San Diego is probably the mellowest city in Southern California.
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It's a fair enough question, not least because Brad is played by Ben Stiller, a frighteningly high-strung performer even at his mellowest.
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"Music After the Fall," like the blog, addresses a vast range of music, from the gnarliest experimentalism to the mellowest minimalism, and Rutherford-Johnson applies a critical intelligence that is at once rigorous and generous.
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That work — Brahms's mellowest, least troubled symphony and hardly a blockbuster — was the biggest work on either program, and Mr. Muti, not always a convincing Brahmsian in earlier years, seems to have developed a greater affinity for the composer.
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To make sure I wasn't about to inadvertently dose myself into history's mellowest coma, I consulted with Allan Frankel, a doctor and the founder of Greenbridge Medical Services and an expert on medical cannabis, to go over the potential downsides of an all-CBD diet.
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Billboard Magazine described "Wonderful Tonight" as "perhaps Clapton's prettiest and mellowest love ballad in some time." Billboard particularly praised Clapton's guitar playing during the interludes.
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Her ex-boyfriend JiCi not only left her, but stated in her contract for her first album that all money from the album goes to him. Jonathan Gouin, a.k.a. "Tché": An heir to the Pain Gouin bakery empire. His company is so rich because their bread are considered to be the mellowest on Earth.
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The rhythm section plays simple interlocking notes and beats. Like "Soma", "Hard to Explain" contains processed drum tracks using dynamic range compression and equalization studio techniques to make them sound like a drum machine. The song incorporates spliced ad-libbing extras from Casablancas, a feature also used on "New York City Cops". "Trying Your Luck", the album's mellowest point, follows and shows more melancholic vocals.
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It was written on the same budget sampler synthesizer as Skylarkings "Another Satellite". Richard Walls said that it resembled "the Beach Boys playing fusion, a kind of number that's becoming an XTC staple". "Chalkhills and Children" was inspired by the Beach Boys "Chalkhills and Children" is the album's closing track and it is mellowest song. Partridge wrote it as a rumination on his life and career.
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Ghost is the fourteenth studio album by Canadian musician Devin Townsend, and the fourth album in the Devin Townsend Project series. It was released on June 20, 2011, simultaneously with the third Devin Townsend Project album Deconstruction. Townsend has stated that the album "is the mellowest (by far) and prettiest record I've done so far". Ghost was performed in its entirety once, on November 13, 2011, at the Union Chapel in London, England.
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" John Mason Brown wrote in the New York Post: "It is not often in our lifetime that we are privileged to enjoy the pleasant sensation of feeling that the present and the future have met for a few triumphant hours.... Yet it was this very sensation—this uncommon sensation of having the present and future meet; eye-witnessing the kind of event to which we will be looking back with pride in the years to come—that forced its warming way, I suspect, into the consciousness of many of us last night as we sat spellbound. Miss Cornell's Juliet is luscious and charming. It finds her at her mellowest and most glamorous. It burns with the intensity Miss Cornell brings to all her acting.
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The record was produced by Bob Rose and featured ex Blondie-bassist Nigel Harrison, the Prague Jazz Orchestra, the Czech Symphony (conducted and arranged by Rose) and The London Gospel Choir and New Dream, a duet with Lennon. The album received critical acclaim throughout Europe – the record wasn't released in the US – and Darling found himself opening up for Bryan Adams throughout his 2007 tour of Italy. In 2010 Darling released his second Bob Rose-produced album, "Stew Americano", for FOD Records which received outstanding reviews in the UK, Star magazine acclaiming it “a resolutely and gloriously old-fashioned album that echoes the storytelling stylings of Billy Joel and Elton John”, whilst Mark Edwards in the Sunday Times hailed it as “a wonderful album full of classic 1970s-style piano pop that should delight anyone who loves peak-period Elton John, Joe Jackson or even Elvis Costello at his mellowest.” The album spawned the singles "Kiss The Pain", "Somebody Kill The DJ", "Hard Way Back" and "Where Were You Last Night".
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