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Gravity is an underground independent record label from San Diego. [2] It was formed in 1991 by Matt Anderson, a member of the influential underground band Heroin. [3] It has been central in developing and promoting the "San Diego sound" – an idiosyncratic form of post-hardcore with loose, chaotic musicianship and vocals, initiated by Heroin, Antioch Arrow, and Clikatat Ikatowi, as well as ...
Heroin only released a handful of vinyl EPs and singles, primarily on San Diego record label Gravity Records; the group's debut 7" was also Gravity's first release. [2] These releases were typically packaged in enigmatic ways, such as a sleeve silkscreened onto a Ralphs paper grocery bag. [ 3 ]
Antioch Arrow was an American punk rock band from San Diego, California, that formed in 1992. Most of their discography was released through the San Diego independent label Gravity Records. The label was responsible raising San Diego's profile in the underground music scene of the mid-1990s.
From NIMBYism to an office disaster that ‘never happened before’ to the permanence of remote work, real-estate execs on housing ‘defying gravity’ Alena Botros May 16, 2024 at 2:56 PM
The early-to-mid 1990s would see the birth of several bands in the San Diego, California music scene, some of which would lead a post-hardcore movement associated with the independent label Gravity Records. [11] This movement would eventually become known as the "San Diego sound". [12]
OliverMcMillan, established in 1978, is a private real estate development firm based in San Diego, California.It creates mixed-use retail, entertainment, and residential projects, both privately and through public-private partnerships with public entities and redevelopment agencies across the U.S. OliverMcMillan has received four national industry design awards and more than 50 regional ...
In 1995, SWVP purchased the Emerald Plaza in San Diego. [3] As of February 1997, the company controlled almost 30% of the Class A office space in downtown San Diego. [4] In 2004, SWVP sold the Emerald Plaza and two other San Diego office buildings to Santa Ana real estate firm Triple Net Properties for $274.5 million. [5]
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