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Industrial rock video albums (3 C) M. Meat Beat Manifesto video albums (1 P) S. Skinny Puppy video albums (3 P) T. Throbbing Gristle video albums (2 P)
Video albums by individual artists should not be put in this main category. Instead, they should be placed in their own subcategories of Category:Video albums by artist, under the format [[Category:(Artist name) video albums]]. The only video albums in this category should be compilation albums of many artists, or articles about series of video ...
Industrial music is a form of experimental music which emerged in the 1970s. In the 1980s, industrial splintered into a range of offshoots, sometimes collectively named post-industrial music. [1] This list details some of these offshoots, including fusions with other experimental and electronic music genres as well as rock, folk, heavy metal ...
This is a list of notable bands who have produced industrial music or industrial rock. Separate lists are maintained of bands that predominately produce electro-industrial and industrial metal . This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.
Consolidated is an American radical activist music group, formed in 1988 and best known in the early 1990s as an alternative dance/industrial music band. [1] Between 1989 and 1994, their instrumental style evolved from industrial, to hip-hop, to hard rock and funk with mixtures of live instruments and electronic instruments.
List of electro-industrial bands; References This page was last edited on 8 November 2024, at 13:39 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
The B-52's Time Capsule: Videos for a Future Generation 1979–1998; B-Sides & Rarities (Deftones album) B'Day Anthology Video Album; Babalon A.D. (So Glad for the Madness) Back Again... No Matter What; Bad Hair Day: The Videos; Ballad & Pop Hits – The Complete Video Collection; Barelaked Nadies; Bartholomew Cubbins 2006–2014; Bat Out of ...
Electro-industrial is a music genre that emerged from industrial music in the early 1980s. While EBM (electronic body music) has a minimal structure and clean production, electro-industrial tends to have a grittier, complex and layered sound with a more experimental [ 1 ] approach.