chunk_id
stringlengths 3
9
| chunk
stringlengths 1
100
|
---|---|
46_108
|
"Stick Me for My Riches" contains additional vocals by Gerald Alston.
|
46_109
|
"Starter" contains additional vocals by Sunny Valentine and Tash Mahogany.
|
46_110
|
"Windmill" contains guitars by John Frusciante.
|
46_111
|
Sample credits
|
46_112
|
"Campfire" contains a sample from "Gypsy Woman" as performed by The Persuasions, and dialogue from
|
46_113
|
Shaolin & Wu-Tang and Writing Kung Fu.
|
46_114
|
"Take it Back" contains a sample from "Nautilus" as performed by Bob James.
|
46_115
|
"Rushing Elephants" contains a sample from "Marcia in LA (Alzati spia)" as performed by Ennio
|
46_116
|
Morricone.
|
46_117
|
"Unpredictable" contains a sample from "Wailing Wail" as performed by Nicolas Flagello.
|
46_118
|
"The Heart Gently Weeps" contains an interpolation of "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" as performed
|
46_119
|
by The Beatles.
|
46_120
|
"Stick Me for My Riches" contains a sample from "Hang on Sloopy" as performed by David Porter.
|
46_121
|
"Windmill" contains samples from "Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)" as performed by Nancy Sinatra,
|
46_122
|
"Ain't No Sunshine" as performed by Lyn Collins and "Brave and Strong" as performed by Sly and the
|
46_123
|
Family Stone.
|
46_124
|
"Weak Spot" contains a sample from "Sneakin' in the Back" as performed by Tom Scott.
|
46_125
|
"Life Changes" contains samples from "The Road We Didn't Take" as performed by Freda Payne, and
|
46_126
|
"Easiest Way to Fall" as performed by Freda Payne.
|
46_127
|
Personnel
|
46_128
|
RZA – performer, strings, arranger, programming, producer, engineer, mixing
GZA – performer
|
46_129
|
Method Man – performer
Raekwon – performer
Ghostface Killah – performer
|
46_130
|
Inspectah Deck – performer
U-God – performer
Masta Killa – performer
Cappadonna – performer
|
46_131
|
Erykah Badu – vocals
George Clinton – vocals
Dexter Wiggle – vocals
Sunny Valentine – vocals
|
46_132
|
Gerald Alston – vocals
Tash Mahogany – vocals
John Frusciante – guitar
Dhani Harrison – guitar
|
46_133
|
Shavo Odadjian – bass
Gary Foote – bass
|
46_134
|
Trevor James – bass
Marco Vitali – strings
Lamont Dozier – composer
|
46_135
|
George Drakoulias – producer, engineer
Mathematics – producer
Easy Mo Bee – producer, programing
|
46_136
|
Mitchell Diggs – executive producer
Oliver Grant – executive producer
|
46_137
|
Jose Reynoso - engineer, mixing
Bob Lanzner – mastering
Steve Chahley – mixing, assistant
|
46_138
|
Sandy Brummels – creative director
Alexx Henry – photography
Jason Kpana – A&R
|
46_139
|
Tamika Layton – A&R
Jamaal Meeks - A&R
Vickie Charles – publicity
Daniel Pappas – marketing
|
46_140
|
Tatia Fox – marketing
Eva Ries – marketing
|
46_141
|
Charts
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
References
External links
8 Diagrams at Discogs
|
46_142
|
Wu-Tang Clan albums
2007 albums
Albums produced by RZA
Albums produced by Easy Mo Bee
|
46_143
|
Albums produced by George Drakoulias
Universal Records albums
|
47_0
|
Glendora is a city in the San Gabriel Valley in Los Angeles County, California, east of Los
|
47_1
|
Angeles. As of the 2020 census, the population of Glendora was 52,558.
|
47_2
|
Known as the "Pride of the Foothills", Glendora is nestled in the foothills of the San Gabriel
|
47_3
|
Mountains. Its downtown area, locally known as the Glendora Village, hosts dozens of restaurants,
|
47_4
|
cafes, shops, and boutiques along Glendora Avenue with many community events scheduled throughout
|
47_5
|
the year. It has been voted as one of the best and friendliest downtowns in the San Gabriel Valley
|
47_6
|
for the last eight years. A suburban feel, low crime rates, and a consistently high-ranking school
|
47_7
|
district has made the city an attractive choice for families in the region. Glendora was
|
47_8
|
incorporated on November 13, 1911, the 25th city to achieve incorporation in Los Angeles County.
|
47_9
|
Neighborhoods and residences in Glendora reflect the city's history and range from Queen Annes, to
|
47_10
|
Folk Victorians, early 20th-century bungalows, to ranch style homes, to mid-rise multi-family
|
47_11
|
residential complexes, to modern mansions. Glendora's most expensive neighborhoods contain many
|
47_12
|
very large, secluded, estate homes with views across the San Gabriel Valley to Downtown Los
|
47_13
|
Angeles. Glendora is also home to the Glendora Country Club, which includes a Robert Trent Jones
|
47_14
|
Sr. 18-hole golf course that has been played by many professional golfers.
|
47_15
|
Glendora is bordered by Azusa and the unincorporated community of Citrus to the west, San Dimas to
|
47_16
|
the east and south, Covina and the unincorporated community of Charter Oak to the south, and the
|
47_17
|
San Gabriel Mountains range to the north.
|
47_18
|
History
|
47_19
|
Ygnacio Palomares received the land grant Rancho San Jose from Governor Juan Bautista Alvarado in
|
47_20
|
1837. The land included the present day cities of Pomona, Claremont, La Verne, San Dimas, and
|
47_21
|
Glendora.
|
47_22
|
Like many cities in the San Gabriel Valley, Glendora was established on previously remote
|
47_23
|
agricultural land when the area became connected to the outside world upon the completion of the
|
47_24
|
Santa Fe Railway's main transcontinental line from Los Angeles to Chicago in May 1887. Located at
|
47_25
|
the foot of the San Gabriel Mountains, Glendora was started on approximately that were subdivided
|
47_26
|
and sold by George D. Whitcomb in late March 1887. On the first day of sale, 300 lots were sold.
|
47_27
|
Whitcomb was the founder of the Whitcomb Locomotive Works in Chicago and Rochelle, Illinois and had
|
47_28
|
moved to California in the early 1880s. He devised the name Glendora by combining the name of his
|
47_29
|
wife, Leadora Bennett Whitcomb, with the location of his home in a glen of the San Gabriel
|
47_30
|
Mountains. In December 1907, the development of Glendora got a boost when passenger service opened
|
47_31
|
on a new extension of the Pacific Electric Railway's Monrovia–Glendora Line which provided hourly
|
47_32
|
one-seat ride service from downtown Glendora to the Pacific Electric Building at Sixth and Main in
|
47_33
|
Downtown Los Angeles. Prior to its 1911 incorporation, Glendora's administrator officially occupied
|
47_34
|
the office of President of Glendora.
|
47_35
|
The downtown area as it appears now is the product of years of renovation and maintenance by the
|
47_36
|
city. The former opera house, movie theatre, Pacific Electric station, banks, hotels, grocery and
|
47_37
|
department stores were converted into more modern commercial buildings. The original layout can be
|
47_38
|
read about on the Downtown Glendora Historical Walk, by reading placards placed along Glendora
|
47_39
|
Avenue (previously called Michigan Avenue). The original townsite was bounded by Sierra Madre
|
47_40
|
Avenue on the north, Minnesota Avenue on the east, Ada Avenue and the railroad on the south, and
|
47_41
|
Pennsylvania Avenue on the west.
|
47_42
|
Glendora used to be home to several military academies, which have since been converted into either
|
47_43
|
churches or private school facilities. These academies included Brown Military Academy, now St.
|
47_44
|
Lucy's Priory High School and Church of the Open Door on Sierra Madre, and Harding Military
|
47_45
|
Academy, whose property is now home to North Glendora Private, a prestigious private community
|
47_46
|
adjacent to Easley Canyon atop Glendora Avenue.
|
47_47
|
From 1960 to 1978, Glendora was home to Clokey Productions which produced 85 episodes of Gumby and
|
47_48
|
65 episodes of Davey and Goliath in town. In celebration of this history, Glendora hosted the first
|
47_49
|
Gumby Fest in 2014 which brought thousands of people from around the country and Canada. In 2015
|
47_50
|
the 2nd GumbyFest was held at Citrus College over an entire weekend.
|
47_51
|
Several wildfires have affected the city in recent years, the most notable being the campfire
|
47_52
|
triggered Colby Fire, which displaced hundreds of Glendora residents. A relief concert titled
|
47_53
|
"Glendora Band Aid" was held shortly after the fire to help raise funds to assist the homeowners
|
47_54
|
who lost their homes in the fire.
|
47_55
|
Glendora has an active Chamber of Commerce, established in 1903. The mission of the Glendora
|
47_56
|
Chamber is to provide tools and resources to assist the business community in prospering and
|
47_57
|
adapting to the economic climate, while growing membership and promoting local purchasing.
|
47_58
|
Geography
|
47_59
|
The city lies in the eastern end of the San Gabriel Valley between the San Gabriel Mountains range
|
47_60
|
to the north and the South Hills to the south.
|
47_61
|
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of , of which is land and
|
47_62
|
, or 0.84%, is water.
|
47_63
|
Climate
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.