Bush, Moby and Bree Sharp will perform Wednesday at the Show Me Center beginning at 7 p.m. in the MTV Campus Invasion.
The British pop band Bush broke onto the music scene in 1993 with the album "Sixteen Stone," which produced the singles "Everything Zen," "Machinehead" and "Glycerine." The second album, "Razorblade Suitcase," sold more than 5 million albums with fewer singles.
"Mouth," a single issued off their remix recording "Deconstructed" in 1997, was one of Bush's biggest hits and appeared on the soundtrack of "An American Werewolf in Paris."
Bush's newest CD is titled "The Science of Things."
Moby's music sometimes is called techno-dance but he is an eclectic musician and remixer who sometimes uses field recordings of American folk music in his works.
He was born Richard Melville Hall 34 years ago. As an infant, was nicknamed in honor of his illustrious literary great-great-grand uncle, to whom his middle name refers.
Moby is a vegan who loves the teachings of Christ, is an egalitarian intellectual, and has never heard a Garth Brooks record.
His most current release, "Play," has been praised by critics and was nominated for two Grammies.
Bree Sharp is a singer-songwriter whose debut CD, " A Cheap and Evil Girl," produced the single "David Duchovny," a crush song written to the star of "X-Files."
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