Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
And there's no skiving, even the young ones come along.
It appears on their 1983 debut album Deep Sea Skiving and was released as its second single.
Skiving is also used for the manufacturing of heat sinks for PC cooling products.
The song "Don't Call Us" appears on the album Deep Sea Skiving retitled as "Boy Trouble".
In February 1983, UK girl group Bananarama released the song as a single off their album Deep Sea Skiving.
The group continued their association with producers Jolley & Swain (who had produced some tracks on their debut album, Deep Sea Skiving).
The 1989 World Tour supported four studio albums, Deep Sea Skiving, Bananarama, True Confessions, and Wow!
Skiving is used to scrape off a film from a solid core (Sometimes used to make PTFE Thread seal tape)
Cook helped the trio record their debut single, "Aie a Mwana", and acted as a producer on their 1982 debut album Deep Sea Skiving.
"Young at Heart" is a pop song first recorded in the 1980s by the British female singing trio Bananarama and appeared on their debut album Deep Sea Skiving in 1983.
Originally released as a stand-alone single, "Aie a Mwana" was eventually added to the group's debut album Deep Sea Skiving in a remixed and more polished version two years later.
A PC cooler created with the use of skiving has the benefit that the heat sink base and the heat sink fins are created from one piece of material (copper or aluminum).
The popularity of the jingle prompted London Records to release the song on a 7" single and add the song to the Japanese version of Bananarama's debut album Deep Sea Skiving.
And That's Not All... is a Bananarama videos compilation from 1984, which features the music videos that were to the singles from the Deep Sea Skiving and Bananarama albums.
(...) Everything is certain from the outset: incentives from anonymous financial backers, the deed (always from behind), sloppy investigation, lazy excuses, a few phrases, pitiful skiving, lenient punishments, suspension of sentences, privileges - "Carry on!"
The latter was co-written with Siobhan Fahey of Bananarama (originally recorded on the Bananarama album Deep Sea Skiving) and violinist Bobby Valentino, and made it to number 8 in the UK Singles Chart on its original release in 1984.