Difference between revisions of "Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum (Album)"
Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum (Album) (view source)
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'''The following is taken from Wikipedia.org. It's intended to be a "starting point" for this HITS Wiki entry and should be edited to suite the more informative, detailed nature of the HITS Wiki.''' | '''The following is taken from Wikipedia.org. It's intended to be a "starting point" for this HITS Wiki entry and should be edited to suite the more informative, detailed nature of the HITS Wiki.''' | ||
Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum (M.M.M.M.) is Tally Hall's debut studio album. Their previous recordings were all independently produced and distributed demos. All of the tracks on the album are fleshed-out, finished versions of their demo tracks, with the exception of "Haiku," which is a completely new song. The album gets its name from a museum of mechanized curiosities of the same name located in Farmington Hills, Michigan. | Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum (M.M.M.M.) is [[Tally Hall]]'s debut studio album. Their previous recordings were all independently produced and distributed demos. All of the tracks on the album are fleshed-out, finished versions of their demo tracks, with the exception of "Haiku," which is a completely new song. The album gets its name from a museum of mechanized curiosities of the same name located in Farmington Hills, Michigan. | ||
The album was officially re-released on September 12, 2006 under the Quack! Media label.[1] This re-release coincided with additional publicity on MTV, national distribution in all major retail stores, and various other TV appearances including The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson.[1] The music video for "Good Day" was first shown at Tally Hall's two Ann Arbor concerts, on September 23, 2006. | The album was officially re-released on September 12, 2006 under the Quack! Media label.[1] This re-release coincided with additional publicity on MTV, national distribution in all major retail stores, and various other TV appearances including The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson.[1] The music video for "Good Day" was first shown at Tally Hall's two Ann Arbor concerts, on September 23, 2006. |