

I don't know if it's the definitive song about life on the road, and I don't even care. It's a real song about the rock & roll lifestyle, our rock & roll lifestyle. "It's not one of those stupid, generic ‘I love rock & roll songs’ that some bands do. Lead guitarist Joe Perry says he's always been fond of "No More No More" because of songwriting partner Steven Tyler's lyrics. With verses such as "Holiday Inns, lock the door with a chain/You love it then you hate it but to me they're all the same," the hard rocking "No More No More" speaks with great detail about life on the rock & roll road. Steven Tyler - vocals, harmonica, keyboards, percussion There are dozens of descendants altogether.Recorded: February 1975 at the Record Plant in New York City currently treats AY.4.2 as a separate variant to the rest of Delta, the CDC still lists all AY lineages under the same "Delta" umbrella.ĪY.4.2 is only one sublineage of the Delta variant. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ( CDC), acknowledged that the variant had been identified in the country in a White House COVID-19 press briefing on October 20, adding that "there is no evidence that the sub-lineage AY.4.2 impacts the effectiveness of our current vaccines or therapeutics." officials do not appear to have been concerned by AY.4.2 recently. These mutations are called Y145H and A222V, and little is known about them, experts have previously told Newsweek. The variant is identified by two mutations in its spike genome-the part of the virus used to enter human cells. On Friday, AY.4.2 was present in 38 countries around the world including the U.S. The variant is not reported to be spreading anywhere near as fast anywhere else in the world, including in the U.S., where Outbreak.Info reports only 34 cases from 13 states.

The vast majority of these cases, 35,225, were in the U.K. government as a variant under investigation, or VUI, as opposed to a variant of concern.Īccording to the COVID-19 variant tracking tool Outbreak.Info, which collects sequencing data from the viral genome database GISAID, there were a total of 37,249 cases of AY.4.2 worldwide as of November 12.

The report notes that AY.4.2 is still classed by the U.K. In fact, according to preliminary results from live virus neutralization studies mentioned in the report, Delta AY.4.2 might be even more easily neutralized by vaccines. Health Security Agency, also shows, based on the results of a study between June 21 and October 29, vaccine effectiveness against AY.4.2 "is very similar" to that seen in other types of Delta. The new report, a technical briefing from the U.K.
