From 79dc59f9307f1031c4c6be66bd721cff428c010b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: EafAtta Date: Wed, 27 Nov 2024 21:06:00 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] add tbrb+rb4dlc+gdrb loading phrases --- _ark/dx/config/dx_tips.dta | 378 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++- _ark/ui/eng/locale_updates.dta | 137 ++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 513 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/_ark/dx/config/dx_tips.dta b/_ark/dx/config/dx_tips.dta index 07e4ea2e..5f0c8037 100644 --- a/_ark/dx/config/dx_tips.dta +++ b/_ark/dx/config/dx_tips.dta @@ -983,7 +983,85 @@ (loading_trivia1106 TRIVIA_WEIGHT (song crazy)) - +;bombsaway +(loading_trivia1107 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song bombsaway)) +(loading_trivia1108 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song bombsaway)) +;illbethereforyou2 +(loading_trivia1109 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song illbethereforyou2)) +;stranglehold +(loading_trivia1110 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song strangehold)) +;thankyou +(loading_trivia1111 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song thankyou)) +;ainttalkinboutlove +(loading_trivia1112 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song ainttalkinboutlove)) +;andthecradlewillrock +(loading_trivia1113 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song andthecradlewillrock)) +;believe +(loading_trivia1114 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song believe)) +;bringthenoize +(loading_trivia1115 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song bringthenoize)) +(loading_trivia1116 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song bringthenoize)) +;burninforyou +(loading_trivia1117 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song burninforyou)) +;aerosmith +(loading_trivia1018 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "Aerosmith")) +(loading_trivia1119 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song dancingwithmyself)) +;hotforteacher +(loading_trivia1020 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song hotforteacher) + (diff expert) + (instrument guitar)) +;ifonlyyoucouldsee +(loading_trivia1121 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song ifonlyyoucouldsee)) +;lustforlife +(loading_trivia1122 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song lustforlife)) +;onebigholiday +(loading_trivia1123 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song onebigholiday)) +;playthatfunkymusic +(loading_trivia1124 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song playthatfunkymusic)) +;unchained +(loading_trivia1125 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song unchained)) +(loading_trivia1126 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song unchained)) + ;;ACDC Track Pack (loading_trivia1200 TRIVIA_WEIGHT @@ -1505,4 +1583,300 @@ (song whatislove)) (loading_trivia1365 TRIVIA_WEIGHT - (song sandstorm)) \ No newline at end of file + (song sandstorm)) + +;;The Beatles Rock Band +(loading_trivia1600 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song aharddaysnight)) +(loading_trivia1601 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1602 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song andyourbirdcansing)) +(loading_trivia1603 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1604 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song backintheussr)) +(loading_trivia1605 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1606 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1607 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song birthday)) +(loading_trivia1608 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song boys)) +(loading_trivia1609 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1610 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song cantbuymelove)) +(loading_trivia1611 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1612 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1613 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song cometogether)) +(loading_trivia1614 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1615 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song daytripper)) +(loading_trivia1616 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1617 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song dearprudence)) +(loading_trivia1618 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song + digapony + ivegotafeeling)) +(loading_trivia1619 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song digapony)) +(loading_trivia1620 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song dontletmedown)) +(loading_trivia1621 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song dontletmedown)) +(loading_trivia1622 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song doyouwanttoknowasecret)) +(loading_trivia1623 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1624 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song drivemycar)) +(loading_trivia1625 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1626 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song eightdaysaweek)) +(loading_trivia1627 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song eightdaysaweek)) +(loading_trivia1628 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song getback)) +(loading_trivia1629 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song getback)) +(loading_trivia1630 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song gettingbetter)) +(loading_trivia1631 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1632 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song goodmorning)) +(loading_trivia1633 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song goodmorning)) +(loading_trivia1634 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song hellogoodbye)) +(loading_trivia1635 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1636 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song helterskelter)) +(loading_trivia1637 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song helterskelter)) +(loading_trivia1638 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song herecomesthesun)) +(loading_trivia1639 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1640 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1641 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song heybulldog)) +(loading_trivia1642 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song iamthewalrus)) +(loading_trivia1643 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1644 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song ifeelfine)) +(loading_trivia1645 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song ifeelfine)) +(loading_trivia1646 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song ifineededsomeone)) +(loading_trivia1647 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1648 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song imemine)) +(loading_trivia1649 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song imemine)) +(loading_trivia1650 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song imlookingthroughyou)) +(loading_trivia1651 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1652 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song isawherstandingthere)) +(loading_trivia1653 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1654 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1655 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1656 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song iwanttoholdyourhand)) +(loading_trivia1657 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song iwanttoholdyourhand)) +(loading_trivia1658 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1659 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song iwantyoushessoheavy)) +(loading_trivia1660 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song lucyinthesky)) +(loading_trivia1661 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1662 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song octopusgarden)) +(loading_trivia1663 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song octopusgarden)) +(loading_trivia1664 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song paperbackwriter)) +(loading_trivia1665 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song paperbackwriter)) +(loading_trivia1666 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song revolution)) +(loading_trivia1667 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song revolution)) +(loading_trivia1668 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song sgtpepperlittlehelp)) +(loading_trivia1669 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1670 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist sgtpepperlittlehelp)) +(loading_trivia1671 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (artist "The Beatles")) +(loading_trivia1672 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song something)) +(loading_trivia1673 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song something)) +(loading_trivia1674 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song taxman)) +(loading_trivia1675 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song taxman)) +(loading_trivia1676 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song theend)) +(loading_trivia1677 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song theend)) +(loading_trivia1678 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song tickettoride)) +(loading_trivia1679 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song tickettoride)) +(loading_trivia1680 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song tomorrowwithin)) +(loading_trivia1681 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song tomorrowwithin)) +(loading_trivia1682 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song twistandshout)) +(loading_trivia1683 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song twistandshout)) +(loading_trivia1684 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song whilemyguitargentlyweeps)) +(loading_trivia1685 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song whilemyguitargentlyweeps)) +(loading_trivia1686 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song yellowsubmarine)) +(loading_trivia1687 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song yellowsubmarine)) + +(loading_trivia1720 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song americanidiot)) +(loading_trivia1721 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song basketcase)) +(loading_trivia1722 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song boulevardof)) +(loading_trivia1723 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song chump)) +(loading_trivia1724 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song holiday)) +(loading_trivia1725 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song longview)) +(loading_trivia1726 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song songofthecentury)) +(loading_trivia1727 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song welcometoparadise)) +(loading_trivia1725 + TRIVIA_WEIGHT + (song whenicomearoundloading_trivia1113)) \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/_ark/ui/eng/locale_updates.dta b/_ark/ui/eng/locale_updates.dta index 1fd67cfc..33726a1f 100644 --- a/_ark/ui/eng/locale_updates.dta +++ b/_ark/ui/eng/locale_updates.dta @@ -2112,6 +2112,42 @@ ;;crazy (loading_trivia1105 "\qCrazy\q is about a guy whose girlfriend packs up her stuff and leaves, and just how much he misses her.") (loading_trivia1106 "Tyler's impressive 6 octave high 'whistle' note near the end of this song is said to be heavily inspired by the ending of \qSince I Don't Have You\q by The Skyliners.") +;bombsaway +(loading_trivia1107 "The song that doesn't exist by the band that doesn't exist.") +(loading_trivia1108 "BOMBS AWAY GO ALL THE BOYS!") +;illbethereforyou2 +(loading_trivia1109 "\qI'll Be There for You\q is the theme song to the iconic NBC sitcom Friends, which aired from 1994-2004. Originally, R.E.M. was asked to allow their song \qShiny Happy People\q to be used, but the band declined. So the original theme song by the Rembrandts we all know and love was written and recorded in its place.")) +;stranglehold +(loading_trivia1110 "Nugent didn't sing lead on this. Derek St. Holmes, who was the vocalist with his band, did. Nugent resented the attention Holmes received on stage and eventually sang all the hits himself. His explanation: \qThere's only one alpha wolf, and that's me\q.") +;thankyou +(loading_trivia1111 "\qThank You\q was famously sampled by Eminem for his song \qStan\q, which was adopted by the Internet as a term for an obsessive fan.") +;ainttalkinboutlove +(loading_trivia1112 "\qAin't Talkin' 'Bout Love\q starts with an arpeggiated chord progression in the key of A minor. Eddie actually played a wrong note during the intro but decided to keep it for the record.") +;ainttalkinboutlove +(loading_trivia1113 "\qAnd the Cradle Will Rock...\q begins with what sounds like guitar chords, but is actually a Wurlitzer electric piano hooked up to a MXR flanger then played through Eddie's Marshall amp.") +;believe +(loading_trivia1114 "The Bravery frontman Sam Endicott and keyboard player John Conway used to play in a ska band called Skabba the Hut in college.") +;bringthanoize +(loading_trivia1115 "\qBring tha Noize\q includes a shoutout to Nation of Islam Supreme Minister Louis Farrakhan, who is himself a musician, playing the classical violin.") +(loading_trivia1116 "Though the Anthrax version is probably the most remembered version of the song (especially to Tony Hawk fans), it's not the only time Public Enemy collaborated with a metal icon to record a version of this song, as they would record a version with Zakk Wylde called \qBring the Noise 20XX\q for Guitar Hero 5 and DJ Hero.") +;burninforyou +(loading_trivia1117 "This song was Blue Oyster Cult's first major radio hit since 1976's \q(Don't Fear) The Reaper\q.") +;aerosmith +(loading_trivia1118 "Steven Tyler once said, \qI must have snorted all of Peru.\q Perry and Tyler were known as \qThe Toxic Twins\q because of their drug habits in the '70s.") +;dancingwithmyself +(loading_trivia1119 "\qDancing with Myself\q was originally released by Billy Idol's band Generation X. The version in GH5 is the more radio-friendly solo effort, but this version is the original.") +;hotforteacher +(loading_trivia1120 "Warning...do not attempt this guitar part without adult supervision!") +;ifonlyyoucouldsee +(loading_trivia1121 "Tonic released a self-produced album called \qLive and Enhanced\q that has both a live version and an acoustic version of \qIf You Could Only See\q.") +;lustforlife +(loading_trivia1122 "A version of \qLust for Life\q with altered lyrics was performed by Bruce Willis on the soundtrack for \qRugrats Go Wild\q, in which Iggy himself voices a newborn baby.") +;onebigholiday +(loading_trivia1123 "The video for \qOne Big Holiday\q is done in the style of wayang kulit, Indonesian shadow puppetry. My Morning Jacket is also known to incorporate puppetry into their stage shows.") +;playthatfunkymusic +(loading_trivia1124 "This song was a huge cross-cultural hit for Wild Cherry, with versions recorded by Average White Band, Vanilla Ice, and The Chipmunks.") +(loading_trivia1125 "\qUnchained\q is notable for being long-time Van Halen producer Ted Templeman's only vocal contribution when he says \qCome on, Dave, gimme a break!\q during the interlude.") +(loading_trivia1126 "A cover of this song is hidden in the files of Guitar Hero 3.") ;;ACDC Track Pack Trivia (loading_trivia1200 "There are streets named for AC/DC in both Melbourne, Australia and Legan?s, Spain.") @@ -2286,6 +2322,107 @@ (loading_trivia1363 "\qToxic\q was the most-searched song on Google in 2004, with Spears being the most-searched artist that year.") (loading_trivia1364 "This song became popular after being featured in a recurring Saturday Night Live sketch that showcased three guys going clubbing, where the men bobbed their heads in sync.") (loading_trivia1365 "This was one of the first songs to gain popularity via the internet. It was initially promoted by posting a 60-second clip of the track online, followed by airplay in discos and clubs, before finally being released to an eager audience.") + +;The Beatles: Rock Band +(loading_trivia1600 "Following a particularly grueling 24 hours, Ringo looked up and declared \qIt's been a hard day's night.\q The band loved the phrase and John worked it into his book \qIn His Own Write\q. Director Richard Lester later suggested that would be a perfect name for The Beatles' first movie; that night John and Paul turned Ringo's phrase into a classic song.") +(loading_trivia1601 "On their first US tour, The Beatles got into the ring with Cassius Clay and came out unscathed. The boxing great (who hadn't yet become Muhammad Ali) took a break from training for his heavyweight championship match with Sonny Liston to shake hands and swap jokes with the band. He marked the event with one of his trademark rhymes: \qWhen Liston reads about The Beatles visiting me, he'll get so mad I'll knock him out in three.\q") +(loading_trivia1602 "Track compilations and running orders changed as albums made their way across the Atlantic. An English fan may find it hard to picture \qRevolver\q without \qAnd Your Bird Can Sing\q, but Americans heard it instead on the US-only \qYesterday ...And Today\q. In all but one case, the UK albums are now the official releases worldwide... though fans in the States will always love \qtheir\q Beatles albums.") +(loading_trivia1603 "John in particular hated the time consuming process of double-tracking his vocals during sessions. In response, engineer Ken Townsend created the Artificial Double Tracking system, which used tape delay to turn one voice into two. This not only saved time, but freed up tracks for more inspired uses. ADT was introduced on the album Revolver and has been widely used ever since.") +(loading_trivia1604 "Take a little Beach Boys and a dash of Chuck Berry, season it with Paul McCartney's sense of humour, and you've got \qThe White Album\q's opener \qBack in the U.S.S.R.\q. Longtime Beach Boys fans, The Beatles hung out with singer Mike Love in India; and the song pokes good natured fun at both the Beach Boys' \qCalifornia Girls\q and Chuck Berry's \qBack in the USA\q. The Beach Boys loved the song and sometimes played it in concert.") +(loading_trivia1605 "John, Paul and George Martin worked around the clock at Abbey Road on October 16 and 17, 1968 -- The Beatles' only 24-hour studio session. The 30 songs for \qThe White Album\q were all recorded, but they still needed to find a running order. The final sequence had no Beatle getting more than two lead vocals in a row, and its flow was enhanced with careful edits and crossfades. The album was ready to be mastered by 5pm on the 17th.") +(loading_trivia1606 "When The Beatles decided to close their Apple Boutique on Baker Street in London, they came up with an unusual way of liquidating the stock: they swung the doors open and invited people to help themselves to anything in the store. While this was hardly a sharp business move, both John and Paul said it was some of the most fun they had being shop owners.") +(loading_trivia1607 "The humour was wild, the soundtrack was full of great music, and it featured bombshell Jayne Mansfield: it's no wonder The Beatles all loved the landmark rock 'n' roll movie \qThe Girl Can't Help It\q. Paul and John spent the afternoon of September 18, 1968 writing \qBirthday\q, then The Beatles called off work and went to Paul's house to watch the movie on telly. They returned to the studio later that night and finished the recording.") +(loading_trivia1608 "If The Beatles liked a song, there was a good chance it would find its way to their set list. They loved hard-driving R&B, as well as the \qgirl group\q records coming out of the US. Ringo sang the Shirelles tune \qBoys\q in his Cavern days with the Beatles, even though the lyrics had a feminine slant. He made up for that by changing a few words and giving the track a tougher feel.") +(loading_trivia1609 "Walk into your local record shop and meet The Beatles? You could have, had you lived in the Liverpool area in 1962 when the group was promoting their debut single \qLove Me Do\q. One day after the single's UK release, The Beatles made a record store appearance at Dawson's Music, in the Mersey town of Widnes. If you were sharp enough to get your record signed that day, you could now sell your copy for 13,000 pounds or more.") +(loading_trivia1610 "Take a close listen to \qCan't Buy Me Love\q -- does it sound like anything's missing? For one of the few times on a Beatles song the familiar harmonies aren't there. The band tried adding them while recording in a Paris studio, but quickly realised that the song just didn't need them. Sung by Paul from start to finish, \qCan't Buy Me Love\q was arranged and recorded in just one magical hour.") +(loading_trivia1611 "You're about to change the world and make musical history -- but that won't prevent your tonsils from acting up. George got an attack of tonsillitis on his first day in America, so Beatles road manager Neil Aspinall took his place at the first \qEd Sullivan Show\q rehearsal. Neil mimed with an unplugged guitar, so he was amused when a US magazine saw the rehearsal and praised his guitar playing.") +(loading_trivia1612 "It took roughly ten minutes to create one of rock's most famous album covers, the street-crossing shot on \qAbbey Road\q. While a police officer held up traffic, The Beatles crossed the street six times, starting at 11:35am on August 8, 1969; photographer Iain Macmillan was perched on a stepladder. Most of its iconic elements, like the Volkswagen Beetle parked near The Beatles, happened purely by accident.") +(loading_trivia1613 "When underground activist Timothy Leary ran for governor of California, he had a snappy campaign slogan: \qCome together.\q John liked that idea and tried to write a campaign song for him. But the song didn't truly come together until John stopped trying to write for Leary and started following his own muse. The song proved more successful than Leary's campaign; he lost to Ronald Reagan.") +(loading_trivia1614 "Touring got less fun during the 1966 tour, and on August 21 The Beatles travelled 341 miles, played two shows, and got rained on twice. The day began with a mid-day show in Cincinnati (a rain-out from the previous night), then they flew to St. Louis to play another waterlogged outdoor show. Throw in the over-enthused crowds and less-than-ideal sound systems, and you'll understand why The Beatles quit touring just eight days later.") +(loading_trivia1615 "There was a great deal of mutual admiration between The Beatles and Jimi Hendrix, who performed this song on a BBC radio broadcast. Bassist Noel Redding sang harmonies on the Hendrix version in a \qJohn-like\q voice, leading many listeners to assume it was a secret Lennon-Hendrix duet. Jimi would strike again by opening a London show with \qSgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band\q, to the pleasure of The Beatles who were in the audience.") +(loading_trivia1616 "\qThe White Album\q had the simplest possible cover, but the band still wanted to make it special: how about an album that would be mass-produced, but unique at the same time? Having become interested in conceptual art, the band and cover artist Richard Hamilton had every copy stamped with its own serial number. Now each of the millions who bought one would have something a little different. Proud owner of UK copy number one? Ringo.") +(loading_trivia1617 "Her name really was Prudence, and she really did need to come out to play. She and her sister, the actress Mia Farrow, were travelling companions on The Beatles' 1968 trip to India, and Prudence's habit of shutting herself away inspired this song. After \qDear Prudence\q, many of the people in John Lennon's life would find their way into his song lyrics, a trend that continued into his solo years.") +(loading_trivia1618 "It was almost too cold and windy to play, and then the police showed up. The Beatles concert on the roof of the Apple offices brought traffic to a standstill in the West End of London on January 30, 1969. The outdoor show produced stirring versions of three songs featured on the Let It Be album: \qI've Got A Feeling\q, \qDig A Pony\q, and \qThe One After 909\q.") +(loading_trivia1619 "The cameras are rolling: can you remember the words of a song you wrote only days ago? Normally there'd be hours of rehearsal before a concert, but The Beatles had barely finished recording \qDig a Pony\q when they were expected to perform on the Apple rooftop. To make sure John didn't go blank, assistant Kevin Harrington knelt in front of him with a set of cue cards featuring the lyrics.") +(loading_trivia1620 "Keyboardist Billy Preston added a welcome shot of energy to the \qLet It Be\q sessions, and the group gave him a unique honour: both sides of \qGet Back\q/\qDon't Let Me Down\q were credited to \qThe Beatles with Billy Preston\q, making him the only guest player ever named on a Beatles single. He'd later sign to Apple and begin a successful solo career.") +(loading_trivia1621 "During the \qLet It Be\q sessions, The Beatles loosened up in the studio by recording many hours of informal jams, including oldies from the Hamburg era. These live performances informed their new material, and \qDon't Let Me Down\q shows the rough rock sound they were after.") +(loading_trivia1622 "Another Mersey act, Billy J. Kramer with the Dakotas had a UK hit with this song. Kramer had Brian Epstein as his manager and George Martin as his producer, so John and Paul were happy to write him a few songs. The Beatles' own version of this song went to #2 in the US, making \qDo You Want to Know a Secret\q, with George on lead vocals, the first Lennon/McCartney song to be both a Beatle and a non-Beatle hit.") +(loading_trivia1623 "With three Hamburg trips under their belts and \qPlease Please Me\q fast becoming a hit, The Beatles were ready for the road by early 1963. Their first tour of England started in February, with the group and other acts supporting teen pop star Helen Shapiro. By now they were sporting stage suits and a more cleaned-up image -- but not too clean; in the town of Carlisle, The Beatles were ejected from a local dance for wearing leather jackets.") +(loading_trivia1624 "Paul brought a song idea to his regular writing session with John, about a guy whose girlfriend wanted to be famous. The melody was good, but the chorus of \qYou can buy me golden rings\q was not. For a few hours the song went nowhere... then the words \qdrive my car\q came to them after a tea break. Suddenly the girl saw the singer as her chauffeur-to-be, among other things, and the song (attributed mainly to Paul) was off and running.") +(loading_trivia1625 "In 1966, Paul was the first Beatle to write a soundtrack for a non-Beatles film -- \qThe Family Way\q, an English comedy starring Sir John Mills and his daughter Hayley Mills. All four Beatles would do film projects while still in the group: John acted in the satirical \qHow I Won the War\q, George scored the movie \qWonderwall\q, and Ringo starred with Peter Sellers in \qThe Magic Christian\q.") +(loading_trivia1626 "Many Beatles classics came easy in the studio, but \qEight Days A Week\q was the first time the band experimented with an incomplete idea in a session. After six different arrangements they finally got the song down, but still didn't know how to start it. They shelved the song for several days, and its distinctive intro was added during mixing. This made \qEight Days a Week\q the first pop record ever to start with a fade-in.") +(loading_trivia1627 "Even a chance conversation could turn into a Beatles song. At one point in 1964 Paul's licence had been suspended for speeding, and he was being chauffeured to John's house for their regular writing session, Paul asked the driver if he'd been busy, who replied that he'd been \qworking eight days a week\q. Paul brought the title to John, and they wrote the song that day.") +(loading_trivia1628 "Before 1969, singles were almost never issued in stereo; it was assumed that they would be played on cheap phonographs. If you wanted the stereo version, you were out of luck until the album came out. \qGet Back\q was the first US Beatles single in full two-channel glory -- a good thing, since the long single version wouldn't be on an album until 1973.") +(loading_trivia1629 "After the wild experiments that defined rock in 1967-68, The Beatles spearheaded a \qback to basics\q trend by recording their next album live in the studio, keeping a loose and spontaneous feel. Advance ads for the \qGet Back\q single proclaimed \qThe Beatles as nature intended.\q The album was also planned to be called \qGet Back\q, though it saw a delayed release as \qLet It Be\q.") +(loading_trivia1630 "Paul didn't mind at all when John gave one of his most upbeat lyrics a twist. During the writing sessions for \qGetting Better\q, Paul sang the optimistic title and John responded with the backup part, \qCan't get no worse.\q Paul loved the dark humoured spin and often named \qGetting Better\q as an example of how well his and John's songwriting partnership worked.) +(loading_trivia1631 "Before you played \qSgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band\q, you could enjoy playing with the cover. Unlike the usual single sleeve cover, \qPepper\q gave you the lyrics on the back cover and a fantastic tableau on the front. Open the shrink wrap and you got a Peter Blake-inspired sheet of cut-outs, and even a red and white swirled inner sleeve. This opened the floodgates for popular bands to outdo each other with elaborate cover designs.") +(loading_trivia1632 "To assemble the menagerie of animal cries that end \qGood Morning Good Morning\q, The Beatles looked no further than the Abbey Road sound effects library. Most of the noises came from a pair of tapes called \qAnimals and Bees\q and \qFox-hunt\q. John wanted them arranged so that each animal heard was big enough to scare the one before.") +(loading_trivia1633 "Plenty of production wizardry went into \qSgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band\q, but one great segue happened almost by chance. During the remixing sessions, it became clear that the last chicken cluck on \qGood Morning Good Morning\q matched the first guitar notes on \qSgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)\q. Producer George Martin reasoned that Sgt. Pepper himself must have been watching that day.") +(loading_trivia1634 "In England, it's considered the ultimate chart honour to have the Number One single during Christmas week; many artists put out seasonal or inspirational songs in hopes of hitting the mark. The Beatles are the only ones to have achieved this four times, ending with \qHello Goodbye\q in 1967.") +(loading_trivia1635 "In late summer 1967, work was completed on John's psychedelic Rolls-Royce. He bought the car in mid-1965 and proceeded to add a stereo system, television, telephone and refrigerator. He then had the car painted in yellows and reds, with intricate scrollwork and flower patterns. The car also had a microphone tied to a loudspeaker installed under the car, which John would use to scare fast driving friends by impersonating the police.") +(loading_trivia1636 "One of the most famous parts of \qHelter Skelter\q was totally unplanned -- namely, Ringo's shout at the end: \qI've got blisters on my fingers!\q There's a good reason he did, since one of the working versions of \qHelter Skelter\q ran as long as 27 minutes.") +(loading_trivia1637 "Often called one of the first heavy metal songs, \qHelter Skelter\q sprang from Paul's desire to record the dirtiest, loudest rock 'n' roll song they could, after reading Pete Townshend's claim that The Who had done just that. Listen behind the wailing guitars and you may hear John making a rare appearance on sax.") +(loading_trivia1638 "It was a beautiful early spring day, and attending Apple business meetings was the last thing George wanted to do. So he played hooky and went to visit Eric Clapton, spending a relaxed morning in his garden. That day's peaceful feeling and the end of a long English winter went directly into this song, and he borrowed Clapton's acoustic guitar to write it.") +(loading_trivia1639 "Don't bother trying to steal the well-known Abbey Road sign -- it's already been done. Thanks to the famous album cover, the street sign became one of the most desirable landmarks in London. The original was stolen soon after the album release, and its metal replacements have been taken many times since then. The sign now hangs well above the street, making it more difficult to take.") +(loading_trivia1640 "Since they travelled so often, having a pet wasn't high on The Beatles' list of priorities. But soon after moving into his London house in spring 1966, Paul acquired his first pet, the English sheepdog Martha. She would later be immortalised in the song \qMartha My Dear\q, and become the first of many McCartney sheepdogs.") +(loading_trivia1641 "The Beatles' new single, \qLady Madonna\q, needed a promotional film, but the group had better things to do than lip-sync. So during the shoot they recorded a new song, \qHey Bulldog\q, and skillful editing made the filmed session match the \qLady Madonna\q soundtrack. The promotional machine got what it needed, and The Beatles got to keep working.") +(loading_trivia1642 "There are many layers of meaning in \qI Am the Walrus\q. But the main idea of a walrus character came from Lewis Carroll's poem \qThe Walrus & the Carpenter\q, which attracted John more for its fantastical images than its literal meaning. Some of the song's imagery was delivered by The Mike Sammes Singers, brought in to sing such lines as \qOompah, oompah, stick it up your jumper!\q") +(loading_trivia1643 "Wrapping up their most psychedelic year, \qMagical Mystery Tour\q was pure Beatles -- the first film to feature a band as directors, writers, producers and stars. Its surreal, offbeat humour caught British audiences by surprise -- especially when the BBC showed it in black and white, the day after Christmas -- but few could complain about its six classic songs.") +(loading_trivia1644 "Good English boys that they were, The Beatles loved their fish and chips. They even filmed themselves having dinner during a promo shoot for \qI Feel Fine\q. The group barely manages to mime to the record between mouthfuls; Paul laughs while John licks his fingers and gives a thumbs-up. Brian Epstein reportedly thought this wasn't suitable for release, but collectors loved this glimpse into the band's silly side.") +(loading_trivia1645 "The ear-grabbing intro started as a lucky accident when John leaned his guitar against an amp and it started buzzing. Liking what they heard, they captured the sound on tape through another Lennon-McCartney team-up: Paul played a single bass note, and John held his guitar in front of the bass amp. John was so proud he later declared feedback as a Beatles first, before it was used by Jimi Hendrix and The Who.") +(loading_trivia1646 "When The Byrds saw \qA Hard Day's Night\q -- which among other things showed George playing a 12-string -- it changed their sound. Likewise, The Byrds were The Beatles' \qfab gear, fave rave American band\q -- or so it said on the California group's second album. George paid them a tribute with the purposely jangly-guitar-sounding \qIf I Needed Someone\q, a song that Byrds leader Roger McGuinn himself recorded many years later.") +(loading_trivia1647 "Five months before The Beatles came to America, a local band near Benton, Illinois had a special guest guitarist: George Harrison. George was the first Beatle to cross the Atlantic, visiting his sister during September 1963. During his trip, he took to the stage for a Saturday night dance in a nearby meeting hall; the band learned some Beatles songs for the occasion, giving this small town a permanent place in Beatles history.") +(loading_trivia1648 "Beatles manager Allen Klein brought in Phil Spector to re-produce the \qLet It Be\q album, and not everybody loved the changes he made. For \qI Me Mine\q, he took a short song, repeated some segments to add an extra verse, and then overdubbed an orchestra. The song was originally only 90 seconds long, but in Spector's hands it became a small epic.") +(loading_trivia1649 "The Beatles had virtually split up by winter 1970, but there was still work to be done. They had not completed a satisfactory version of George's \qI Me Mine\q during the \qLet It Be\q sessions, and they still wanted to get it on the album. George, Paul and Ringo gathered at Abbey Road Studios on 3rd January to complete the track.") +(loading_trivia1650 "If you know the difference between the mono and stereo versions of \qI'm Looking Through You\q, you're a truly devoted Beatles fan. On the stereo version, there's a false start as John and Paul briefly mess up the acoustic guitar intro. On the mono version, this moment is missing. This is one of the many nuances and slight variations that keep collectors happy.") +(loading_trivia1651 "If you're not sure what an MBE is, The Beatles weren't sure at first either. The medal declares one an official Member of the British Empire -- not quite a knighthood, but the highest honour that the British monarchy had yet bestowed upon a mere pop group. The sight of Beatle haircuts at Buckingham Palace was enough to raise some eyebrows; and John stirred up more controversy when he mailed back his medal in 1969 as an antiwar protest.") +(loading_trivia1652 "Could you make a feature out of counting? Paul knew how -- his voice turning into a full-throttle scream by the time he hit four. Leading off with one of the most famous count-ins in rock history, \qI Saw Her Standing There\q is one of a handful of Beatles songs that start this way. The others include \qTaxman\q, \qYer Blues\q, and \qSgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)\q.") +(loading_trivia1653 "Nobody thought they were making history when John and Paul got their hair cut one afternoon in Paris in late 1961. They were visiting their friend Jürgen Vollmer, an artist whose fashion sense the band trusted. He changed them from '50s-style ducktails to a shaggier \qmop-top\q look, and the iconic Beatle haircut was born. Little did he know that official Beatle wigs would become a hot item once The Beatles toured America.") +(loading_trivia1654 "The band came to regret mentioning in interviews that they loved Jelly Babies, the baby-shaped British jellybeans. Fans took that as a cue to send boxes of the treats to The Beatles, and before long the group was dodging candy showers on stages across England. Paul put a stop to that on The Beatles' first Christmas record when he said, \qWe've gone right off Jelly Babies.\q When they came to America, it started all over again.") +(loading_trivia1655 "Only once did four Beatles ever share the same home -- a top-floor apartment at 57 Green Street in Mayfair. Brian Epstein urged them to make the move to London in the summer of 1963, and the new digs weren't exactly luxurious. The band never found the time to hang pictures or to buy tables... or even a kettle. There were only three full-size bedrooms and, as the last to arrive, Paul got stuck with the tiny room in the back.") +(loading_trivia1656 "Beatlemania didn't start with the first US single... or even the second, third or fourth. \qShe Loves You\q, \qFrom Me to You\q, \qPlease Please Me\q, and the Hamburg-era \qMy Bonnie\q all failed to chart on their first US release. Then came \qI Want to Hold Your Hand\q, and America went Beatle-mad. Radio stations now wasted no time digging up those other four singles.") +(loading_trivia1657 "The times were definitely changing when The Beatles knocked Bobby Vinton off the top of the charts. The crooner's \qThere! I've Said It Again\q held the Billboard #1 slot for most of January 1964, just in time to get bumped off the top by \qI Want to Hold Your Hand\q on February 1. The Beatles would hold Number One for three solid months -- and who would finally nab the slot from them? Jazz great Louis Armstrong with \qHello, Dolly!\q") +(loading_trivia1658 ""The Beatles had a grand concept in mind for the final album they recorded: the disc was to be called \qEverest\q, a title borrowed from engineer Geoff Emerick's brand of cigarettes, and the cover would show them at Mount Everest. But staging that cover proved too ambitious even for The Beatles, so during an early lunch they just left the studio with photographer Iain Macmillan, and crossed the street.") +(loading_trivia1659 "It builds and it builds, and then it stops dead: the sudden ending of \qI Want You (She's So Heavy)\q made a few hearts jump. John wanted a dramatic ending that hadn't been tried before, so he asked for the tape to be cut. This meant that it ended at full volume, about 20 seconds before the end of the actual performance. With a long instrumental jam, this was second only to \qRevolution 9\q as The Beatles' longest released song.") +(loading_trivia1660 "Julian Lennon did a starry drawing of his classmate Lucy, with a title written across the top: \qLucy in the sky with diamonds\q. His father John thought it made a beautiful idea for a song. When Paul came over for a writing session that day, John proudly displayed the drawing and the two went to work. It was the drawing that inspired the song's fantastic images.") +(loading_trivia1661 "During the \qSgt. Pepper\q sessions, rock grew up, and The Beatles' faces got hairy. Though Ringo had worn a beard before joining the group, the band was officially clean-cut until the end of 1966. Paul had started his moustache to cover a scar from a moped accident, while George grew his during a trip to India; eventually, everybody had them. Paul was the first to shave his before the album's pre-release party in May 1967.") +(loading_trivia1662 "If Ringo had gotten the fish and chips he wanted for lunch, this song might never have happened. He was spending a holiday on comedian Peter Sellers' yacht, and wasn't sure about the squid that he was served. When the captain told him later that octopuses keep gardens beneath the sea, the image inspired him to pick up the guitar and write about it.") +(loading_trivia1663 "\qOctopus's Garden\q was Ringo's second solo Beatles composition, but the first to feature the whole band. George in particular was a fan of the song -- he thought the idea of a peaceful undersea garden very cosmic. Ringo and Paul, along with a guest violinist, played everything on \qDon't Pass Me By\q, his first composition which was on \qThe White Album\q.") +(loading_trivia1664 "Nobody outside the group knew that Candlestick Park on August 29, 1966 would be The Beatles' last official show, or that \qPaperback Writer\q -- the second-to-last song in the set -- would be the last original song they'd play for a paying audience. For the moment it was still time to \qhave some fun tonight\q as they closed the Candlestick show with a favourite cover tune, Little Richard's \qLong Tall Sally\q.") +(loading_trivia1665 "With demand for The Beatles far exceeding available time, they took the novel step of making promotional films instead of doing live television. Future \qLet It Be\q director Michael Lindsay-Hogg made multiple films of \qPaperback Writer\q and \qRain\q for different outlets including The Ed Sullivan Show. This was the first of several promotional pieces to be shot on 35mm film -- a pioneer move far ahead of the polished \qmusic videos\q to come.") +(loading_trivia1666 "For \qRevolution\q, John wanted a sound that was as searing as the subject matter. George Martin obliged by plugging the guitars directly into the recording console, completely overloading the channel. This was something you just didn't do (at least according to EMI technicians), and it created grisly, heavily distorted guitar sounds -- which was exactly what John was after.") +(loading_trivia1667 "You say you want a revolution... how about four? There's the original acoustic take (\qRevolution 1\q) as well as the faster grittier sounding single. Then there's \qRevolution 9\q, a tape collage that grew from several minutes of material sliced off the end of the album track. And don't forget the promo film, whose semi-live performance combines the energy of the single with the harmonies of the album. A fab four, indeed.") +(loading_trivia1668 "\qWith a Little Help From My Friends\q is the only Beatles song to top the UK charts in three different versions -- none of which were performed by The Beatles. Joe Cocker hit with it first in 1968, then Wet Wet Wet in 1988, and Sam & Mark in 2004. Many other artists, including Electric Light Orchestra leader Jeff Lynne, recorded the song over the years.") +(loading_trivia1669 "George Martin would often sit and explain new technologies to The Beatles. One night he was demonstrating how different frequencies sounded, and played one that the band couldn't hear, but dogs could. They loved the idea of dogs reacting to the album as their owners listened, so they asked for it to be added just before the play-out groove at the end of the Sgt. Pepper album.") +(loading_trivia1670 "Before \qWith a Little Help From My Friends\q had a full set of lyrics, John Lennon's original title for it was \qBad Finger Boogie.\q This title didn't go to waste: After a Welsh band called the Iveys was signed to Apple Records, John changed their name to Badfinger.") +(loading_trivia1671 "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band has sold 4.5 million copies in the UK, a record that's never been topped.") +(loading_trivia1672 "Frank Sinatra never had much good to say about rock music, but George Harrison's \qSomething\q was one of the few contemporary songs he liked enough to cover -- though for many years he mistakenly credited the song to Lennon/McCartney. Sinatra took some trademark liberties with the words, singing \qYou stick around Jack, it might show.\q More amused than offended, George sang it Frank's way in his solo years.") +(loading_trivia1673 "It's not easy to be the third songwriter when you've got John Lennon and Paul McCartney in your band. By \qAbbey Road\q, George had proven himself as a songwriter in every way but one: none of his songs had ever made the A-side of a Beatles single. \qSomething\q remedied that, and George soon got to hear it recorded by four of his favourite singers: James Brown, Ray Charles, Smokey Robinson, and Elvis Presley.") +(loading_trivia1674 "\qOne for you, nineteen for me\q actually understates the case. George Harrison figured that for every twenty shillings (one pound) that The Beatles earned, they paid even MORE than nineteen back in taxes. George wasn't too keen on keeping just a fraction of his Beatles earnings, so this politically themed song had a very personal starting point.") +(loading_trivia1675 "Want to make a cameo in a Beatles song? Try taking their money. In their backing vocals for \qTaxman\q, John and Paul pointed fingers directly at Prime Minister Harold Wilson and opposition leader Edward Heath -- the first living people to make it into a Beatles lyric. John would later mention people he liked better, including Peter Brown, B.B. King and Doris Day, and Paul McCartney.") +(loading_trivia1676 "While recording \qAbbey Road\q, Paul and John had a lot of good ideas lying around that hadn't grown into full songs. The solution was to combine them with new material to form a classical style suite, an idea supported by George Martin. Not a bad way to cap off a recording career.") +(loading_trivia1677 "Following the recording of their three way guitar duel, John, Paul and George thought \qThe End\q needed a drum solo too, but Ringo was having none of it. Despite Ringo's reluctance, he rose to the occasion after encouragement from the others and George Martin. It didn't hurt that Ringo had just gotten a snazzy new set of tom-tom heads, which put him in more of a soloing mood.") +(loading_trivia1678 "Were The Beatles making a movie called \qEight Arms to Hold You\q? That's what it said on the US single of \qTicket to Ride\q, teased as a song from the forthcoming film. But Capitol Records had only jumped the gun and announced a title in progress: The Beatles' second film got a punchier title when John and Paul wrote a song called \qHelp!\q") +(loading_trivia1679 "For a short time in 1960 John and Paul performed as a duo called the Nerk Twins, in a pub run by Paul's cousin Elizabeth and her husband Mike. When Bett and Mike later ran a pub in the seaside town of Ryde on the Isle of Wight, Paul and John visited them there, too. The phrase \qticket to Ryde\q would eventually become part of the inspiration for this song.") +(loading_trivia1680 "This mash-up from the 2006 \qLove\q album brings together two of The Beatles' most spiritually inclined songs: \qWithin You Without You\q reflects George's absorption with meditation and John's \qTomorrow Never Knows\q draws its inspiration from \qThe Tibetan Book of the Dead\q. These subjects were an unusual source of material for pop songs at the time.") +(loading_trivia1681 "The impossible happened in 2006 as the world got a live show and a new album from The Beatles. Created for the Cirque du Soleil show, \qLove\q, the accompanying album reworked The Beatles' music into an 80 minute soundscape. Often combining two or more songs into one, The Beatles' \qLove\q album picked up two Grammys for the father and son production team of George and Giles Martin.") +(loading_trivia1682 "Could you sing like this? John could... but only once. Most of the Please Please Me album was recorded in a single ten-hour session, and \qTwist and Shout\q was saved for last because John would need to give it everything he had. George Martin attempted a second take, but because of the strain it put on John's vocal chords, the first take is the one you hear.") +(loading_trivia1683 "During the week of April 4, 1964, the three bestselling artists in America were The Beatles, The Beatles and The Beatles. In fact they had all FIVE songs in the US Top Five that week, the first time one band or artist had ever done so. \qTwist and Shout\q was at Number Two, just behind \qCan't Buy Me Love\q.") +(loading_trivia1684 "To George Harrison, the Chinese philosophical text the \qI Ching\q seemed based on the concept that there are no coincidences, and that even the most random-seeming occurrences are meant to be. To explore this idea, he decided that his next song would stem from the first phrase that caught his eye when he opened a book at random. \qGently weeps\q was the phrase he saw, and the lyrics flowed from there.") +(loading_trivia1685 "Very few guitarists could have walked into the studio with The Beatles, and Eric Clapton was the only one who ever did. George made friends with the young virtuoso guitarist, then riding high with the band Cream, and invited him in for the solo. George would return the favour by co-writing and playing on a Cream classic, \qBadge\q.") +(loading_trivia1686 "\qYellow Submarine\q might not have happened if they didn't owe the studio another film. Although apprehensive about its creative potential, their enthusiasm rose when they saw how well it reflected their sense of humour and imagination. They wound up giving four exclusive songs to the film and appearing in its live-action finale; Blue Meanies and Apple Bonkers could now join The Beatles' cast of characters.") +(loading_trivia1687 "You'd never know by listening, but the Rolling Stones' Brian Jones clinked glasses during this song's instrumental break. Other Stones appearances would follow, with Jones playing sax on \qYou Know My Name (Look Up the Number)\q and Mick Jagger and Keith Richards singing on \qAll You Need is Love\q.") + +;Green Day: Rock Band +(loading_trivia1720 (loading_phrase "The theme song to the cartoon Johnny Test has attracted controversy for sounding suspiciously like \qAmerican Idiot.\q Ironically, Johnny's best friend is a dog named Dukey.")) +(loading_trivia1721 (loading_phrase "Billie Joe Armstrong wrote \qBasket Case\q about his struggle with anxiety; years before he would be diagnosed with panic disorder, he thought he was going crazy. Armstrong said, \qThe only way I could know what the hell was going on was to write a song about it\q.")) +(loading_trivia1722 (loading_phrase "'Boulevard of Broken Dreams' follows the same chord progression as Oasis' 'Wonderwall', which Noel Gallagher wasn't happy about. 'They should have the decency to wait until I am dead [before stealing my songs].' They've since made up.")) +(loading_trivia1723 (loading_phrase "Rock Band? More like underwater band")) +(loading_trivia1724 (loading_phrase "'Holiday' was featured in the 2005 video game Tony Hawk's American Wasteland.")) +(loading_trivia1725 (loading_phrase "'All the tracks [from Dookie] are here except the hidden vocal track 'All By Myself', which is a shame because they already had one masturbation anthem on here. What's one more?' - Ajakes, Examining The FINAL Rock Band Setlist")) +(loading_trivia1726 (loading_phrase "This is one of the few official songs in Rock Band to have only one instrument (vocals) charted.")) +(loading_trivia1727 (loading_phrase "This song is about the band's experiences moving out of their parents' houses into an abandoned warehouse in Oakland, CA. \qIt's about West Oakland, living in a warehouse with a lot of people, a bunch of artists and musicians, punks and whatever just lived all up and down, bums and junkies and thugs and gang members and stuff that just lived in that area. It's no place you want to walk around at night, but it's a neat warehouse where you can play basketball and stuff\q, says Billie Joe Armstrong.")) +(loading_trivia1728 (loading_phrase "Before the song's music video was filmed, MTV aired a live performance of the song by the band at Woodstock '94, which started a fashion trend of people wearing sweaters like the striped sweater Billie Joe Armstrong wore in the performance.")) (os_blnk " ") #include ../../dx/locale/dx_locale_updates.dta