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more... Hook 'N Sling - The Best Thing (TV Rock Mix).mp3
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Hook 'N Sling - The Best Thing (TV Rock Mix)
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Video results for: the best thing tv rock mixMore results from video
MR BUNGLE on CAPITAL CHAOS TV 1999
http://www.capitalchaos.net MR BUNGLE @ Club Xtreme - Cameron Park, CA 1999 on their (More) http://www.capitalchaos.net MR BUNGLE @ Club Xtreme - Cameron Park, CA 1999 on their "California" tour, also on the bill were DILLINGER ESCAPE PLAN..Mr. Bungle was an influential avant-progressive experimental rock group formed in Northern California in 1985. Created while the members were still in high school and named after a children's educational film, they released four demo tapes in the mid to late 1980s, before being signed to Warner Bros. Records, who subsequently released three full-length studio albums between 1991 and 1999. Mr. Bungle have not been active since touring in 2000 to support their last album, and a recent media interview has confirmed the group is now disbanded.[1] While early in their career Mr. Bungle went through several line up changes, the bands most long serving members were vocalist Mike Patton, guitarist Trey Spruance, bassist Trevor Dunn, drummer Danny Heifetz, and Clinton "Bär" McKinnon on saxophone and other woodwind instruments. Mr. Bungle were known for their distinctive musical traits, often blending and cycling through several musical genres within the course of a single song and fusing radically different musical styles together. Many of their songs had a non-conventional structure and utilized a wide array of instruments and samples. Distinguished by their live shows, which often featured members dressing up and an array of unlikely cover songs, their style has influenced many recent funk metal bands. During the course of their career the band also had an ongoing feud with Red Hot Chili Peppers frontman Anthony Kiedis, which escalated in the late 90s with Kiedis having Mr. Bungle removed from a number of large music festivals in Europe and Australasia where the Chili Peppers were headlining. Although signed to a major record label, Mr. Bungle never had significant commercial success and only released one music video. They did, however, gain a reasonable amount of worldwide popularity due to a large cult following. Mr. Bungle formed in 1985 in Eureka, California while the members were still in high school; initially consisting of Trevor Dunn, Mike Patton, Trey Spruance, Theo Lengyel, and Jed Watts. Watts was subsequently replaced by Hans Wagner, and he by Danny Heifetz, while Clinton "Bär" McKinnon joined in 1989.[2] The band's name was taken from a children's educational film devised to teach children good manners and hygiene, which was featured in a Pee Wee Herman HBO special in the early '80s. A puppet named Mr. Bungle was the main character, used to represent the kind of person no clean, polite child would wish to be. In 1989 Faith No More bassist Billy Gould told Patton about a pornographic video called Sharon's Sex Party, which also starred a character known as Mr. Bungle.[2] Soon after forming, the band's first demo, The Raging Wrath of the Easter Bunny, was recorded during Easter of 1986. It generally featured a fast, low-fi, death metal style, though it also utilized a trainwhistle, a saxophone, bongos, and a kazoo. The Raging Wrath of the Easter Bunny was followed by the demo Bowel of Chiley in 1987; this recording featured a completely different style incorporating the sounds of ska, swing, and funk. In 1988 Mr. Bungle released their third demo, Goddammit I Love America!, which was musically similar to Bowel of Chiley. Their final demo tape was OU818, released in 1989; this recording was the first to feature tenor sax player Clinton "Bär" McKinnon and drummer Danny Heifetz. OU818 combined songs from the earlier demos along with some new tracks having a heavier overall sound than the previous releases.[3][4] In 1989 Mike Patton landed the lead vocalist slot with San Francisco's Faith No More, getting the job after Jim Martin of Faith No More heard him on a Mr. Bungle demo.[5] Patton decided not to break up Mr. Bungle, and continued to be a member of both bands simultaneously. Having established a strong following in Northern California, Mr. Bungle was signed to Warner Bros., who released their self-titled debut in 1991. Their debut, Mr. Bungle, was recorded a year after Mike Patton was recruited into Faith No More and was produced by jazz experimentalist John Zorn. Released on August 13, 1991 the album contained several new songs but overall the sound was in a similar style as OU818. The record mixed metal, funk, ska, carnival music, and free jazz, but was normally described as "funk metal" by music critics.[3] The content is, however, very hard to pin down using specific genres, and the structure and musical style of any single track frequently changes dramatically.[6] Critic Steve Huey wrote in All Music Guide "Mr. Bungle is a dizzying, disconcerting, schizophrenic tour through just about any rock style the group can think of, hopping from genre to genre without any apparent rhyme or reason, and sometimes doing so several times in the same song."[7] The album featured numerous samples, including Kentucky Fried Chicken commercial outtakes, items from the videogames "Super Mario Bros", "Smash TV", and "RBI Baseball", the movies Blue Velvet and Sharon's Sex Party, and the pinball games "Cyclone," "Earthshaker," and "Haunted House." Almost all the members went by obscure aliases in the album credits. To promote the album in some stores, a Mr. Bungle bubble bath was given away with copies of the record sold.[2] The first track on the self-titled recording was originally called "Travolta"(sample (help·info)); however, the actor John Travolta took issue with this title and threatened legal action. With the encouragement of Warner Bros. the song name was changed and on later pressings of the album was called "Quote Unquote", which is also the title of an unauthorized John Travolta biography by Bob McCabe.[2] They created a video for "Travolta" and submitted it to MTV. However, the station refused to air the video because of images of bodies dangling on meat hooks.[6] The album sold well despite MTV refusing to air their video and a lack of radio airplay. It received mostly positive reviews with Journalist Bill Pahnelas calling it "an incredible musical tour de force, and hands down the best alternative rock record of the year so far".[8] Following the release of the album the band toured North America successfully building a large and loyal cult following. Their popularity was partly due to unique stage shows where they often performed with masks to hide their identities and played unlikely covers during their set such as Billy Squier's "The Stroke," "The Star Wars Theme", and John Sebastian's "Welcome Back". Due to artwork delays and the band members' many side-projects, it was another 4 years before Disco Volante was released in October 1995.[3] This, their second major release, has a completely different tone and style to earlier Mr. Bungle recordings.[9] While the self-titled album was described as "funk metal", with Disco Volante this was replaced with the label "avant-garde" or "experimental."[6] The music was complex and unpredictable with the band continuing with their extreme shifts of musical style during songs. Some the tracks were in foreign languages and would radically change genres mid-song, arguably making it Mr. Bungle's most difficult and inaccessible release.[6] Featuring lyrics about death, suicide, and child abuse,[ along with plodding death metal, deranged children's songs, and a Middle Eastern techno number, music critic Greg Prato described the album as having "a totally original and new musical style that sounds like nothing that currently exists". Not all critics were impressed with the album, with The Washington Post describing it as "an album of cheesy synthesizers, mangled disco beats, virtuosic playing and juvenile noises", calling it "self-indulgent" and adding that "Mr. Bungle musicians like to show off their classical, jazz and world-beat influences in fast, difficult passages which are technically impressive but never seem to go anywhere". Disco Volante included influences from contemporary classical music, avant-garde jazz, electronic music pioneer Pierre Henry, Edgar Allan Poe, John Zorn, Frank Zappa, Penderecki, and European film music of the 1960s and 1970s such as those composed by Ennio Morricone and Peter Thomas. The album notes also contained an invitation to participate in an "unusual scam" - if $2 was sent to the bands address, participants would receive additional artwork, lyrics to the songs "Ma Meeshka Mow Skwoz" and "Chemical Marriage", and some stickers. Mr. Bungle supported this record with extensive tours through the United States, Europe, and Australia during '95 and '96, with the tours successfully widening the groups fan base. In 1996 Theo Lengyel retired as Bungle's original sax player and keyboardist due to creative differences. After another 4 year break between albums, the band's third album, California, was released on July 13 1999.[16] California is said to be Mr. Bungles most accessible[17][18] and while the genre shifts are still present, they are less frequent, with succinct song formats giving the album a less chaotic and more stable feel.[19] This resulted in what All Music Guide described as "their most concise album to date; and while the song structures are far from traditional, they're edging more in that direction and that greatly helps the listener in making sense of the often random-sounding juxtapositions of musical genres".[20] California continues the bands musical, lyrical, and thematic experimentation, although it has a much lighter tone.[21] On the different style of this album, Mike Patton explained that to the band "the record is pop-y", before adding "but to some fucking No Doubt fan in Ohio, they're not going to swallow that."[22] The album was generally well received with music critic Robert Everett-Green stating "The band's newest and greatest album does not reveal itself quickly, but once the bug bites, there is no cure. The best disc of the year, by a length."[23] Additionally, the recording process for California became much more complex. The group chose to record the disc on analog rather than digitally[24] and some songs required several 24-track machines while utilizing more than 50 analog tracks.[19] As a result each song contains detailed layers of original samples, keyboards, percussion, and melodies.[6] Mr Bungle live in 1999 Mr Bungle live in 1999 The album displays numerous influences, including exotica, Burt Bacharach, and The Beach Boys, while blending lounge, pop, jazz, funk, thrash-metal, Hawaiian, Middle Eastern, kecak, and avant-garde soundscapes.[17][18][21][25][20] The band did 5 tours to support this record. For the most part, perhaps with the exception of the Sno-Core 2000 tour where they were often booed, the band did have success attracting an audience. Following the 2000 tour the band again went on hiatus. Rumors circulated that the band had dissolved, with some members stating that the band was "over" while others insisted it was just "in limbo".[3] In 2003 Patton alluded to the fact that the band would probably not record any more albums stating "I think it is over. The guys are spread all over the world and we don't talk to each other. I have not spoken to a couple of the guys since the last tour, years ago."[28] While no official break-up announcement ever materialized, a 2004 Rolling Stone interview with Patton confirmed Mr. Bungle had disbanded with him revealing "We could have probably squeezed out a couple more records but the collective personality of this group became so dysfunctional, this band was poisoned by one person's petty jealousy and insecurity, and it led us to a slow, unnatural death. And I'm at peace with that, because I know I tried all I could."[1] When asked about a possible reunion, Mike Patton said, "It could happen, but I won't be singing. Some bridges have definitely been burned. It was a fun time and sometimes you just have to move on. I've got a lot on my plate now."[29] Trevor Dunn adds, on his website, "Bungle is dead and I'm happy about it" and that "the members of Mr. Bungle will never work together as such again".[30] Spruance,[31] Heifetz, and McKinnon[32] have been more optimistic; to quote Spruance, in response to the standard 'Mr. Bungle regrouping' question: "I hope so because that band could take over the fucking world if it wanted to."[31] After the dissolution of Mr. Bungle the members have gone on to numerous different projects. Mike Patton co-founded the record label Ipecac Recordings[33] and is involved with several other ventures, most notably the bands Fantômas,[34] Tomahawk,[35] and Peeping Tom.[36] He also acted in the motion picture Firecracker.[37] Trey Spruance is involved with various bands, including Secret Chiefs 3 and Faxed Head. Trevor Dunn joined Patton in Fantômas as well as forming his own jazz band, Trevor Dunn's Trio Convulsant; he also occasionally played bass with Secret Chiefs 3.[6][38] Danny Heifetz's projects included playing with Secret Chiefs 3 and in a country/punk band called Dieselhed;[6] he now resides in Sydney, Australia, and plays in outfits such as The Tango Saloon and The Fantastic Terrific Munkle.[39][40] Clinton McKinnon also played with Secret Chiefs 3; he now lives in Melbourne, Australia, and plays with The Ribbon Device. Mr. Bungle were generally regarded as an experimental rock or avant-progressive rock group. All Music described Mr. Bungles music as a "unique mix of the experimental, the abstract, and the absurd",[4] while The Seattle Times characterized their music as "harsh, grating, unstructured, blasting, squeaky, speedy, slow, eerie and strangely compelling".[10] Distinctive features of the music were the utilization of numerous different instruments, unique vocals, and the use of unpredictable song formats and a number of different musical genres. Along with the normal instruments of a rock band, Mr. Bungle would also incorporate additions such as bongos, woodblocks, tenor sax, Jews harp, xylophone, glockenspeil, clarinet, piano, and organ.[14] Journalist John Serba commented that the instrumentation "sounded kind of like drunken jazz punctuated with Italian accordions and the occasional Bavarian march, giant power chord, or feedback noise thrown in"[42] Overlaying this was Mike Patton's vocals, who often used death metal growls, crooning, screeching, gurgling, or simply whispering. The arrangement of their songs was also unique, normally displaying a total lack of any structured song format and rotating through different genres ranging from slow melodies to thrash-metal.[19] Critic Patrick Macdonald commented "In the middle of hard-to-follow, indecipherable noise, a relatively normal, funky jazz organ solo will suddenly drift in, it doesn't seem to fit but you can't stop listening to it".[10] Similarly New York Times journalist Jon Pareles described it as music that "leaps from tempo to tempo, key to key, style to style, all without warning".[43] Some of the notable genres they utilized include heavy metal,[20] funk,[20] free jazz,[20] surf rock,[17] punk,[43] klezmer music,[43] ska,[6] kecak,[25] avant-jazz,[21] folk music,[44] pop,[20] doo-wop,[44] funk metal,[25] electronica,[45] swing music,[20] space age pop,[20] death metal,[20][44] rockabilly,[20][25] bossa nova,[20] progressive rock,[18] country and western,[20] circus music [20] and even video game and cartoon music.[25] Critic Greg Prato stated they "may be the most talented rock instrumentalists today, as they skip musical genres effortlessly, while Mike Patton illustrates why many consider him to be the best singer in rock".[11] Mr. Bungle's style has influenced many recent funk and metal chart-toppers, most notably Korn, whose guitarists utilize what they've dubbed the "Mr. Bungle chord".[1] Brandon Boyd of Incubus also cited Mr. Bungle as an influence.[46] Although, Patton has stated that he considers it an insult when people cite him as a forefather of Korn and Limp Bizkit, stating "I feel no responsibility for that, it's their mothers' fault, not mine." Mr. Bungle were well-known for their stage shows, where all of the band members would dress up in outrageous costumes and masks, often wearing a uniform of mechanic's jumpsuits along with masks such as Madonna, Nixon, Darth Vader, an executioner's hood, or plastic clown or gimp masks.[13] Bassist Trevor Dunn explained that initially the reason for the masks and dressing up was to assure anonymity.[48] The shows for the California tours, while still involving various members in costumes, were largely devoid of the trademark masks and outfits due to the increased demands of the music.[19][49] Often the theme was related to California with palm tree props and the band members wearing beach party outfits including Hawaiian shirts and khaki pants.[19][50] Occasionally, the band would simply appear in black suits with white dress shirts or dress up in chef costumes, cowboy suits, or as the Village People.[42][51] Throughout their career Mr. Bungle also performed numerous covers in their live shows, ranging from tiny snippets to whole songs. The covers were by a wide variety of artists and genres encompassing movie scores by Ennio Morricone, Henry Mancini, and John Williams, pop songs by Elton John and Jennifer Lopez, hip hop by Public Enemy and Ol' Dirty Bastard, to punk and metal songs by the Dead Kennedys, Metallica, and Slayer.Mr. Bungle is known to have had a bad relationship with the Red Hot Chili Peppers' frontman Anthony Kiedis.[2] The feud began when Kiedis saw singer Mike Patton performing with Faith No More and accused him of imitating his style. Stating "Yeah I watch that 'Epic' video, and I see him jumping up and down, rapping, and it looked like I was looking in the mirror. The thing is, I had no problem with him personally. I mean, I love 'The Real Thing,' and I liked his vocals on that record. I mean, when I heard the record I noticed subtle similarities, but when I saw that video it was like, 'Wait a second here, what the fuck?".[2] Mike Patton and Mr. Bungle took offense to Kiedis' comment, sarcastically threatening Kiedis in the press. In the early nineties, Patton met with Kiedis; the two were polite to each other and the feud seemed to have ended.[2] However, in 1999 Mr. Bungle's album California was scheduled to be released on June 8, but their label, Warner Bros. Records, pushed it back so as not to coincide with the Red Hot Chili Peppers similarly titled album, Californication, which was to be released on the same day. This appeared to reignite the old feud with Kiedis having Mr. Bungle removed from a series of summer festivals in Europe; as the headlining act at the festivals The Chili Peppers had final word on the bands that would appear.[2][28] Patton stated "Our agent was in the process of booking these festivals, and it was becoming apparent that we'd landed some pretty good ones—one in France, another one in Holland, some big-name festivals. Turns out someone's holding a grudge! We were booted off several bills, including a really big festival in Australia, specifically because Anthony Kiedis did not want us on the bill. He threatened to pull the Chili Peppers if Mr. Bungle was on the bill. Now, rationalize that one! That's so fucking pathetic! I mean, this guy's selling a million records! We are not even a speck of dust on this guy's ass! What's the fucking problem?"[52] Trey Spruance added "We were booked, months in advance, to do eleven festival dates in Europe. Come Summer, we get a call from the three biggest of those festivals, all of them the same day, saying that we can't play, because the headlining band retains the right to hire and fire whomever they wish. We found out it was the Red Hot Chili Peppers, so our manager called their manager to find out what the hell was going on, and their manager was very apologetic, and said, 'We're really sorry, we want you to know this doesn't reflect the management's position, or the band's for that matter, it's Anthony Kiedis who wants this.'"[53] As a result, Mr. Bungle parodied the Red Hot Chili Peppers in Detroit, Michigan on Halloween of 1999. Patton introduced each Mr. Bungle band member with the name of one of the Red Hot Chili Peppers before covering the songs Give It Away, Around The World, Under the Bridge and Scar Tissue, with Patton deliberately using incorrect lyrics. Mr. Bungle also satirized many of the mannerisms of the band, mocking their frequent heroin injections and on-stage antics. Kiedis responded by having them removed from the 2000 Big Day Out festival in Australia and New Zealand,[2][28] stating "I would not have given two fucks if they played with us there, but after I heard about some Halloween show where they mocked us and read another interview where Patton talked shit about us, and I was like, you know what, fuck him and fuck the whole band." (Less)
Freddie & The Dreamers
Freddie and the Dreamers were a British musical band who had a number of hit records between May (More) Freddie and the Dreamers were a British musical band who had a number of hit records between May 1963 and November 1965. Their act was based around the comic antics of the 5-foot-3-inch-tall (1.60m) Freddie Garrity, who was famous for bouncing around the stage with arms and legs flying. UK history he band consisted of Freddie Garrity (born Manchester, Lancashire 14 November 1936 died 19 May 2006),[1] vocals, Roy Crewdson (born Manchester May 29, 1941 ), guitar, Derek Quinn (born Manchester May 24, 1942, ), guitar and harmonica, Peter Birrell (born Manchester May 9, 1941, ), bass, and Bernie Dwyer (born Manchester December 4, 1940, died December 4, 2002), drums. Although the band were grouped as a part of the Merseybeat sound phenomenon that The Beatles exploded around the world in the wake of Beatlemania, they came from Manchester, and were the first such non-Liverpool, non-Brian Epstein-managed band to break through in the UK. Prior to becoming a singer, Garrity worked as a milkman in Manchester. [2] They had four Top Ten UK hits: a cover of James Ray's hit "If You Gotta Make a Fool of Somebody", which reached number 3 in the charts in mid-1963, "I'm Telling You Now", (number 2 in August), "You Were Made For Me", (number 3 in November) and "I Understand", which hit the number 5 spot in November 1964. Super session guitarist Big Jim Sullivan played on a majority of the records most notably on "Over You", "I Understand", "A Little You", "Thou Shalt Not Steal", "Just For You" and best of all, a cover version of Paul Anka's "I Love You Baby". 1964 album You Were Made For Me, CD cover The group would appear on stage and perform pre-rehearsed, synchronised wacky dance routines. While it is refreshing to have a band that does not take itself seriously, their show was probably more suited for the seaside show at the end of the pier than for a rock festival.[citation needed] Their success was more down to image than music,[citation needed] with Freddie's Buddy Holly-on-speed stage persona, Pete's dropped jaw and Derek's sinister dark glasses. Freddie and the Dreamers could make hit records of songs that other "serious" bands had turned down as "unsuitable for beat groups" by infusing even the slightest of songs with pep-charged performances filled with their trademark humour and zest.[citation needed] "You Were Made for Me", which was turned down by The Searchers is an example of this. It would probably sound unberably twee if delivered by a more 'earnest' singer or band, but it became a memorable and likeable hit in the unpretentious hands of Freddie & co.[citation needed] Some of their Merseybeat styled records like "I Just Don't Understand" (a cover of Ann-Margret) compare well with the best of Merseybeat.[citation needed] The band did have musical ability, and at their peak of popularity were probably second only to the Beatles[citation needed] so far as fame is concerned. Although they did not play on all the records, The Dreamers showed themselves to be quite competent instrumentally and their vocal harmonies were quite clever. Anecdotally, their EMI A&R man, John Burgess noted when reviewing their audition of "If You Gotta...Somebody", he was considering rejecting them for one fault or another but ultimately discovered he couldn't get their rendition out of his head-the whole being greater than the sum of its parts.[citation needed] In the end success for the group was limited. Neither their music nor their stage act moved with the times, and they faded along with merseybeat. Although Freddie Garrity or Derek Quinn might contribute the odd co-written song, their inability to write their own material severely hobbled them. Despite Freddie's innocent novelty appeal, the Dreamers had a "wrong-side-of-the-law" look, a similar mix to that of their Merseybeat rivals Gerry & the Pacemakers, which made both groups looked older, "square" and past their sell-by date. This "mums and dads" appeal was a big contrast to image of The Beatles and the young and trendy beat combos starting to emerge, such as The Dave Clark Five, The Who, The Small Faces or The Kinks. Television shows such as Ready Steady Go! subtly stressed the point. Freddie and the Dreamers were also happy to appear on the popular BBC children's show Blue Peter. They did have the sense to move from mainstream rock and roll into children's entertainment, and were working in cabaret until their split up in 1968, thus extending their career a little longer than most other merseybeat groups. They appeared in four British films: "What a Crazy World" with singer Joe Brown, "Seaside Swingers", "Just for You" and "The Cuckoo Patrol". Between 1971 and 1973 Garrity and Birrell appeared in the UK ITV children's show Little Big Time, a zany music/talent/adventure show with audience participation [3] [edit] US fame As their popularity declined in the UK, Freddie and the Dreamers enjoyed a brief spell of fame in America, riding the wave of the British Invasion when the American teen public was hungry for any British pop music. As happened with many British EMI groups at that time their recordings were refused by EMI's American arm Capitol Records, and the Dreamers' 1965 releases and re-releases appeared on assorted labels. They recorded on Capitol's new subsidiary Tower, and Philips' Mercury Records label. "I'm Telling You Now", which had been co-written by Garrity and Mitch Murray, reached Number 1 on the US charts in Spring 1965. They were the first of three consecuitve groups from Manchester to have Number 1 hits that spring, the others being Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders and Herman's Hermits. Their next biggest US hit was "Do the Freddie" at number 18, intended to inspire "The Freddie" (sic) as a dance craze. (The band's late 1965 album, Do the Freddie, even included diagrams from legendary dance instructor Arthur Murray on how to perform the routines exactly.) At their US peak, a TV series featuring the band and British actor Terry-Thomas was bruited but never came to fruition. [edit] Legacy In the 1980 Rolling Stone History of Rock & Roll, writer Lester Bangs paid tribute of a kind to the group: "... Freddie and the Dreamers [had] no masterpiece but a plentitude of talentless idiocy and enough persistence to get four albums and one film soundtrack released ... the Dreamers looked as thuggish as Freddie looked dippy ... Freddie and the Dreamers represented a triumph of rock as cretinous swill, and as such should be not only respected, but given their place in history." Freddie and the Dreamers had an unwitting role to play in rock history. In an interview, Paul McCartney said that the Freddie and the Dreamers's version of "If You Gotta Make A Fool Of Somebody" was a Beatles arrangement. The Beatles played it one night in Manchester. Next thing, Freddie and Co had copied it, and were performing this arrangement themselves. Because of this incident, The Beatles decided to concentrate on their own compositions instead. And the rest is History. The Beatles forgave Freddie and the Dreamers, and invited them to do a guest appearance in their 1964 Christmas Special. Freddie and the Dreamers, with a few different line-ups of newer Dreamers, remained a touring band into the 1990s. They appeared with other artists from the same era such as Gerry & the Pacemakers, The Troggs and Peter Noone of Herman's Hermits. Garrity retired due to pulmonary hypertension, and died on 19 May 2006 [4] . Drummer Dwyer died on 4 December 2002 of lung cancer; Birrell became a taxi driver. Crewdson now runs a bar in Tenerife, while Quinn lives in Cheshire and is in distribution. [edit] (Less)
Hook 'N Sling - The Best Thing (TV Rock Mix).mp3
MR BUNGLE on CAPITAL CHAOS TV 1999 http://www.capitalchaos.net MR BUNGLE @ Club Xtreme - Cameron Park, CA 1999 on their (More) http://www.capitalchaos.net MR BUNGLE @ Club Xtreme - Cameron Park, CA 1999 on their "California" tour, also on the bill were DILLINGER ESCAPE PLAN..Mr. Bungle was an influential avant-progressive experimental rock group formed in Northern California in 1985. Created while the members were still in high school and named after a children's educational film, they released four demo tapes in the mid to late 1980s, before being signed to Warner Bros. Records, who subsequently released three full-length studio albums between 1991 and 1999. Mr. Bungle have not been active since touring in 2000 to support their last album, and a recent media interview has confirmed the group is now disbanded.[1] While early in their career Mr. Bungle went through several line up changes, the bands most long serving members were vocalist Mike Patton, guitarist Trey Spruance, bassist Trevor Dunn, drummer Danny Heifetz, and Clinton "Bär" McKinnon on saxophone and other woodwind instruments. Mr. Bungle were known for their distinctive musical traits, often blending and cycling through several musical genres within the course of a single song and fusing radically different musical styles together. Many of their songs had a non-conventional structure and utilized a wide array of instruments and samples. Distinguished by their live shows, which often featured members dressing up and an array of unlikely cover songs, their style has influenced many recent funk metal bands. During the course of their career the band also had an ongoing feud with Red Hot Chili Peppers frontman Anthony Kiedis, which escalated in the late 90s with Kiedis having Mr. Bungle removed from a number of large music festivals in Europe and Australasia where the Chili Peppers were headlining. Although signed to a major record label, Mr. Bungle never had significant commercial success and only released one music video. They did, however, gain a reasonable amount of worldwide popularity due to a large cult following. Mr. Bungle formed in 1985 in Eureka, California while the members were still in high school; initially consisting of Trevor Dunn, Mike Patton, Trey Spruance, Theo Lengyel, and Jed Watts. Watts was subsequently replaced by Hans Wagner, and he by Danny Heifetz, while Clinton "Bär" McKinnon joined in 1989.[2] The band's name was taken from a children's educational film devised to teach children good manners and hygiene, which was featured in a Pee Wee Herman HBO special in the early '80s. A puppet named Mr. Bungle was the main character, used to represent the kind of person no clean, polite child would wish to be. In 1989 Faith No More bassist Billy Gould told Patton about a pornographic video called Sharon's Sex Party, which also starred a character known as Mr. Bungle.[2] Soon after forming, the band's first demo, The Raging Wrath of the Easter Bunny, was recorded during Easter of 1986. It generally featured a fast, low-fi, death metal style, though it also utilized a trainwhistle, a saxophone, bongos, and a kazoo. The Raging Wrath of the Easter Bunny was followed by the demo Bowel of Chiley in 1987; this recording featured a completely different style incorporating the sounds of ska, swing, and funk. In 1988 Mr. Bungle released their third demo, Goddammit I Love America!, which was musically similar to Bowel of Chiley. Their final demo tape was OU818, released in 1989; this recording was the first to feature tenor sax player Clinton "Bär" McKinnon and drummer Danny Heifetz. OU818 combined songs from the earlier demos along with some new tracks having a heavier overall sound than the previous releases.[3][4] In 1989 Mike Patton landed the lead vocalist slot with San Francisco's Faith No More, getting the job after Jim Martin of Faith No More heard him on a Mr. Bungle demo.[5] Patton decided not to break up Mr. Bungle, and continued to be a member of both bands simultaneously. Having established a strong following in Northern California, Mr. Bungle was signed to Warner Bros., who released their self-titled debut in 1991. Their debut, Mr. Bungle, was recorded a year after Mike Patton was recruited into Faith No More and was produced by jazz experimentalist John Zorn. Released on August 13, 1991 the album contained several new songs but overall the sound was in a similar style as OU818. The record mixed metal, funk, ska, carnival music, and free jazz, but was normally described as "funk metal" by music critics.[3] The content is, however, very hard to pin down using specific genres, and the structure and musical style of any single track frequently changes dramatically.[6] Critic Steve Huey wrote in All Music Guide "Mr. Bungle is a dizzying, disconcerting, schizophrenic tour through just about any rock style the group can think of, hopping from genre to genre without any apparent rhyme or reason, and sometimes doing so several times in the same song."[7] The album featured numerous samples, including Kentucky Fried Chicken commercial outtakes, items from the videogames "Super Mario Bros", "Smash TV", and "RBI Baseball", the movies Blue Velvet and Sharon's Sex Party, and the pinball games "Cyclone," "Earthshaker," and "Haunted House." Almost all the members went by obscure aliases in the album credits. To promote the album in some stores, a Mr. Bungle bubble bath was given away with copies of the record sold.[2] The first track on the self-titled recording was originally called "Travolta"(sample (help·info)); however, the actor John Travolta took issue with this title and threatened legal action. With the encouragement of Warner Bros. the song name was changed and on later pressings of the album was called "Quote Unquote", which is also the title of an unauthorized John Travolta biography by Bob McCabe.[2] They created a video for "Travolta" and submitted it to MTV. However, the station refused to air the video because of images of bodies dangling on meat hooks.[6] The album sold well despite MTV refusing to air their video and a lack of radio airplay. It received mostly positive reviews with Journalist Bill Pahnelas calling it "an incredible musical tour de force, and hands down the best alternative rock record of the year so far".[8] Following the release of the album the band toured North America successfully building a large and loyal cult following. Their popularity was partly due to unique stage shows where they often performed with masks to hide their identities and played unlikely covers during their set such as Billy Squier's "The Stroke," "The Star Wars Theme", and John Sebastian's "Welcome Back". Due to artwork delays and the band members' many side-projects, it was another 4 years before Disco Volante was released in October 1995.[3] This, their second major release, has a completely different tone and style to earlier Mr. Bungle recordings.[9] While the self-titled album was described as "funk metal", with Disco Volante this was replaced with the label "avant-garde" or "experimental."[6] The music was complex and unpredictable with the band continuing with their extreme shifts of musical style during songs. Some the tracks were in foreign languages and would radically change genres mid-song, arguably making it Mr. Bungle's most difficult and inaccessible release.[6] Featuring lyrics about death, suicide, and child abuse,[ along with plodding death metal, deranged children's songs, and a Middle Eastern techno number, music critic Greg Prato described the album as having "a totally original and new musical style that sounds like nothing that currently exists". Not all critics were impressed with the album, with The Washington Post describing it as "an album of cheesy synthesizers, mangled disco beats, virtuosic playing and juvenile noises", calling it "self-indulgent" and adding that "Mr. Bungle musicians like to show off their classical, jazz and world-beat influences in fast, difficult passages which are technically impressive but never seem to go anywhere". Disco Volante included influences from contemporary classical music, avant-garde jazz, electronic music pioneer Pierre Henry, Edgar Allan Poe, John Zorn, Frank Zappa, Penderecki, and European film music of the 1960s and 1970s such as those composed by Ennio Morricone and Peter Thomas. The album notes also contained an invitation to participate in an "unusual scam" - if $2 was sent to the bands address, participants would receive additional artwork, lyrics to the songs "Ma Meeshka Mow Skwoz" and "Chemical Marriage", and some stickers. Mr. Bungle supported this record with extensive tours through the United States, Europe, and Australia during '95 and '96, with the tours successfully widening the groups fan base. In 1996 Theo Lengyel retired as Bungle's original sax player and keyboardist due to creative differences. After another 4 year break between albums, the band's third album, California, was released on July 13 1999.[16] California is said to be Mr. Bungles most accessible[17][18] and while the genre shifts are still present, they are less frequent, with succinct song formats giving the album a less chaotic and more stable feel.[19] This resulted in what All Music Guide described as "their most concise album to date; and while the song structures are far from traditional, they're edging more in that direction and that greatly helps the listener in making sense of the often random-sounding juxtapositions of musical genres".[20] California continues the bands musical, lyrical, and thematic experimentation, although it has a much lighter tone.[21] On the different style of this album, Mike Patton explained that to the band "the record is pop-y", before adding "but to some fucking No Doubt fan in Ohio, they're not going to swallow that."[22] The album was generally well received with music critic Robert Everett-Green stating "The band's newest and greatest album does not reveal itself quickly, but once the bug bites, there is no cure. The best disc of the year, by a length."[23] Additionally, the recording process for California became much more complex. The group chose to record the disc on analog rather than digitally[24] and some songs required several 24-track machines while utilizing more than 50 analog tracks.[19] As a result each song contains detailed layers of original samples, keyboards, percussion, and melodies.[6] Mr Bungle live in 1999 Mr Bungle live in 1999 The album displays numerous influences, including exotica, Burt Bacharach, and The Beach Boys, while blending lounge, pop, jazz, funk, thrash-metal, Hawaiian, Middle Eastern, kecak, and avant-garde soundscapes.[17][18][21][25][20] The band did 5 tours to support this record. For the most part, perhaps with the exception of the Sno-Core 2000 tour where they were often booed, the band did have success attracting an audience. Following the 2000 tour the band again went on hiatus. Rumors circulated that the band had dissolved, with some members stating that the band was "over" while others insisted it was just "in limbo".[3] In 2003 Patton alluded to the fact that the band would probably not record any more albums stating "I think it is over. The guys are spread all over the world and we don't talk to each other. I have not spoken to a couple of the guys since the last tour, years ago."[28] While no official break-up announcement ever materialized, a 2004 Rolling Stone interview with Patton confirmed Mr. Bungle had disbanded with him revealing "We could have probably squeezed out a couple more records but the collective personality of this group became so dysfunctional, this band was poisoned by one person's petty jealousy and insecurity, and it led us to a slow, unnatural death. And I'm at peace with that, because I know I tried all I could."[1] When asked about a possible reunion, Mike Patton said, "It could happen, but I won't be singing. Some bridges have definitely been burned. It was a fun time and sometimes you just have to move on. I've got a lot on my plate now."[29] Trevor Dunn adds, on his website, "Bungle is dead and I'm happy about it" and that "the members of Mr. Bungle will never work together as such again".[30] Spruance,[31] Heifetz, and McKinnon[32] have been more optimistic; to quote Spruance, in response to the standard 'Mr. Bungle regrouping' question: "I hope so because that band could take over the fucking world if it wanted to."[31] After the dissolution of Mr. Bungle the members have gone on to numerous different projects. Mike Patton co-founded the record label Ipecac Recordings[33] and is involved with several other ventures, most notably the bands Fantômas,[34] Tomahawk,[35] and Peeping Tom.[36] He also acted in the motion picture Firecracker.[37] Trey Spruance is involved with various bands, including Secret Chiefs 3 and Faxed Head. Trevor Dunn joined Patton in Fantômas as well as forming his own jazz band, Trevor Dunn's Trio Convulsant; he also occasionally played bass with Secret Chiefs 3.[6][38] Danny Heifetz's projects included playing with Secret Chiefs 3 and in a country/punk band called Dieselhed;[6] he now resides in Sydney, Australia, and plays in outfits such as The Tango Saloon and The Fantastic Terrific Munkle.[39][40] Clinton McKinnon also played with Secret Chiefs 3; he now lives in Melbourne, Australia, and plays with The Ribbon Device. Mr. Bungle were generally regarded as an experimental rock or avant-progressive rock group. All Music described Mr. Bungles music as a "unique mix of the experimental, the abstract, and the absurd",[4] while The Seattle Times characterized their music as "harsh, grating, unstructured, blasting, squeaky, speedy, slow, eerie and strangely compelling".[10] Distinctive features of the music were the utilization of numerous different instruments, unique vocals, and the use of unpredictable song formats and a number of different musical genres. Along with the normal instruments of a rock band, Mr. Bungle would also incorporate additions such as bongos, woodblocks, tenor sax, Jews harp, xylophone, glockenspeil, clarinet, piano, and organ.[14] Journalist John Serba commented that the instrumentation "sounded kind of like drunken jazz punctuated with Italian accordions and the occasional Bavarian march, giant power chord, or feedback noise thrown in"[42] Overlaying this was Mike Patton's vocals, who often used death metal growls, crooning, screeching, gurgling, or simply whispering. The arrangement of their songs was also unique, normally displaying a total lack of any structured song format and rotating through different genres ranging from slow melodies to thrash-metal.[19] Critic Patrick Macdonald commented "In the middle of hard-to-follow, indecipherable noise, a relatively normal, funky jazz organ solo will suddenly drift in, it doesn't seem to fit but you can't stop listening to it".[10] Similarly New York Times journalist Jon Pareles described it as music that "leaps from tempo to tempo, key to key, style to style, all without warning".[43] Some of the notable genres they utilized include heavy metal,[20] funk,[20] free jazz,[20] surf rock,[17] punk,[43] klezmer music,[43] ska,[6] kecak,[25] avant-jazz,[21] folk music,[44] pop,[20] doo-wop,[44] funk metal,[25] electronica,[45] swing music,[20] space age pop,[20] death metal,[20][44] rockabilly,[20][25] bossa nova,[20] progressive rock,[18] country and western,[20] circus music [20] and even video game and cartoon music.[25] Critic Greg Prato stated they "may be the most talented rock instrumentalists today, as they skip musical genres effortlessly, while Mike Patton illustrates why many consider him to be the best singer in rock".[11] Mr. Bungle's style has influenced many recent funk and metal chart-toppers, most notably Korn, whose guitarists utilize what they've dubbed the "Mr. Bungle chord".[1] Brandon Boyd of Incubus also cited Mr. Bungle as an influence.[46] Although, Patton has stated that he considers it an insult when people cite him as a forefather of Korn and Limp Bizkit, stating "I feel no responsibility for that, it's their mothers' fault, not mine." Mr. Bungle were well-known for their stage shows, where all of the band members would dress up in outrageous costumes and masks, often wearing a uniform of mechanic's jumpsuits along with masks such as Madonna, Nixon, Darth Vader, an executioner's hood, or plastic clown or gimp masks.[13] Bassist Trevor Dunn explained that initially the reason for the masks and dressing up was to assure anonymity.[48] The shows for the California tours, while still involving various members in costumes, were largely devoid of the trademark masks and outfits due to the increased demands of the music.[19][49] Often the theme was related to California with palm tree props and the band members wearing beach party outfits including Hawaiian shirts and khaki pants.[19][50] Occasionally, the band would simply appear in black suits with white dress shirts or dress up in chef costumes, cowboy suits, or as the Village People.[42][51] Throughout their career Mr. Bungle also performed numerous covers in their live shows, ranging from tiny snippets to whole songs. The covers were by a wide variety of artists and genres encompassing movie scores by Ennio Morricone, Henry Mancini, and John Williams, pop songs by Elton John and Jennifer Lopez, hip hop by Public Enemy and Ol' Dirty Bastard, to punk and metal songs by the Dead Kennedys, Metallica, and Slayer.Mr. Bungle is known to have had a bad relationship with the Red Hot Chili Peppers' frontman Anthony Kiedis.[2] The feud began when Kiedis saw singer Mike Patton performing with Faith No More and accused him of imitating his style. Stating "Yeah I watch that 'Epic' video, and I see him jumping up and down, rapping, and it looked like I was looking in the mirror. The thing is, I had no problem with him personally. I mean, I love 'The Real Thing,' and I liked his vocals on that record. I mean, when I heard the record I noticed subtle similarities, but when I saw that video it was like, 'Wait a second here, what the fuck?".[2] Mike Patton and Mr. Bungle took offense to Kiedis' comment, sarcastically threatening Kiedis in the press. In the early nineties, Patton met with Kiedis; the two were polite to each other and the feud seemed to have ended.[2] However, in 1999 Mr. Bungle's album California was scheduled to be released on June 8, but their label, Warner Bros. Records, pushed it back so as not to coincide with the Red Hot Chili Peppers similarly titled album, Californication, which was to be released on the same day. This appeared to reignite the old feud with Kiedis having Mr. Bungle removed from a series of summer festivals in Europe; as the headlining act at the festivals The Chili Peppers had final word on the bands that would appear.[2][28] Patton stated "Our agent was in the process of booking these festivals, and it was becoming apparent that we'd landed some pretty good ones—one in France, another one in Holland, some big-name festivals. Turns out someone's holding a grudge! We were booted off several bills, including a really big festival in Australia, specifically because Anthony Kiedis did not want us on the bill. He threatened to pull the Chili Peppers if Mr. Bungle was on the bill. Now, rationalize that one! That's so fucking pathetic! I mean, this guy's selling a million records! We are not even a speck of dust on this guy's ass! What's the fucking problem?"[52] Trey Spruance added "We were booked, months in advance, to do eleven festival dates in Europe. Come Summer, we get a call from the three biggest of those festivals, all of them the same day, saying that we can't play, because the headlining band retains the right to hire and fire whomever they wish. We found out it was the Red Hot Chili Peppers, so our manager called their manager to find out what the hell was going on, and their manager was very apologetic, and said, 'We're really sorry, we want you to know this doesn't reflect the management's position, or the band's for that matter, it's Anthony Kiedis who wants this.'"[53] As a result, Mr. Bungle parodied the Red Hot Chili Peppers in Detroit, Michigan on Halloween of 1999. Patton introduced each Mr. Bungle band member with the name of one of the Red Hot Chili Peppers before covering the songs Give It Away, Around The World, Under the Bridge and Scar Tissue, with Patton deliberately using incorrect lyrics. Mr. Bungle also satirized many of the mannerisms of the band, mocking their frequent heroin injections and on-stage antics. Kiedis responded by having them removed from the 2000 Big Day Out festival in Australia and New Zealand,[2][28] stating "I would not have given two fucks if they played with us there, but after I heard about some Halloween show where they mocked us and read another interview where Patton talked shit about us, and I was like, you know what, fuck him and fuck the whole band." (Less)
Freddie & The Dreamers Freddie and the Dreamers were a British musical band who had a number of hit records between May (More) Freddie and the Dreamers were a British musical band who had a number of hit records between May 1963 and November 1965. Their act was based around the comic antics of the 5-foot-3-inch-tall (1.60m) Freddie Garrity, who was famous for bouncing around the stage with arms and legs flying. UK history he band consisted of Freddie Garrity (born Manchester, Lancashire 14 November 1936 died 19 May 2006),[1] vocals, Roy Crewdson (born Manchester May 29, 1941 ), guitar, Derek Quinn (born Manchester May 24, 1942, ), guitar and harmonica, Peter Birrell (born Manchester May 9, 1941, ), bass, and Bernie Dwyer (born Manchester December 4, 1940, died December 4, 2002), drums. Although the band were grouped as a part of the Merseybeat sound phenomenon that The Beatles exploded around the world in the wake of Beatlemania, they came from Manchester, and were the first such non-Liverpool, non-Brian Epstein-managed band to break through in the UK. Prior to becoming a singer, Garrity worked as a milkman in Manchester. [2] They had four Top Ten UK hits: a cover of James Ray's hit "If You Gotta Make a Fool of Somebody", which reached number 3 in the charts in mid-1963, "I'm Telling You Now", (number 2 in August), "You Were Made For Me", (number 3 in November) and "I Understand", which hit the number 5 spot in November 1964. Super session guitarist Big Jim Sullivan played on a majority of the records most notably on "Over You", "I Understand", "A Little You", "Thou Shalt Not Steal", "Just For You" and best of all, a cover version of Paul Anka's "I Love You Baby". 1964 album You Were Made For Me, CD cover The group would appear on stage and perform pre-rehearsed, synchronised wacky dance routines. While it is refreshing to have a band that does not take itself seriously, their show was probably more suited for the seaside show at the end of the pier than for a rock festival.[citation needed] Their success was more down to image than music,[citation needed] with Freddie's Buddy Holly-on-speed stage persona, Pete's dropped jaw and Derek's sinister dark glasses. Freddie and the Dreamers could make hit records of songs that other "serious" bands had turned down as "unsuitable for beat groups" by infusing even the slightest of songs with pep-charged performances filled with their trademark humour and zest.[citation needed] "You Were Made for Me", which was turned down by The Searchers is an example of this. It would probably sound unberably twee if delivered by a more 'earnest' singer or band, but it became a memorable and likeable hit in the unpretentious hands of Freddie & co.[citation needed] Some of their Merseybeat styled records like "I Just Don't Understand" (a cover of Ann-Margret) compare well with the best of Merseybeat.[citation needed] The band did have musical ability, and at their peak of popularity were probably second only to the Beatles[citation needed] so far as fame is concerned. Although they did not play on all the records, The Dreamers showed themselves to be quite competent instrumentally and their vocal harmonies were quite clever. Anecdotally, their EMI A&R man, John Burgess noted when reviewing their audition of "If You Gotta...Somebody", he was considering rejecting them for one fault or another but ultimately discovered he couldn't get their rendition out of his head-the whole being greater than the sum of its parts.[citation needed] In the end success for the group was limited. Neither their music nor their stage act moved with the times, and they faded along with merseybeat. Although Freddie Garrity or Derek Quinn might contribute the odd co-written song, their inability to write their own material severely hobbled them. Despite Freddie's innocent novelty appeal, the Dreamers had a "wrong-side-of-the-law" look, a similar mix to that of their Merseybeat rivals Gerry & the Pacemakers, which made both groups looked older, "square" and past their sell-by date. This "mums and dads" appeal was a big contrast to image of The Beatles and the young and trendy beat combos starting to emerge, such as The Dave Clark Five, The Who, The Small Faces or The Kinks. Television shows such as Ready Steady Go! subtly stressed the point. Freddie and the Dreamers were also happy to appear on the popular BBC children's show Blue Peter. They did have the sense to move from mainstream rock and roll into children's entertainment, and were working in cabaret until their split up in 1968, thus extending their career a little longer than most other merseybeat groups. They appeared in four British films: "What a Crazy World" with singer Joe Brown, "Seaside Swingers", "Just for You" and "The Cuckoo Patrol". Between 1971 and 1973 Garrity and Birrell appeared in the UK ITV children's show Little Big Time, a zany music/talent/adventure show with audience participation [3] [edit] US fame As their popularity declined in the UK, Freddie and the Dreamers enjoyed a brief spell of fame in America, riding the wave of the British Invasion when the American teen public was hungry for any British pop music. As happened with many British EMI groups at that time their recordings were refused by EMI's American arm Capitol Records, and the Dreamers' 1965 releases and re-releases appeared on assorted labels. They recorded on Capitol's new subsidiary Tower, and Philips' Mercury Records label. "I'm Telling You Now", which had been co-written by Garrity and Mitch Murray, reached Number 1 on the US charts in Spring 1965. They were the first of three consecuitve groups from Manchester to have Number 1 hits that spring, the others being Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders and Herman's Hermits. Their next biggest US hit was "Do the Freddie" at number 18, intended to inspire "The Freddie" (sic) as a dance craze. (The band's late 1965 album, Do the Freddie, even included diagrams from legendary dance instructor Arthur Murray on how to perform the routines exactly.) At their US peak, a TV series featuring the band and British actor Terry-Thomas was bruited but never came to fruition. [edit] Legacy In the 1980 Rolling Stone History of Rock & Roll, writer Lester Bangs paid tribute of a kind to the group: "... Freddie and the Dreamers [had] no masterpiece but a plentitude of talentless idiocy and enough persistence to get four albums and one film soundtrack released ... the Dreamers looked as thuggish as Freddie looked dippy ... Freddie and the Dreamers represented a triumph of rock as cretinous swill, and as such should be not only respected, but given their place in history." Freddie and the Dreamers had an unwitting role to play in rock history. In an interview, Paul McCartney said that the Freddie and the Dreamers's version of "If You Gotta Make A Fool Of Somebody" was a Beatles arrangement. The Beatles played it one night in Manchester. Next thing, Freddie and Co had copied it, and were performing this arrangement themselves. Because of this incident, The Beatles decided to concentrate on their own compositions instead. And the rest is History. The Beatles forgave Freddie and the Dreamers, and invited them to do a guest appearance in their 1964 Christmas Special. Freddie and the Dreamers, with a few different line-ups of newer Dreamers, remained a touring band into the 1990s. They appeared with other artists from the same era such as Gerry & the Pacemakers, The Troggs and Peter Noone of Herman's Hermits. Garrity retired due to pulmonary hypertension, and died on 19 May 2006 [4] . Drummer Dwyer died on 4 December 2002 of lung cancer; Birrell became a taxi driver. Crewdson now runs a bar in Tenerife, while Quinn lives in Cheshire and is in distribution. [edit] (Less)
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Hook 'N Sling - The Best Thing (TV Rock Mix)
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Hook 'N Sling - The Best Thing (TV Rock Mix)
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Mega post 49 new albums
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Queen - Discography, part 2
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