News for: sidewinder direct

    Edit

    Captain America 4’s Giancarlo Esposito Talks Reshoots, Being Cast as a Different Villain

    Coming Soon 18 Mar 2025
    Directed by Julius Onah, the MCU film sees Esposito play Seth Voelker/Sidewinder; although, he was initially approached to play a different character in the film.
    • 1
    ×