6-813: [REDACTED] Look up hup in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Hup or HUP may refer to: Art and music [ edit ] Hup (album) , a 1989 album by The Wonder Stuff " Hüp ", a single by Turkish singer Tarkan Hup (comics) , a series of four comics published by Last Gasp from 1986–1992 by R. Crumb Organizations [ edit ] Hanoi University of Pharmacy , in Vietnam Harvard University Press , in Cambridge, Massachusetts Howard University Press , in Washington, D.C. Hospital of
12-483: A US Navy utility helicopter SIGHUP , a Unix signal Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Hup . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hup&oldid=1167330054 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
18-465: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Hup (album) Hup is the second album by English alternative rock band The Wonder Stuff , released in 1989. "Don't Let Me Down, Gently" and "Golden Green" were both released as singles from the album, reaching number 19 and number 33 respectively in the UK Singles Chart . "Piece of Sky"
24-737: The University of Pennsylvania , in Philadelphia Other uses [ edit ] Hup people , an Amazonian indigenous people in Brazil and Colombia Hup language a language of Brazil and Colombia hup, the ISO 639 code for the Hupa language of California, United States Heisenberg's uncertainty principle Hungarian Unix Portal Humphrey Park railway station , in England HUP Retriever ,
30-598: Was originally much slower and played on acoustic guitar with harmonica . One version featured references to Rick Astley . The slower version was released on the Welcome to the Cheap Seats EP. "Unfaithful" is the folksy ballad on the album, and does not feature percussion, only strings and acoustic guitar. "Golden Green" was originally a purely electric guitar and percussion song which had Martin Bell's fiddle and banjo added. There
36-463: Was originally planned to be the next single after "Golden Green", but this plan was abandoned when Rob Jones left the band in December 1989. The promotional video originally filmed for "Piece of Sky" was re-worked (notably with all shots of Rob Jones being removed) and ultimately used for their next single, "Circlesquare", which was written on the same day as "Can't Shape Up"; May 9, 1989. "Can't Shape Up"
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