Sunday, 24 August 2008

Mp3 music: Throbbing Gristle






Throbbing Gristle
   

Artist: Throbbing Gristle: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Industrial
Experimental
ROck: Alternative

   







Throbbing Gristle's discography:


Mutant Throbbing Gristle
   

 Mutant Throbbing Gristle

   Year: 2004   

Tracks: 8
The First Annual Report Of
   

 The First Annual Report Of

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 6
Kreeme Horn
   

 Kreeme Horn

   Year: 1997   

Tracks: 5
Giftgas
   

 Giftgas

   Year: 1995   

Tracks: 7
Funk Beyond Jazz
   

 Funk Beyond Jazz

   Year: 1993   

Tracks: 9
Heathen Earth
   

 Heathen Earth

   Year: 1991   

Tracks: 10
March 18
   

 March 18

   Year: 1986   

Tracks: 1
Rafters / Psychic Rally
   

 Rafters / Psychic Rally

   Year: 1982   

Tracks: 11
Mission of Dead Souls: the Last Live Performance ofTG
   

 Mission of Dead Souls: the Last Live Performance ofTG

   Year: 1981   

Tracks: 12
In The Shadow Of The Sun
   

 In The Shadow Of The Sun

   Year: 1980   

Tracks: 1
D.O.A.  The Third And Final Report
   

 D.O.A. The Third And Final Report

   Year: 1978   

Tracks: 15
20 Jazz Funk Greats
   

 20 Jazz Funk Greats

   Year: 1978   

Tracks: 13
Blood Pressure
   

 Blood Pressure

   Year: 1975   

Tracks: 7






Abrasive, fast-growing, and incompatible, Britain's Throbbing Gristle pioneered industrial music; exploring dying, mutilation, fascism, and abjection amid a thundery blare of mechanical noise, tape loops, extremist anti-melodies, and bludgeoning beat generation, the group's cultural terrorist act -- the "wreckers of civilisation," one tabloid called them -- raised the stake of aesthetic opposition to new high, combating all notions of commerciality and penny-pinching taste with a madman fervour.


Formed in London in the fall of 1975, Throbbing Gristle consisted of vocalist/ringleader Genesis P-Orridge, his then-lover, guitarist Cosey Fanni Tutti, tape recording manipulator Peter "Cheesy" Christopherson, and keyboardist Chris Carter. A performance graphics troupe as much as a isthmus, their early live shows -- each starting with a lick clock and running just 60 minutes ahead the power to the point was cut -- threatened obscenity torah; during their notorious premier gig, P-Orridge even mounted an art present consisting only of put-upon tampons and dirty diapers.


Upon forming their own label, Industrial, the radical issued their introductory spill, The Best of Throbbing Gristle, Vol. 2, in 1976. A full-length debut, The Second Annual Report of Throbbing Gristle, followed in 1977, in a pressure of only five hundred copies; obeisance to winnow take, the record was afterward reissued -- cut from a master tape played backward. The 1977 underground reach "United" marked a bantam footstep toward availableness, thanks to the inclusion of a discernable round. Typically, when the track reappeared on 1978's D.O.A: The Third and Final Report, it was sped up to final all of 17 seconds; no less provocative was "Ground beef Lady" (elysian by the taradiddle of a burn-unit dupe) or "Death Threats" (a compilation of homicidal messages left hand on the group's respondent machine).


20 Jazz Funk Greats, a harsh electro-pop field clarence Shepard Day Jr., followed a year after, and after 1980's live-in-the-studio Heathen Earth, Throbbing Gristle called it quits. P-Orridge and Christopherson presently formed Psychic TV (though Christopherson split in one case more to form Coil), spell the leftover twosome continued on as Chris & Cosey. As Throbbing Gristle's influence big, a on the face of it sempiternal series of posthumous releases followed, to the highest degree of them taken from alive dates; among the more than far-famed were 1981's 24 Hours of Throbbing Gristle, 1983's Once Upon a Time (Live at the Lyceum), 1998's Dimensia in Excelsis, 2001's The First Annual Report of Throbbing Gristle, and 2004's Mutant TG and TG+. Throbbing Gristle reunited during the early 2000s for performances, and released Parting Two: Endless Not, their humble album in 25 old age, in 2007.





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Thursday, 14 August 2008

John Lennon's killer Mark denied parole

New York (ANI): John Lennon's killer has been denied parole for a fifth time because of the premeditated nature of his cleanup of the former Beatle on Dec. 8, 1980. A two-member Parole Board panel denied Mark Chapman's plea to be let go, indicating that he had actually planned to kill the legendary musician.

In its decision, the panel cited that Chapman made two Hawaii trips for killing Lennon. And it was in his second see that he killed Lennon, by firing five shots at the singer as he returned home from a recording session and fatally striking him little Joe times. "Your conduct hence precipitated a horrendously tragic event which has impacted many individuals," The New York Daily News quoted the panel, as committal to writing in its decision.



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Wednesday, 6 August 2008

Newly discovered Beatles tape sells for $23,000

A mag tape recording of The Beatles that was recently observed by a man in his father's Liverpool dome has sold for $23,000, it was announced today (August 5).


The tape recording, which features John Lennon and Paul McCartney bursting into fits of giggles as they try to finish 'I'll Follow the Sun', was sold to an cyberspace bidder by Cameo Auctioneers.


The half-hour, reel-to-reel tape was recorded in 1964 and also includes versions of 'I Feel Fine,' 'I'm a Loser' and 'Don't Put Me Down Like This', reports the Associated Press.

--By our Los Angeles staff.
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