Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Golden Age is the 9th and final studio album [1] released by American indie rock band American Music Club. The album is the band's second after a 10-year hiatus that ended in 2004. [2] The album is an effort by the band to experiment more in their music. [3]
Source: [4] The club was started after local school teacher Robin Pike suggested to David Stopps, a budding music manager whom he had previously bumped into when he was managing local band Smokey Rice and they appeared at the school dance that Pike was heavily involved with, that Aylesbury needed a music club based on Pike's seeing of groups elsewhere notably Mothers in Birmingham.
American Music Club's 1985 debut, The Restless Stranger, released on Grifter Records, [6] mixed post-punk and country elements and is widely considered as the first slowcore release, [failed verification] establishing the band as major pioneers of slowcore and an early influence on post-rock. [3]
Here’s what happened to some of your favorites. ... and he said club hopping was a daily, summertime routine during the 1980s. ... Chairman of the Board and other bands play live music. ...
Columbia House was an umbrella brand for Columbia Records' mail-order music clubs, the primary iteration of which was the Columbia Record Club, established in 1955. The Columbia House brand was introduced in the early 1970s by Columbia Records (a division of CBS, Inc. ), and had a significant market presence in the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s.
Music and Video Club (MVC) was founded by former directors of Our Price, another entertainment retailer, who left after it was purchased by WHSmith.. MVC took over two video rental stores called 'Titles' in Hendon and Colchester, with its unique selling strategy being centred around offering discounted prices for members, using a dual pricing system whereby members obtained a membership card ...
Their first "club" show was opening for the Butthole Surfers as teenagers, and one of their early live shows at City Gardens was released on the live album The Live Brain Wedgie/WAD. The Ramones performed at City Gardens 25 times, including one of only two performances by the band to feature drummer Clem Burke of Blondie (billed as "Elvis Ramone").
The Underground was a music club located in the Allston neighborhood of Boston that featured local, national and international acts performing independent and post-punk music. Although the emerging acts who played there included Mission of Burma, The Cure and New Order, its lifespan was short, from February 1980 until June 1981. [1]