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American Radio Archives and Museum offers one of the largest collections of radio broadcasting in the United States and in the world. [12] It has a collection of 23,000 radio and TV scripts, 10,000 photographs, 10,000 books on radio history, and 5,000 audio recordings.
While on tour with The Real Tuesday Weld in Saint Petersburg, the English musician Stephen Coates came across an X-ray record at a market stall. Coates was inspired to launch The X-Ray Audio Project , an initiative to provide a resource of information about roentgenizdat recordings with visual images, audio recordings and interviews. [ 10 ]
An initial blurb from the label's website stated: "Drawing from radio archives, private tapes, collections of rare vinyl, and all sorts of unreleased sessions, often working hand-in-hand with the artists themselves, the series will focus on filling gaps in the historical record and illuminating otherwise dark corners of the musical continuum." [2]
Dark Globe – Break My World (Break My Bones Mix – Steve Mackey and The Fat Truckers) Appears on: Dark Globe – Break My World single (2004) The Kills – Love is a Deserter (Cavemen Remix) Appears on: The Kills – Love Is A Deserter single (2005) Death from Above 1979 – Romantic Rights (Cavemen's Death From The Inside Remix)
The sound of the album was labeled as "weepy Americana" with "a raw-to-the-bone piano ballad, and belt-along worthy pop-punk". [5] In support of the album, Slow Pulp will tour through North America and Europe in late 2023.
"Disco 2000" is a song by British band Pulp, included on the band's fifth album, Different Class (1995). Featuring a disco-inspired musical performance, the song was based on Pulp singer Jarvis Cocker's childhood memories of his friend Deborah Bone, who he had "fancied" in his youth but could never impress.
20 Years of Jethro Tull is a 1988 boxed set which spans the first twenty years of Jethro Tull.It was issued as five LPs: Radio Archives, Rare Tracks, Flawed Gems, Other Sides of Tull, and The Essential Tull.
The tour kicked off January 22, 1994 at the Civic Center in Pensacola, Florida and culminated on May 7, 1994 at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto, [3] estimated to have performed to 589,137 fans. [2] Some recordings from the tour were featured on the 1998 live album Different Stages. [4] This was the band's last tour to have any opening acts.