| Attached: __رحمة الأم |
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| Attached: __رحمة الأم |
Posted via email from Dogmeat
- Agnieszka Ledochowska
Wrócę zanim zdążysz powiedzieć placek z jagodami
przez Kończyna i Rzeczy
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at
kenfookindodd
you killing me ?
what mean kenfookindodd ? silly old bastard ?
boy ABBA is one of the most popular pop groups in the whole world ..
and this song is brilliant!
and Sweden isn´t strange , a very polite country !
so dont write shit about music you dont understand !
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FOR STEREO SOUND AND HIGH DEFINITION VIDEO.
Robin Workman in 1976 (?) recorded an album of ABBA instrumentals called "Moog and Guitars Play ABBA." It was only released in Australian as far as I know. It has never had a CD outing, so I have mastered this track from my own LP copy at the highest quality possible. Enjoy this Australian Rarity and the ABBA Mamma Mia pictures!!
Here is another LP rarity. Robin Workman in 1976 (?) recorded an album of ABBA instrumentals called "Moog and Guitars Play ABBA." It was only released in Australian as far as I know. It has never had a CD outing, so I have mastered this track from my own LP copy at the highest quality possible. Enjoy this Australian Rarity and the ABBA SOS pictures!!
Posted via email from Dogmeat
Posted via email from Dogmeat
Posted via email from Dogmeat
A teacher was given a professional reprimand yesterday for referring to a group containing two black pupils and an Asian classmate as being "in the nig-nog corner".Michael Aldersley, a science teacher at Calderstones school in Liverpool, was sacked in May 2001. In November 2000 he had told a computer class of 14-year-olds: "Everyone in the nig-nog corner, come here, you might learn something." Three pupils and their parents complained to the school.
Yesterday, a General Teaching Council hearing in Birmingham concluded he had demonstrated unacceptable conduct, and that a formal reprimand should lie on his registration for two years.
Dr Aldersley, in his 50s, did not attend the hearing. In a statement, he said he had meant "foolish and silly children". The hearing was told the Oxford dictionary had several definitions of the phrase: a foolish person; an unskilled recruit; or a coarsely abusive term for black people.
After the hearing, Brian Davies, headteacher of Calderstones, said: "I never considered that it would mean silly or foolish children. I only took it to have one meaning ... and that is a derogatory phrase toward black pupils."
Mr Davies said Dr Aldersley had apologised to the pupils concerned, but from his initial meetings with the teacher, he suspected he did not realise the offence he had caused; 22% of pupils are from minority ethnic groups. He was sacked for gross misconduct by a 5-3 vote of governors.
In his statement, Dr Aldersley referred to his "incautious" use of language but said that, when questioned by the school, he had felt a lack of support, a bullying tone, and cynicism concerning racism in South Africa, where he taught in the 1970s. Yesterday Mr Davies acknowledged that Dr Aldersley "nailed his colours very firmly to the mast" in South Africa as an opponent of apartheid. Calderstones colleagues and pupils had also written in support of Dr Aldersley, who had an unblemished teaching record.
Nig-nog school master reprimanded for referring to two black pupils and an Asian classmate as being "in the nig-nog corner") might be of interest to anyone reading around the subject. Far less defensible than "niggardly", of course, or maybe the teacher had been asleep for a generation or two. – Hajor 5 July 2005 00:42 (UTC)
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- The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section.
I think that this article should exist, but the title isn't right. Shouldn't the title be something like "Niggardly controversy"? HuskyHuskie 9:13 am, 17 March 2007, Saturday (3 years, 4 months, 18 days ago) (UTC−5)
- At the deletion discussion a good number of people wanted a change in the title, including me. It seems to me that since the word has become controversial at somewhat different times, it might be better to say "controversies", although they all seem to revolve around essentially the same issues. I'm not really sure whether "controversy" or "controversies" is better. I could accept either. Noroton 10:41 am, 17 March 2007, Saturday (3 years, 4 months, 18 days ago) (UTC−5)
- There's a naming convention that prefers singular words to plural in Wikipedia article titles (here: Wikipedia:Naming conventions (plurals)), but I don't think it applies here. Noroton 10:51 am, 17 March 2007, Saturday (3 years, 4 months, 18 days ago) (UTC−5)
I'm not sure about plurals, but I'd prefer Controversies about the word Niggardly or something like that, just because niggardly is an adjective so in "Niggardly controversy" it looks like it's modifying the word controversy.Chunky Rice 12:26 pm, 18 March 2007, Sunday (3 years, 4 months, 17 days ago) (UTC−5)
- I didn't think of that. Good point. The title should be as short as possible, but that may be the shortest while also being the clearest. I guess the link from "Niggardly" will keep it accessable to people searching for something on this subject. If that link ever went, the article would be extremely difficult to find no matter what else we name it. The meaning of the title also fits the subject matter. You've capitalized "Niggardly" but we probably shouldn't, per Wikipedia naming policy. It's better that we don't put the word in quotes or italics (we probably can't put it in italics). Saying "the word" before "niggardly" makes it clear. I don't see a better substitute for "about" either: it's a good, plain word. Did you know there's a whole Wikipedia page not just on naming articles but on the use of capital letters in article names? It's here, but it all comes down to not using capital letters except for the first letter or in names. So: Controversies about the word niggardly Noroton 2:11 pm, 18 March 2007, Sunday (3 years, 4 months, 17 days ago) (UTC−5)
- All right, just to make it more complicated, I used the Wikipedia "Search" and "Go" functions to look up "Controversies about", "Controversies on" and "Controversies over" and "over" is the word they use most. I personally like "about" but just so you all know, "over" is the word used more, if that matters. Noroton 2:21 pm, 18 March 2007, Sunday (3 years, 4 months, 17 days ago) (UTC−5)
- I'd support "over" or "about". I agree that the article is primarily about the controversies rather than the word; and I agree with the need to avoid quotes and to avoid making "niggardly" appear to be a modifier in the title. Mike Christie (talk) 2:23 pm, 18 March 2007, Sunday (3 years, 4 months, 17 days ago) (UTC−5)
- Lots of good info in this discussion on the name that I hadn't thought about. I really prefer shorter titles, but Chunky Rice is quite correct in his point about what looks like it is being modified. As to what preposition should be used, let me throw this suggestion out: Controversy regarding the word niggardly HuskyHuskie 5:28 pm, 18 March 2007, Sunday (3 years, 4 months, 17 days ago) (UTC−5)
So, I'm fine with Controversies about the word niggardly. Is there any consensus here? Chunky Rice 11:25 am, 20 March 2007, Tuesday (3 years, 4 months, 15 days ago) (UTC−5)
- Support Noroton 2:39 pm, 20 March 2007, Tuesday (3 years, 4 months, 15 days ago) (UTC−5)
- Support Mike Christie (talk) 3:53 pm, 20 March 2007, Tuesday (3 years, 4 months, 15 days ago) (UTC−5)
Okay, I just took the initiative and moved the page since there didn't seem to be any singificant dissent about it.Chunky Rice 5:17 pm, 21 March 2007, Wednesday (3 years, 4 months, 14 days ago) (UTC−5)
- The above discussion is preserved as an archive. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section.
Sappy personal story - really needed? [edit]
The interjection about the newspaper editors in Ohio is cute, but does it really help our understanding of the topic? I don't think so, and would recommend its deletion. Feralcats 9:20 am, 3 April 2007, Tuesday (3 years, 4 months, 1 day ago) (UTC−5)
- I agree; I went ahead and took it out. Mike Christie (talk) 9:31 am, 3 April 2007, Tuesday (3 years, 4 months, 1 day ago) (UTC−5)
- Cute and sappy don't do it for me either, but I think it shows how strong feelings can get about using the word, on both sides. That's why I included it. How many words that have a noncontroversial regular meaning can you say that about? It gives another example (and there aren't an enormous number) showing how offended people can get about it. Please reconsider. Noroton 6:47 pm, 4 April 2007, Wednesday (3 years, 3 months, 30 days ago) (UTC−5)
- Hm. To me the story is interesting because it's not just about misundersta
Posted via email from Dogmeat

Just as I'd become convinced that the United States was really one big Essex it turned into a bumper sized version of Lincolnshire. Now it's mutated into a slightly more stodgy Hertfordshire. We had a beyond bland dining experience in a Cracker Barrel in Louisiana yesterday - fried chicken breast and side dishes of vegetables in varying shades of beige. The chicken was encased in some sort of fibre glass version of batter which meant that they could take random bits of chicken and the casing would sort of hold it all together in a vaguely chicken breast shape. The Cracker Barrel was like one of those farm shops you find on the A17 in Lincolnshire. It had farm implements hanging off the ceiling and the place was cluttered with factory-made interesting old things. Everythin had a barcode, everything was for sale.
It seems to me that America is forever trying to recreate it's recent past in glass fibre, plastic and particle board. Yesterday, having played in Austin, we were obliged to drive through the night because the hotels were full of hurricane evacuees. We got to Shreveport in the late morning and booked into a Casino hotel. Shreveport is all Casino hotels - Casinos and loan places. We got a great big luxury room with a kingsize bed that was almost double the size of a double bed. It was very cheap - they make their money on gambling, the rest of it is just designed to make you feel like a high roller. Neither Amy or myself have any interest in gambling. We strolled round the casino looking at all these glum, desperate people. Occasionally one of them would have a win and they'd set up a half hearted whoop and a holler. Some of the others would vaguely join in. then they'd all slump back into their own private misery.
We had dinner in a plastic brick built railway station from the Great Depression. For no apparent reason there was a stage coach hanging off the ceiling. We had a table under an overhanging canopy. Above us were balconies stacked with the luggage of the dear departed from a century ago. We had gumbo and shrimps and stuff and it taste very much like the real thing.
The hotel staff were all black - African Americans as they're called now. I love the black people I meet in America, we always seem to get on together. They're much more open, much less uptight than a lot of the white people - Jellyfish Americans as I believe they're now called.
I can see how America breaks bands that try to tour it - the bands that try to break America and fail. Touring here is hard. The distances are huge and a lot of the venues have joined the industry. Some take a professional pride - they don't perhaps give a flying fuck about you personally but they'll make every effort to ensure that the show goes off without a hitch. Others really don't give a fuck. Nobody compliments you or tells you anything that would help to make you feel less insecure - you're on your own, buddy.
PA systems don't work properly, house engineers mix you too quietly because they feel like giving their ears a night off. Some engineers are so fucking lazy that they can't be bothered to waddle the distance from the board out front to the stage to actually listen to the monitors with their own ears. That's usually in clubs where nothing works properly and just being in there for more than five minutes is enough to bring you out in a rash.
Thee Parkside in San Francisco is a bit like this. Last time we played there a young girl did the sound - she actually did a great job even though she arrived an hour and a half late and the monitor speakers were all but blown. This time we had a guy who could have got off a care in the community bus. He was willing enough and he kept calling me Sir. Every time I asked for something he said yessir, yessir, and bowed subserviently. He seemed to think we were a country 'n' western band - he said we'd be OK with him because his speciality was twang. I said ours was bass and that threw him through a loop, I could tell by the slight twitch.
The monitors hardly worked, just like last time. Apparently there's no money to repair them. We didn't break the percentage due to unspecified costs. I hope some of these costs go to repairing the equipment. We didn't have a bad time but some of the people, the ones who probably thought we'd be a Dead Kennedys tribute or something, got on our nerves. Mostly the audience were lovely. I hope we can play in San Francisco again soon but at a diferent venue.
At Merced in the middle of California we came across a notable exception. Jeff the soundman there did a great job. Sadly there were only twenty eight people. But those twenty eight loved us thanks in part to Jeff. And I should say that the Bumbershoot crew were good too. In fact I'm probably going to back track completely on most of what I've just said because thinking about it just about everywhere we've played is a notable exception.
At the Cinema Bar in Los Angeles I thought I made a fine job of the sound myself with no time for a real soundcheck. Even though some drunken arsehole at the back demanded in a stentorian voice that we TURN THE GUITARS DOWN - WE CAME TO HEAR YOU. Well, really - I pointed out that Amy was standing behind a yard of American plywood with strings on it, whacking the hell out of it, and so was I, so what the fuck did he think he was hearing if it wasn't us, expressing ourselves.
There was a cunt sitting right in front of me who suggested in quite an aggressive manner that we do more of Amy's songs - how about Beer And Kisses, or what about Give The Drummer Some? That ought to work well with that computer beatbox thing. The subtext read stop fucking about with that talentless English git and play some quality music.
I didn't like him and he didn't like me, I could tell. He was middle-aged - he wore a baseball cap perched on top of his fat pink head, a loose white t-shirt, tight shorts and luckilly one of those black banana bag things that men like that wear to keep their hemorrhoid cream in. I say luckilly because at least that way we couldn't see an escaped testicle.
I think he was the inspiration for my Campaign For Better Dressed Men. I'm not sure quite how we're going to campaign yet, except by wearing trousers and real shoes but I'm sure tailoring and a bit of work with a steam iron will find a way.

Anyway, as I was saying, touring America can wear you down - it's scary. We landed up in Kansas City. I thought, what the fuck am I doing playing in Kansas City? I remember Doctor Feelgood coming home from their only US tour with tales of opening for Gentle Giant in Kansas City and it not making any sense at all.
The club we were at was called Knuckleheads. It could have been put there for the tourists except that no tourists would come to this area of town. It on the wrong side of the tracks but there were so many tracks it'd be hard to say which tracks it was on the wrong side of - the place is surrounded by railroad tracks. It appears to be in the middle of a freight yard.
Knuckleheads is a genuine juke joint in a poor area of town. It looks like the bar in The Blues Brother where they play both types of music, Country and Western. I was looking for the chicken wire grill in front of the stage and for a moment I was almost terrified. But everyone was really kind and we set up the gear and soundchecked, had something to eat and bonded with the soundman and owner over stories of John Mayall and what an arsehole he is.
The set went over great. When we got to the break in Another Drive-in Saturday a passing freight train sounded its horn/whistel/siren thing - you know the noise. It was exactly on key, sounding like a deranged orchestra. There were no more than fifty people but for a Tuesday night in Kansas City we took that as a great success and so did the owner - he wants us to come back and do a weekend show. I never thought there'd be anyone interested in us in the middle of America. I assumed they were all redneck rock fans and Foreigner ruled the airwaves. It seems I was wrong.
Before we went to the hotel - best hotel of the tour by the way - we had a junk food excursion at the Waffle House. As we walked in Sweet Home Alabama came on the jukebox. The place was cluttered up with neighbourhood badhats. It was trashy and we felt right at home. We had waffles with maple syrup.
I don’t want to hear that stuff - a band should always strive to give the impression that they arrived in a space craft. Unless they’re a blues band, and then I want to know that they arrived in a Bedford van having spent the night in a lay-by, sleeping in ex-army sleeping bags on top of the amplifiers. The only band I've ever witnessed transgressing rule number three was a Brighton band called The Electric Soft Parade. Their frontman said yeah cheers so often I lost count. The Electric Soft Parade weren't very good. The Dykeenies were but the singer said cheers after the first three numbers so I gave up. Actually that’s not quite true - I was getting cold and I had to go and get organised for my cameo appearance.
I don't know what to say about The Proclaimers shows without sounding corny, trite or bland. Someone who isn't reading this carefully might leave under the impression that I'm using those adjectives to describe The Proclaimers but I'm not - they could never be any of those. So I have to resort to fabulous, fantastic, they went out with a bang etc...
I've probably said it all already anyway. Erika Nockalls played the violin on Sunshine On Leith wearing a green satin frock. I played my green Microfret guitar on Whole Wide World. So there was a bit of colour co-ordination - a matching his 'n' hers Eric section.
Anyway, they were talking about getting together to record a new album beginning next March. I can hardly wait.
There's loads more to talk about but if I start on that I'll get bogged down in it so I think I'll stop now and put this on the site without finishing it off...
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Stiff Records is a record label created in London in 1976 by entrepreneurs Dave Robinson and Andrew Jakeman, and active until 1985. It was reactivated in 2007. Established at the outset of the punk rock boom, Stiff Records signed pub rock acts and marketed them as punk and New Wave, including Nick Lowe, Wreckless Eric, Elvis Costello and Ian Dury. The label's marketing and advertising was often provocative and witty. Stiff billed itself as "The World's Most Flexible Record Label".
Property Value dbpedia-owl:abstract
- Stiff Records is a record label created in London in 1976 by entrepreneurs Dave Robinson and Andrew Jakeman, and active until 1985. It was reactivated in 2007. Established at the outset of the punk rock boom, Stiff Records signed pub rock acts and marketed them as punk and New Wave, including Nick Lowe, Wreckless Eric, Elvis Costello and Ian Dury. The label's marketing and advertising was often provocative and witty. Stiff billed itself as "The World's Most Flexible Record Label". Other slogans were "We came. We saw. We left. ", "If It Ain't Stiff, It Ain't Worth a Fuck", and "When You Kill Time, You Murder Success" (printed on promotional wall clocks). On the label of Stiff's sampler compilation Heroes & Cowards was printed: "In '78 everyone born in '45 will be 33-1/3". A very early Stiff sampler album, A Bunch of Stiff Records, introduced the slogan, "If they're dead, we'll sign them" and "Undertakers to the Industry". A member of the group was Mrs Radbourne, who was one of the bigger stiffies. Stiff also produced eccentric but highly effective promotional campaigns, such as the three package tours in 1977, 1978 and 1980, Elvis Costello's "busking outside CBS Records" arrest and the 12 different wallpaper sleeves printed for Ian Dury's second album, Do It Yourself, with associated unscheduled makeovers of unsuspecting record shops. Barney Bubbles was responsible for much of the graphic art associated with the early Stiff releases.
- Stiff (engl. steif, starr, unbeweglich, Leichnam, prüder Mensch) war eins der bekanntesten und erfolgreichsten britischen Independent Labels der Punk-Wave-Ska-Ära. “If it ain’t stiff it ain’t worth a f**k“ war einer der Werbesprüche der Plattenfirma für ihre Produkte – auf deutsch etwa “Wenn es kein Stiff ist, ist es fürn A*sch. ”
- La Stiff Records, fu una etichetta discografica creata nel 1975 a Londra.
- Stiff Records est un label indépendant de rock fondé à Londres en 1976 par Dave Robinson et Jake Riviera. Dissous en 1985, le label fut réactivé en 2007. Surfant la nouvelle vague punk qui a déferlé sur le Royaume-Uni au moment de son lancement, il a publié de nombreux artistes de punk rock et de pub rock mais aussi d'autres artistes qui seront associés au mouvement new wave, comme Elvis Costello ou Ian Dury. Ce « rebelle parmi les labels discographiques britanniques » est considéré comme l'un des « responsables de l'avènement des révolutions punk et new wave de la fin des années 1970 ».
- Stiff Records is een platenlabel dat in 1976 in Londen werd opgericht door Dave Robinson en Andrew Jakeman (ook bekend als Jake Riviera). Het label was actief tot 1985. De oprichting van het label viel samen met de opkomst van de punk rock. Stiff Records tekende verschillende pubrock bands en artiesten die vervolgens als punk en new wave door het label werden gepromoot. Tot die artiesten behoorden Nick Lowe, Elvis Costello en Ian Dury. Stiff Records maakte veel gebruik van provocatieve en geestige marketing en reclame, waarbij het label zichzelf betitelde als "The World's Most Flexible Record Label" ("Het meest flexibele platenlabel"). Het label bracht verder muziek uit van onder meer: Madness Motörhead The Pogues Tracey Ullman The Belle Stars Devo The Damned Ian Dury and the Blockheads Dave Edmunds Jona Lewie Lene Lovich Kirsty MacColl Yello
- Stiff Records er et engelsk plateselskap som eksisterte mellom 1976 og 1986, men som i følge det som sies å være selskapets nettside skal begynne å gi ut plater igjen. Selskapets utgivelser har først og fremst konsentrert seg rundt undergrunnsstjerner. Blant artistene som er gitt ut på selskapet kan nevnes Elvis Costello, Madness, Ian Dury, Tracey Ullmann, The Damned, Lene Lovich og The Pogues, men selskapet har også laget enkeltutgivelser med artister som Gary Glitter og Motörhead, selv om sistnevnte aldri ble gitt ut. Selskapets første utgivelse var Nick Lowes singel «So it goes», og selskapet trakk raskt til seg kjente navn, samtidig som mye også ble brukt på å gi ut mindre kjente musikere. Selskapet var også kjent for fantasifulle omslag. I 1978 ble selskapet splittet ved at den ene grunnleggeren, Jake Riviera stiftet Radar Records og tok med seg Costello og Lowe til det nye selskapet. Signeringen av Madness i 1979 gjorde imidlertid at selskapet raskt kom seg på beina igjen. Dårlig økonomistyring og nye musikktrender førte imidlertid til at selskapet i 1984 ble solgt til Island Records, hvorpå blant andre Madness forlot selskapet. Det ble ingen suksess for Island, og i 1986 ble selskapet tilbakeført til grunnlegger Dave Robinson. Det skulle imidlertid bare ta måneder før selskapet var historie. Nylig har imidlertid en nettside som hevder å representere Stiff Records sagt at de vil starte opp Stiff Records igjen.
- Stiff Records var ett brittiskt skivbolag som startades i London 1976 av Jake Riviera och Dave Robinson och som var verksamt fram till 1985. Stiff startades samtidigt som punkrocken höll på att slå igenom, och bolaget signade artister som Nick Lowe, Elvis Costello och Ian Dury, och marknadsförde deras musik som punk eller new wave. Bolagets marknadsföring och reklamkampanjer var ofta provocerande och/eller humoristisk. Några av Stiffs många slogans var "The World's Most Flexible Record Label", "We came. We saw. We left. ", "If It Ain't Stiff, It Ain't Worth a Fuck" och "When You Kill Time, You Murder Success" (det senare trycktes på väggklockor som gavs bort i reklamsyfte). På framsidan av Stiffs samplingsalbum A Bunch of Stiff Records fanns slagorden "If they're dead, we'll sign them" och "Undertakers to the Industry". Stiff blev också känt för sina excentriska men effektiva reklamkampanjer, som Stiffs Live, två turneringar som ägde rum 1977 respektive 1978, där de flesta av bolagets artister deltog och där framträdandena gjordes varje natt under olika tider; arresteringen av Elvis Costello under hans spelning utanför konkurrenten CBS Records kontorsbyggnad och de 12 olika tapetaffischer som trycktes upp för Ian Durys andra album, Do It Yourself, vilket ledde till ett drastiskt ändrat utseende för en rad skivaffärer runt om i Storbritannien (naturligtvis utan ägarens vetskap). Barney Bubbles gjorde många av Stiffs tidiga skivomslag och affischer.
- Stiff Records — независимая звукозаписывающая компания, образованная в Лондоне в 1976 году антрепренерами Дэйвом Робинсоном и Эндрю Джекманом (известным также как Джейк Ривьера) при финансовой поддержке Ли Брилло из Dr. Feelgood, который одолжил им 400 фунтов стерлингов. Дебютным релизом лейбла стал сингл So It Goes Ника Лоу, вышедший 14 августа 1976 года. К 1980 году британский бюджет компании составлял 3,5 миллиона фунтов. Stiff Records просуществовали до 1985 года, когда, после неудачной попытки перейти под крыло Island Records, были перепроданы ZTT Records. Компания считается «колыбелью британского панк-рока» (в качестве таковой прославилась двумя массированными промо-турами в 1977 и 1978 годах), но в действительности выпускала пластинки исполнителей широкого стилистического спектра.
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- Stiff (engl. steif, starr, unbeweglich, Leichnam, prüder Mensch) war eins der bekanntesten und erfolgreichsten britischen Independent Labels der Punk-Wave-Ska-Ära. “If it ain’t stiff it ain’t worth a f**k“ war einer der Werbesprüche der Plattenfirma für ihre Produkte – auf deutsch etwa “Wenn es kein Stiff ist, ist es fürn A*sch. ”
- La Stiff Records, fu una etichetta discografica creata nel 1975 a Londra.
- Stiff Records is a record label created in London in 1976 by entrepreneurs Dave Robinson and Andrew Jakeman, and active until 1985. It was reactivated in 2007. Established at the outset of the punk rock boom, Stiff Records signed pub rock acts and marketed them as punk and New Wave, including Nick Lowe, Wreckless Eric, Elvis Costello and Ian Dury. The label's marketing and advertising was often provocative and witty. Stiff billed itself as "The World's Most Flexible Record Label".
- Stiff Records est un label indépendant de rock fondé à Londres en 1976 par Dave Robinson et Jake Riviera. Dissous en 1985, le label fut réactivé en 2007. Surfant la nouvelle vague punk qui a déferlé sur le Royaume-Uni au moment de son lancement, il a publié de nombreux artistes de punk rock et de pub rock mais aussi d'autres artistes qui seront associés au mouvement new wave, comme Elvis Costello ou Ian Dury.
- Stiff Records er et engelsk plateselskap som eksisterte mellom 1976 og 1986, men som i følge det som sies å være selskapets nettside skal begynne å gi ut plater igjen. Selskapets utgivelser har først og fremst konsentrert seg rundt undergrunnsstjerner.
- Stiff Records is een platenlabel dat in 1976 in Londen werd opgericht door Dave Robinson en Andrew Jakeman (ook bekend als Jake Riviera). Het label was actief tot 1985. De oprichting van het label viel samen met de opkomst van de punk rock. Stiff Records tekende verschillende pubrock bands en artiesten die vervolgens als punk en new wave door het label werden gepromoot. Tot die artiesten behoorden Nick Lowe, Elvis Costello en Ian Dury.
- Stiff Records — независимая звукозаписывающая компания, образованная в Лондоне в 1976 году антрепренерами Дэйвом Робинсоном и Эндрю Джекманом (известным также как Джейк Ривьера) при финансовой поддержке Ли Брилло из Dr. Feelgood, который одолжил им 400 фунтов стерлингов. Дебютным релизом лейбла стал сингл So It Goes Ника Лоу, вышедший 14 августа 1976 года. К 1980 году британский бюджет компании составлял 3,5 миллиона фунтов.
- Stiff Records var ett brittiskt skivbolag som startades i London 1976 av Jake Riviera och Dave Robinson och som var verksamt fram till 1985. Stiff startades samtidigt som punkrocken höll på att slå igenom, och bolaget signade artister som Nick Lowe, Elvis Costello och Ian Dury, och marknadsförde deras musik som punk eller new wave. Bolagets marknadsföring och reklamkampanjer var ofta provocerande och/eller humoristisk.
rdfs:label
- Stiff Records
- Stiff Records
- Stiff Records
- Stiff Records
- Stiff Records
- Stiff Records
- Stiff Records
- Stiff Records
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limbsandthings1 | July 03, 2010
Chris Spedding (Guitar Jamboree, Motorbikin' Robert Gordon, etc.) sits down for a rare interview (7 min) with French Talk Host, Pierre Ardisson at the famous Belle Epoque Dancehall turned Rock Club turned Punk Boite turned Discoteque, Le Palace in Paris and discusses (in English with French Subtitles) his vast CV of studio sessions, hired gun, one offs and artistic collaborations (of which he notes John Cale and Brian Eno number), and some of which he scarcely recalls.
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1. One in five UK women will not have children, many by choice.
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2. Gooseberries have been in England since at least 1275, when the king shipped over plants from France to grow at the Tower of London.
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3. International athletes coming to London for the 1948 Olympics had to bring their own towels.
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4. And half the pigeons brought to the stadium to be released for the opening ceremony died in the heat.
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5. A man thought to be Tokyo's oldest had, in fact, been dead for 30 years.
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6. Dogs mimic their owners.
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7. And one in three are obese.
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8. Snooker world championships used to last a year.
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9. One in 36 pound coins is fake.
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10. The world's most ancient living creatures are a breed of shrimp which live in south-west Scotland.
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Seen 10 things? Send us a picture to use next week. Thanks to Vic Barton-Walderstadt for this week's picture of 10 advertising boards.
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Produced and directed by Tony Palmer
Tony Palmer ( 1941 ) is a British film director and writer. He Worked For More Than 60 films and at an early age Worked with in the 1960s with artists like the Beatles , Cream , Jimi Hendrix or Frank Zappa together. Later he directed or portraits Maria Callas , from Margot Fonteyn , John Osborne , Igor Stravinsky , Richard Wagner , Yehudi Menuhin , Benjamin Britten and Ralph Vaughan Williams . Even in the theater and the opera he directed HAS. He HAS SEVERAL published books.
Literatur von und über Tony Palmer im Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek ( Datensatz zu Tony Palmer • PICA-Datensatz • Apper-Personensuche )
Tony Palmer in der deutschen und Englisch Version of Internet Movie Database
Website von Tony Palmer
Website vom Vertrieb Tony Palmer DVD mit Filmausschnitten
Tony Palmer is a British director who specializes in making documentary films in the music. over 100 films in his list of works, including high-profile film portrait of William Walton, Benjamin Britten, Stravinsky, Richard Wagner, Shostakovich as revised Solomon Volkov, Testimony / Testimony, Henryk Górecki, Maria Callas, Yehudi Menuhin.
He has also directed numerous opera productions.
Palmer has received over 40 international awards, including 10 gold medals at the New York Film & Television Festival, several BAFTA (British Academy of Film & Television) and Emmy nominations and prizes, and the only person he is double winner of the Prix Italia.
- Officiell webbplats
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