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Slap a Ham Records was an independent label from San Francisco owned and operated by Chris Dodge. [1] The label lasted for about 13 years, officially shutting down in 2002. According to Dodge, this was due because of the September 11 attacks; "After the attacks, everyone stopped spending money" and as a result, Slap a Ham faced stagnate commerce, causing Dodge to go into d
Five months after that recording, in the fall of 1991, their seven-song self-titled 7-inch was released, including a firing squad cover photo. In 1992, the band recorded a live radio show on KSPC, a split 5" with Dropdead, a contribution to Slap-a-ham's Son of Blleeaauurrggh compilation 7-inch, and a split 7-inch with Man is the Bastard.
Asked what her response to that apology was, Ms Smallman told the BBC Radio 4 programme: "It felt like a slap in the face, really. "You say sorry when you bump into someone at the supermarket.
Liberty Gone with Millions of Dead Cops (Slap-A-Ham, EP, 1994) [14] split with Man Is the Bastard (Six Weeks, LP, 1994) [16] split with Slight Slappers (Sound Pollution, MCR, EP, 1995) split with Ulcer (Six Weeks, EP, 1995) Fear Persuasion Violence Obedience split 10" with Cripple Bastards, Masskontroll and Warpath (Wiggy, EP, 1995)
The runner who slapped a Georgia reporter's butt while jogging past her on live TV has been identified as a local youth minister, according to the New York Post.. Alexandrea Bozarjian, a reporter ...
Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Nick Ut has spoken out against claims that his famous 1972 photo of a terrified child running from a napalm bomb attack on her village during the Vietnam War ...
Spazz vocalist and bassist Chris Dodge's record label, Slap-a-Ham Records, [7] was a fixture during the rapid rise and decline of powerviolence in the late '80s and early '90s, releasing influential records by the likes of Man Is the Bastard, No Comment, Crossed Out, Infest and Spazz, amongst others.
Things got wacky as all heck in the '60s and '70s, when recipes like ham and bananas hollandaise and the nightmares of the Betty Crocker recipe box roamed the streets. There were no rules to be ...