George Morel - What Happened MP3 version. 1649 downloads at 23 mb/s. George Morel - What Happened FLAC version. 1579 downloads at 31 mb/s. A. What Happened (Morel's Club Mix). B. What Happened (Morel's Dub Mix). Keyboards – Marcus Fugate. Mastered By – Nilz . Jennifer Carbonel - What Happened (12").
Groove On US. George Morel/THE Invisible MAN feat Jennifer Carbonel. What Happened (remixes). Side 1. 1. "What Happened" (Morel club mix). Side 2. "What Happened" (Morel dub mix). 100% Secure Shopping.
Jennifer Carbonel – What Happened. Label: Groove On – GO-6. Getting the balance right between the simple and complex is a line so fine you could almost imagine a queue forming outside the toilet cubical for it, but that’s exactly what Morel’s achieved with this soundscape that conjures up a myriad of emotions and images held together by a haunting riff that never lets go. Bittersweet and totally irresistible, particularly in the vocal-free version. Reply Notify me Helpful.
The Invisible Man is the sixth solo album by the American Music Club singer/songwriter Mark Eitzel, released by Matador Records in 2001. It is a more electronic effort by Eitzel, who is known for his more stark, acoustic arrangements. Eitzel wrote all of the songs on an acoustic guitar, but finished most with a sampler and Pro-tools on his Power Mac G4 in the front room of his house in San Francisco. The Boy With the Hammer".
The Invisible Man (Queen song). The song is sung mostly by Freddie Mercury, with vocal contributions from Taylor. Originally released on the album The Miracle, it was released as a single in 1989. Taylor claims that he got the inspiration to create the song while reading a book, and the bassline instantly came to his imagination.
5,28 €. What Happened. The George Morel & Invisible Man. 5,60 €. Shining Star.
The Invisible Man" was the original planned title for the album that would be called The Miracle, but three weeks prior to the album's release, they changed the name. Hidden within the song are the names of each of the band members: Freddie Mercury at the beginning of the first verse (often confused with "Freddy Kreuger"!), John Deacon after the first verse, Brian May, said twice before his solo, and Roger Taylor after the words "Look at me, look at me," which Taylor answers with a quick drum beat. Show creator Butch Hartman is a huge Queen fan, and happened to come across this track on an imported "greatest hits" CD while on a business trip in South Korea. He fell in love with the bass line, and decided that if he ever got the chance to create a new cartoon (after "The Fairly Odd Parents") he would use that bass line in its theme song.