Woody

Woody may refer to:

  • Woody (name), a given name, nickname and surname
  • Woody, California, rural town in Kern County
  • Version 3.0 of the Debian GNU/Linux distribution, codenamed woody
  • Woody Woodpecker, anthropomorphic cartoon character
  • Woody, the working title of the British television sitcom SunTrap
  • Sheriff Woody, a character from the films, Toy Story.
  • See also

  • Wood
  • Woodie (disambiguation)
  • Woodies (disambiguation)
  • Woodrow (disambiguation)
  • Woody's (disambiguation)
  • Woody Bay (disambiguation)
  • Woody Island (disambiguation)
  • Woody Point (disambiguation)
  • Wu Di (disambiguation)
  • British Sea Power

    British Sea Power are an indie rock band based in Brighton, East Sussex, England, although three of the band members originally come from Natland (near Kendal), Cumbria, England. The wide-ranging nature of their material has led critics to liken their sound to a variety of groups, from The Cure and Joy Division to the Pixies and Arcade Fire. The band are famed for their live performances, the unusual lyrical content of their songs and the adventurous choice of locations for some of their shows. British Sea Power's members are Jan Scott Wilkinson (vocals, guitar), Martin Noble (guitar), Neil Hamilton Wilkinson (bass guitar, vocals, guitar), Matthew Wood; (drums), Phil Sumner (cornet, keyboards) and Abi Fry (viola).

    History

    Early years and The Decline of British Sea Power

    British Sea Power's Yan and Hamilton are brothers and were school friends with Wood in Kendal. They were in a number of bands together while at school, but after finishing his exams Yan moved to study at the University of Reading, where he met guitarist Noble, who was originally from Bury, Greater Manchester. A few years later, Hamilton and Wood joined them and formed a band.

    Debian

    Debian (/ˈdɛbiən/) is a Unix-like computer operating system that is composed entirely of free software, most of which is under the GNU General Public License, and packaged by a group of individuals known as the Debian Project. Three main branches are offered: Stable, Testing and Unstable.

    The Debian Stable distribution is one of the most popular for personal computers and network servers, and has been used as a base for several other Linux distributions. The Debian Testing and Unstable branches are rolling release and eventually become the stable distribution after development and testing (Unstable becomes Testing, and Testing becomes Stable).

    Debian was first announced in 1993 by Ian Murdock, Debian 0.01 was released in August 1993, and the first stable release was made in 1996. The development is carried out over the Internet by a team of volunteers guided by a project leader and three foundational documents: the Debian Social Contract, the Debian Constitution, and the Debian Free Software Guidelines. New distributions are updated continually, and the next candidate is released after a time-based freeze.

    Whatever (Jill Scott song)

    "Whatever" is a song released in 2005 by American R&B/soul singer-songwriter Jill Scott, from her album Beautifully Human: Words and Sounds Vol. 2. Scott scored her biggest dance charting song on Billboard's Dance Chart.

    Track listing

    Charts

    References

    External links

  • Lyrics of this song at MetroLyrics
  • Whatever (En Vogue song)

    "Whatever" is the second single from musical group En Vogue's third studio album, EV3. It has been certified gold by the RIAA for shipments of over 500,000 units. It reached #16 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart.

    "Whatever" was produced by Babyface (he participated on other tracks as well) as this album marked the first time En Vogue departed from their usual Foster & McElroy sound. The video version was also the first to feature only three of the original En Vogue members (without the recently departed Dawn Robinson).

    Efforts to re-record the album without Robinson were all but successful as she is heard in background and lead throughout EV3. Her original lead verse on "Whatever" is fourth ("anything you do, I crave it baby...") and can be clearly heard on the remixes to this track. Cindy Herron replaced Dawn's outgoing lead in the video and studio album version.

    While EV3 was being recorded, Dawn Robinson chose to leave the group. Her voice is heard throughout the harmony and lead vocals on 95% of the album including this song.

    Whatever (Jennifer Batten album)

    Whatever is the third studio album by guitarist Jennifer Batten, released on September 10, 2007 through Wood Bell Records (Japan) and on April 18, 2008 through Lion Music (Europe). Included with the album is a DVD containing a selection of instructional footage and music videos by Batten, as well as music videos by guest videographers/editors.

    Track listing

    All songs written and composed by Jennifer Batten, except where noted. 

    Personnel

  • Jennifer Battenguitar, guitar synthesizer, programming, spoken vocals (tracks 2, 4), sound effects (track 10), production
  • Ann Marie Crouch – vocals (track 4), spoken vocals (track 4)
  • Leah Santos – vocals (track 6)
  • Herman Begay – vocals (track 8)
  • Michael Jordan – drums (track 10), percussion (track 5), sound effects (track 10)
  • Sandin Wilsonbass (track 2)
  • Andre Berry – bass (track 3)
  • Skip Vonkuske – cello
  • Nelly Kovalev – violin
  • Betsy Hamilton – Native American flute
  • Jon Clark – spoken vocals (track 1)
  • Debbie Schepps – spoken vocals (track 3)
  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Wait For War

    by: Calling All Cars

    Young and restless, loveless nation
    Comb your hair back, goodbye mother.
    Everybody waits for war, son
    Everybody waits for war.
    Everybody waits for war, son
    Everybody waits for war.
    Everybody waits for war, son
    Everybody waits for war.
    Everybody waits for war, son




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