Artist: Killing Joke: mp3 download Genre(s): Rock: Punk-Rock Pop: Pop-Rock Alternative Other Trance: Psychedelic Rock Electronic Killing Joke's discography: Hosannas From The Basements Of Hell Year: 2006 Tracks: 9 For Beginners Year: 2004 Tracks: 16 Seeing Red Year: 2003 Tracks: 4 Killing Joke (Special Uk Edition) Year: 2003 Tracks: 11 Killing Joke Year: 2003 Tracks: 11 Wardance - The Remixes Year: 1999 Tracks: 9 Democrazy Year: 1996 Tracks: 10 Wilful Days Year: 1995 Tracks: 13 Pandemonium Year: 1994 Tracks: 10 Joking Apart Year: 1994 Tracks: 13 Laugh? I Nearly Bought One! Year: 1992 Tracks: 17 Extremities, Dirt and Various Repressed Emotions EP Year: 1990 Tracks: 11 Outside The Gate Year: 1988 Tracks: 10 Brighter Than A Thousand Suns Year: 1986 Tracks: 11 Brighter Than A 1000 Suns Year: 1986 Tracks: 11 What's This For...! Year: 1981 Tracks: 8 4 Stations Of The Sun (Demos and Unreleased) Year: Tracks: 13 Heavy and slow, Killing Joke (at least early in their life history) was a quasi-metal band dance to a tune of fate and gloom. They eventually became less wakeless and more arty (the latter seems nigh impossible) -- more than danceable even -- only early on they made some pressing slabs of liquefied dynamite that oozed with the power of dense guitars, thudding drums, and sinful vocalizing. The origins of Killing Joke lie in the Matt Stagger Band. Paul Ferguson was drumming for the chemical group when he met Jaz Coleman (vocals, keyboards) in the late '70s. Coleman coupled the Matt Stagger Band in brief, just before long he and Ferguson split to strain Killing Joke in late 1978. The couplet recruited bassist Youth (born Martin Glover Youth), world Health Organization had antecedently played with the punk rocker grouping the Rage, and guitarist Geordie (born Kevin Walker) to complete the band's batting order. Killing Joke moved to Notting Hill Gate and recorded their debut EP, About Red, with money borrowed from Coleman's girlfriend of the clip. BBC disc jockey John Peel was impressed by the EP and offered the group a session on his show, which became one of the to the highest degree popular shows he spread in the late '70s. By the end of 1979, the mathematical group had signed with Island Records, world Health Organization allowed them to pose up their own label, Malicious Damage. Killing Joke released "Wardance," their debut single on Malicious Damage, in February of 1980. Following its outlet, Killing Joke and Malicious Damage switched from Island Records to EG and released their eponymous debut record album. The group began playing shows regularly passim England and gained a reputation for being controversial. Their artwork often featured hideous or seditious images, and after unitary of their concert posters envisioned the Pope blessing legions of Nazis, the group was prohibited from performing a concert in Glasgow. Despite the controversy, the mathematical group began amassing a undermentioned of both strong-armer and disco fans with hard-edged merely danceable singles like "Psyche" and "Follow the Leader." The band released its second record album, What's THIS For...!, in 1981. After recording and releasing the group's third base album, 1982's Revelations, Jaz Coleman -- world Health Organization had developed an obsession with the occult -- decided that the revelation was near, so he left the group and ran away to Iceland with Geordie. While in Iceland, Coleman and Geordie worked with a number of Icelandic bands, about notably Theyr, which would later develop into the Sugarcubes. Youth followed Coleman to Iceland shortly afterward his difference. After a few months with no mark of the end of the world, Youth returned to England and formed Brilliant with Ferguson. However, Ferguson left shortly afterward the group's formation and touched to Iceland with Killing Joke's new bassist, Paul Raven. Youth continued playing with Brilliant, while Killing Joke's new batting order -- featuring Coleman, Geordie, Ferguson, and Raven -- worked in Iceland for a abbreviated catamenia. Soon, the group returned to England and recorded Fervour Dances, which was released in 1983. Fire Dances demonstrated a calmer, more than straightforward band than the one showcased on the group's earlier records. For the rest of the '80s, Killing Joke continued to release albums, all of which failed to find the interview they had in the early '80s. After 1988's Outside the Gate, the group stone-broke up, only to reunify two eld later for Extremities, Dirt & Various Repressed Emotions. Extremities featured a new drummer, Martin Atkins, and returned the band to the noisy dance experiments of their earlier records. Following its outlet, the mathematical group took a four-year break. In 1994, Killing Joke re-formed as a trine with Coleman, Geordie, and Youth and the group released Topsy-turvydom, a harder-edged, heavier record album than their previous records. Democracy (1996), a second self-titled album (2003), and the live solemnization 25 Gathering! followed. After opening for the reunited Mötley Crüe on a 2004 duty tour of the U.K., the band colonized in Prague to record its future record album, Hosannas from the Basement of Hell, which appeared in 2006. |
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