Classifier Instance:

Anchor text: Warpaint Live
Target Entity: Warpaint_Live
Preceding Context: In a marketing stunt, Columbia Records immediately released five singles at once, and the band was perceived as being over-hyped. This was during a period in which mainstream record labels were giving previously unheard-of levels of promotion to what was then considered countercultural music genres. Nonetheless, the record was critically acclaimed and fairly successful commercially, with The Move covering the album's "Hey Grandma" (a Miller-Stevenson composition) on their eponymous first album. More recently, "Hey Grandma" was included in the soundtrack to the 2005 Sean Penn-Nicole Kidman film, The Interpreter, as well as being covered in 2009 by the Black Crowes, on
Succeeding Context: . Spence's "Omaha" was the only one of the five singles to chart, reaching number 88 in 1967. Miller-Stevenson's "8:05" became a country rock standard (covered by Robert Plant, , and others).
Paragraph Title: null
Source Page: Moby Grape

Ground Truth Types:

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|  |  |---wordnet_instrumentality_103575240
|  |  |  |---wordnet_medium_106254669
|  |  |  |  |---wordnet_album_106591815

Predicted Types:

TypeConfidenceDecision
wordnet_artifact_100021939-0.08105058902614247 0
wordnet_event_100029378-1.263880588514452 0
wordnet_organization_108008335-1.0583263585706482 0
wordnet_person_100007846-1.9694858155866126 0
yagoGeoEntity-2.1386638036129213 0
|---wordnet_entity_100001740
|  |---wordnet_artifact_100021939
|  |---wordnet_event_100029378
|  |---wordnet_organization_108008335
|  |---wordnet_person_100007846
|  |---yagoGeoEntity