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Possible Answers:
ASAP.
Last seen on: Daily Boston Globe Crossword Sunday, 24 December 2023
Random information on the term “Chop-chop”:
Chop Chop is an electropop band out of Los Angeles, California, founded in Boston, Massachusetts, and is on the Archenemy Record Company, home to such acts as Freezepop, Lifestyle, The Texas Governor, Rockets Burst from the Streetlamps, and Karacter.
The band was originally a trio centered on Catherine Cavanagh. The band’s debut, self-titled album was recorded in Cavanagh’s attic apartment, with Cavanaghcomposing, arranging, playing guitars, drum machines, keyboards, and bass. The album also includes rhythms based on the sounds of a freight train moving and stopping. The album mixed guitar pop with electronics, and gained comparisons with artists such as Ladytron, with one reviewer describing it as “a truly inspired affair, raw in its approach and pure in its intent, a must-have for any fan of indie music with a distinct personality”. PopMatters called the album “melodic, quirky and highly likeable” in one review but “a project that should’ve stayed in the bedroom” in another.
Random information on the term “ASAP”:
A.S.a.P. were a rock band formed by guitarist and vocalist Adrian Smith of Iron Maiden. A.S.a.P. released an album in 1989 entitled Silver and Gold. A.S.a.P. stands for “Adrian Smith and Project”, and the full name of the band is incorporated within the band logo, with each word written in tiny font underneath the corresponding letter in the abbreviation.
Adrian Smith formed the band in 1989 when Iron Maiden was taking a year break after spending almost a year on the road for the Seventh Son of a Seventh Son album tour in 1988. The band had its origin in Urchin, a band Smith fronted in the 1970s. Andy Barnett, Dave Colwell and Richard Young played with Smith in various incarnations of Urchin, which was disbanded in 1981 when Smith joined Iron Maiden.
Further foundations for the band were laid out in late 1985 when Iron Maiden were taking a break after their massive world tour in support of their album Powerslave. Bored with the lull in band’s activity as they prepared to record a new album, Adrian Smith and Nicko McBrain started playing on their own to pass the time, and they soon formed a full band which included Colwell and Barnett. Along with some other musicians they knew, they went to play a one-off gig at London’s Marquee Club in 1986, under the name of “The Entire Population of Hackney”. At the show, the band performed mostly original material, including the songs “Silver and Gold” (which would later become the title track of their only album, “Fighting Man”, “School Days” and “When She’s Gone” (all of which would later be recorded by A.S.a.P. and released as B-sides to its singles) at the show, as well as three songs that would later be recorded by Iron Maiden (“Juanita”, “Reach Out” and “That Girl”).