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Free Radicals is an American band from Houston, Texas, that combines elements of several genres: jazz, funk, ska, reggae, hip-hop, African, and Indian music. History [ edit ] The Free Radicals live band includes six or seven members. [3]
- Jazz, funk, ska, reggae, klezmer, hip hop, world
- Pete Sullivan, Nick Cooper, Al Bear, Jacob Breier, Chris Valero, Zack Hamburg, Jason Jackson, Muhammad Jafari, Jon Durbin, Nick Gonzalez, Tavian Morgan
- 1996–present
- Houston, Texas, U.S.
Plot. "Free Radicals" is the story of a recently widowed woman named Nita. Her husband, Rich, had just died while on his way to the hardware store. Rich's death came as a surprise to Nita. She had been diagnosed with cancer a year before, and they were expecting her to die before him, especially because Rich had just been given a good bill of ...
- United States
- 2009
- English
- Alfred A. Knopf New Yorker
The Free Radicals. Free Radicals' helter-skelter hybrid is a vast extension of drummer/producer Nick Cooper's previous work in the ska/funk/rock outfit Sprawl and the free-form jazz collective Necessary Tension. The Radicals'…. Read Full Biography.
Radical (chemistry) The hydroxyl radical, Lewis structure shown, contains one unpaired electron. In chemistry, a radical, also known as a free radical, is an atom, molecule, or ion that has at least one unpaired valence electron. [1] [2] With some exceptions, these unpaired electrons make radicals highly chemically reactive.
Jul 15, 2014 · Free radicals and other oxidants have gained importance in the field of biology due to their central role in various physiological conditions as well as their implication in a diverse range of diseases. The free radicals, both the reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS), are derived from both endogenous sources ...
- Alugoju Phaniendra, Dinesh Babu Jestadi, Latha Periyasamy
- 10.1007/s12291-014-0446-0
- 2015
- 2015/01
Radical of an integer, in number theory, the product of the primes which divide an integer. Radical of a Lie algebra, a concept in Lie theory. Nilradical of a Lie algebra, a nilpotent ideal which is as large as possible. Left (or right) radical of a bilinear form, the subspace of all vectors left (or right) orthogonal to every vector.
Used with permission. One day back in the seventies, I was browsing through Walter B. Rideout's The Radical Novel in the United States, 1900-1954 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1956). Many of the authors discussed were then unknown to me: Robert Cantwell, George Allan England, Josephine Herbst, to name a few, but I'd heard of Howard Fast ...