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  2. Mechina (band) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechina_(band)

    The band's next album Progenitor was released on January 1, 2016. The song "Anagenesis" was released in advance on December 26, 2015. [7] Progenitor has been noted to continue the band's streak of "positives and pitfalls", and Mel Rose guest appears again, singing the entirety of tracks "Cryoshock" and "The Horizon Effect". [8]

  3. Cure (magazine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cure_(Magazine)

    The Official Cure Magazine Shop in Los Angeles, [2] XENON has been providing U.S. fans to interact with bands through Livestream Q&A session events since August 2014. Well known bands including CELL, Diaura, Royz, Daizystripper, Grieva, Lin -End of World Corruption, Arlequin, The Rhedoric, and Pentagon have been welcomed to the event.

  4. Sophie (musician) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sophie_(musician)

    Sophie's music career began in a band named Motherland, alongside bandmates Sabine Gottfried, Matthew Lutz-Kinoy, and Marcella Dvsi. She played live shows in Berlin and the UK during 2008–2009. She later collaborated with Lutz-Kinoy on a series of performance works. [16]

  5. Enon (band) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enon_(band)

    Enon was an indie rock band founded by John Schmersal, Rick Lee, and Steve Calhoon that was active from 1997 to 2011; for most of its history, however, Enon was a three-piece outfit composed of Schmersal, Toko Yasuda, and Matt Schulz. Though situated for a time in Philadelphia, Enon was primarily known for being part of the New York music scene.

  6. T-Square (band) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-Square_(band)

    Shunsuke "Xenon" Ishigawa (2001–2002) Joined the band as a session bassist during a live performance as the "Japan version" of T-Square Plus in 2001. [43] Katsuji Morioka (2004–2005) First appeared in the Year-End performance in 2003. [192] He also appeared in the studio albums Groove Globe in 2004 [193] and Passion Flower in 2005. [194]

  7. Xenon (nightclub) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xenon_(nightclub)

    Xenon was a popular New York City discotheque and nightclub in the late 1970s and early 1980s. It was located in the former Henry Miller's Theatre at 124 West 43rd Street (now the site of the Stephen Sondheim Theatre ) which, prior to Xenon, had been renamed Avon-at-the-Hudson and was operating as a porn house.

  8. Hawkwind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawkwind

    In 1988 the band recorded the album The Xenon Codex with Guy Bidmead, but all was not well in the band and soon after, both Lloyd-Langton and Thompson departed. Drummer Richard Chadwick, who joined in the summer of 1988, had been playing in small alternative free festival bands, most notably Bath's Smart Pils, for a decade and had frequently ...

  9. List of Hawkwind band members - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Hawkwind_band_members

    In 1988 the band recorded the album The Xenon Codex with Guy Bidmead, but all was not well in the band and soon after, both Lloyd-Langton and Thompson departed. Drummer Richard Chadwick, who joined in the summer of 1988, had been playing in small alternative free festival bands, most notably Bath's Smart Pils, for a decade and had frequently ...