Well tough darts for her. If you are in a band called Blondie and you’re the front-woman and you bleach your hair, wth do you expect?
The Skillet Lickers – 1926
Oops. The Skillet Lickers – 1926.
I noticed Butthole Surfers.
Hey, I was a cook at The Lighthouse Tavern here in my town many years ago Nowadays it’s just called The Lighthouse, and it’s no longer a tavern - it’s a Christian place that feeds and ministers to the homeless and other needy people.
Let’s see … I honestly thought “Ben Folds Five” was a “sentence name”, like “Frankie Goes to Hollywood”. I thought, “what does Ben fold five of?” Why oh why did he leave off the “The”?
I decided when I was a teenager, after hearing all those horror stories about “satanic” bands in the '80s, that it was a bad idea to name your band with a single, four-letter word. Four-letter names are too easy to turn into evil acronyms:
KISS: Knights (or Kids) In Satan’s Service
RUSH: ReUnite Satan’s House
And why were there only three of them?
Getting slightly more modern, how about Enoch Light and the Light Brigade? Lesw Brown and His Band of Renown? Woody Herman’s Thundering Herd? (in all three incarnations)
Just to add onto Marley 23’s answer: I came across the term “radio head” when reading about avionics a few years ago. Apparently, it’s the part with all the buttons and dials that is installed in aircraft cockpits to allow the pilot to operate the radio. The rest of the (often heavy) radio components are sometimes installed in other parts of the plane and are linked to the radio head by wires. I assume separating the components helps with weight/balance and cooling issues, and for easier access for repairs. I’m not a mechanic, though.
Here’s a sample link to an article about radio heads.
In case you’re not attempting a whoosh…
They originally were Ben Folds Three, for about four seconds. Folds decided that Ben Folds Five sounded better and that’s the name they went with.
Same thing with guitar amps. The “amp head” has all the knobs and contains all the electronic components, and is sometimes separate from the “cabinet”, which is where the speakers are.
No love for Echo and the Bunnymen?