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Stewart Home (born 1962) is an artist, film maker, writer, subcultural pamphleteer, underground art historian, and activist. His mother, Julia Callan-Thompson, was a model and hostess who was associated with the radical arts scene in Notting Hill Gate. She knew such people as the writer and Situationist Alexander Trocchi. Stewart was put up for adoption soon after his birth.
Home is best known in Anglo-American mainstream culture for his neo-conceptual art work and more recent novels, such as the non-narrative "69 Things To Do With A Dead Princess" (2002), and his re-imagining of the 1960s in "Tainted Love" (2005); while in subcultural circles and territories such as Germany and Finland he is better known for his earlier parodistic pulp fictions Pure Mania, Red London, No Pity, Cunt, and Defiant Pose that pastiche the work of 1970s British skinhead pulp novel writer Richard Allen and combine it with pornography, political agit-prop, and historical references to punk rock and avant-garde art.
In the 1980s and 1990s, he exhibited widely and also wrote a number of non-fiction pamphlets, magazines, and books. They chiefly reflected the politics of the radical left, punk culture, the occult, the history and influence of the Situationists - of whom he is a severe critic - and other radical left-wing 20th century anti-art avant-garde movements. In Home's earlier work, the focux of these reflections was often Neoism, a subcultural network of which he had been a member, and from which he derived various splinter projects. The constant characteristics of his activism in the 1980s and 1990s were:
Duncan Charles Home VC (10 June 1828-1 October 1857) was a recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.
Home, sung by Kit Chan, was the first in a series of yearly songs commissioned for Singapore's National Day celebrations. In 2004, it was remixed for 3 child soloists and a girls' choir and reused as that year's National Day song.
"Home" is Depeche Mode's thirty-third UK single, released on June 16, 1997, and the third single for the album Ultra. It is also the third (and most recent) UK single with Martin Gore on lead vocals, and the second stand-alone single with him on lead vocals (the others are "A Question of Lust" and "Somebody", which was a double-A side with "Blasphemous Rumours").
Though it was planned to be released in the US, it ended up being scrapped due to some radio stations playing the song "Useless" instead, leading people in the US to believe that was the third single, when it was the fourth single. Reprise scrapped the US release of "Home", despite there already being confirmed tracklists, and released Home/Useless as a double A-side single.
"Home" is a ballad with beautiful strings and other arrangements, and as a Martin vocal track it's a fan favorite. The single version of "Home" has an ambient intro, rather than the drum beat starting directly at the beginning like the album version.
There are no actual B-sides for "Home", just live versions of "Barrel of a Gun" and "It's No Good" recorded during the Ultra Party concert in London. The "Home" remixes are often considered the worst DM remixes, because some of the mixes don't even keep any of the music, just Martin's vocals mixed in with new melodies. The "Air Around the Golf" mix appears on Remixes 81 - 04.
The music video for "Home" is the only Ultra video not directed by Anton Corbijn, but instead by Steve Green. It features an alien exploring an apartment complex, and uses a highly-shortened down version of "Home", likely the Radio edit.
During the last "Touring The Angel" world tour, "Home" has been included in the setlist, and the "Air Around The Golf" arrangement was used for the first half part of the song. Probably, due to the unordinary version, Martin failed several times singing the first verse.
"Home" was the first major label single by Angela Aki. It was released on September 14 2005 and reached #38 on the Oricon Charts.
The experimental pop band Home formed in Tampa, Florida, in the early-1990s before relocating to New York in 1996. The band released eight self-produced, sequentially-numbered, ultra-low-distribution albums on cheap Radio Shack cassettes before signing to Sony's Relativity Records label, which distributed its ninth album (appropriately titled IX) in 1995. This album, Home's only release on a major label, received favorable reviews in publications such as Spin, The Village Voice and Magnet. Subsequent Home albums have appeared on independent record labels, also to generally positive reviews. Dave Fridmann of The Flaming Lips was the producer behind at least two of Home's albums.
Though Home was originally regarded as a lo-fi band due to its primitive recording techniques, its releases starting with IX have largely featured a cleaner sound highlighted by guitars and various electronic keyboards. In reviewing IX, The Village Voice observed that Home's sound resembles bands from "the late '80s (Sebadoh, Grifters) and mid-70s (Devo, Faust, David Bowie) sprinkled with enough influences out of the bargain-bins (Elton John, Gong, David Bowie) to push the hipster taste-envelope a smidgen closer to both prog-art and schmaltz-rock." That album received a 7-out-of-10 rating from Spin. A year later, describing the band's independent album Elf: Gulf Bore Waltz, The Chicago Tribune wrote: "Laboring in the rock 'n' roll hinterland of Florida, the band Home has developed a refreshingly scattershot sound that wanders erratically through folky balladry, prog rock, ragged pop, and unclassifiable experimentation. Though somewhat reminiscent of indie rock obscurantists like Pavement, Home is both more ambitious and more consistently tuneful than many of its trendier peers."
Less charitably, The Trouser Press Record Guide opined: "When intently focused, Home can squeeze an agreeably synthetic, Devo-esque poptone (like 'Make It Right') from its gizmos. More often, though, Home lapses into wildly freeform freakouts (like 'Atomique') that combine electronic noise, found sound and even a bit of spoken word. ... Those endowed with short attention spans will no doubt have the easiest time making it all the way through IX."blank">http://www.trouserpress.com/entry.php?a=home
The members of Home also helped found the Screw Music Forever recording label and music collective. Besides releasing Home's own 7-inch singles, Screw Music also has released recordings by related bands such as Dumbwaiters, _Pee Shy, Leels and the 100% Storms Ensemble.
Home's 16th album, Sexteen, which the band describes as "a concept record about fucking," was released in 2006. This album also marked the end of the band's longstanding relationship with its European label, Cooking Vinyl. During the same year, members of Home performed under the name Home Hunters during the Come The Freak On music festival at Bombshell Gallery in St. Petersburg, Florida.
As of late 2006, Home was making preparations for its next album, Seventeen, envisioned as the soundtrack to a movie that the band members were simultaneously preparing to film.
} "Home" is a single from Sheryl Crow's 1996 self-titled album. It was the final single from the album, following "A Change Would Do You Good", and was later included on the album The Very Best of Sheryl Crow. It was only released commercially in Europe.
The black-and-white video was directed by Samuel Bayer and features Sheryl performing on a village car racing festival. Several villagers are portrayed, sharing their definitions of what 'home' is for them with the viewer. At the end of the video, Sheryl ends up covered in mud thrown around by the racing cars.
:For other uses, see Home (disambiguation).
The HOME Investment Partnerships Program (HOME) is a type of United States Federal assistance provided by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to States in order to provide decent and affordable housing, particularly housing for low- and very low-income Americans. HOME Investment Partnerships Program (CFDA 14.239); compliance/06/06toc.html" target="_blank">OMB Circular A-133 Compliance Supplement; Part 4: Agency Program Requirements: Department of Housing and Urban Development, pg. 4-14.239-1 It is the largest Federal block grant to States and local governments designed exclusively to create affordable housing for low-income families, providing over US$2 billion each year. HOME Investment Partnerships Program, Homes and Communities: Community Planning and Development, US Department of Housing and Urban Development The program is commonly referred to as the Home Investment or Home Partnership Program, and is often operating in conjunction with other housing and other urban development programs, such as the _CDBG program. Its federal identification number, or CFDA number, is 14.239.
"Home" is the third single by Canadian rock band Three Days Grace from their self-titled album.
The original promotional video was shot as a montage of the band playing on tour accompanied by the song. It held little to no success and was not charted on MuchMusic's Countdown due to its low rotation.
The second and more familiar video was produced a few months later featuring the band in a sort of abandoned room with a gothic girl walking throughout the video. There has been much discussion of her role on sites such as YouTube, MySpace, and even forums, but it can be interpreted that the girl is supposed to represent the feeling of emptiness and apathy, and that even those of us who grow up in the best house, on the inside it can be just as bad and can make us do things with remorse and regret. She was spitting up black blood, representing the emptiness, depression, and apthic feelings that we can all go through. Dean Karr was the director of this video.
On Zebrahead's album MFZB, their song "House Is Not My Home" is similar to it, with lines such as "I think this house is not my home/I think I'd rather be alone tonight". Also, both MFZB and Three Days Grace's self titled album were released in the same year.
When performed live, the song is usually done as a medley with Filter's hit song Hey Man, Nice Shot.
"Home" is a song by American rock band Daughtry from their self titled debut album. The song had been climbing up the U.S. charts for a few weeks before the song was announced as second single (possibly due to its use on American Idol as the show's "vote off" song).
Home is a song by American Idol runner-up Katharine McPhee, from the album Katharine McPhee (album)