British albums usually had 7 songs per side for a total of 14 songs per album on average. the US pressings always removed a few songs to make it 5-6 per side, making 10-12 cut albums and the leftovers where eventually cobbled together for another album, like the US release, "Yesterday...and Today or "Hey Jude" which was a compilation of deleted cuts and single releases.
He doesn't. Tupac used to go in the studio and record 2 songs per day. In anticipation of his short time on earth. Thus, many many many album's worth of material is still out there waiting to be master mixed. source; Tupac Resurrection film footage, words from Tupac
they sample the background music and sing the words
Go to website songfacts and specify 1973 (you should be able to find the website by googling song facts. They list all songs released per year.
Try "Platypus (I Hate You)" by Green Day. It's 369 beats per minute (bpm).
About two-hundred songs can be stored per gigabyte, dependending on the encoding.
Most songs are about 4MB when downloaded. So 250 songs per GB, 7x250 = 1750 songs. This of course is an estimate.
If we take an average song to be 4 minutes then; 273 songs, if your songs are encoded at the standard 128 kilobits per second 182 songs, if your songs are encoded at the higher quality 192 kilobits per second
About 3150 songs considering each song being 5mb per file!
1ml/minute = 60ml/hour = 1.5litres per day
A top speed of around 50 km per hour.
hi
12 for 15 songs
Probably somewhere around 1,825,000.
Alot of them. There are 30 songs per CD. I work there
There are many different songs that all cost different prices. Some songs cost $1.29 and some are less. A lot of songs are sometimes even free!
There is just one theme song, HOWEVER, they do update the beat of it per doctor and era.