691 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
691 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
BEGIN LINE_NOIZ.12
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I S S U E - ! @ M A R C H 1 1 , 1 9 9 4
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>LiNE NOiZ< >LiNE NOiZ<
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! -------- o o *~~~~~ f | 08413 ======= zxxxxxz
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! I |\ | l i\ | 7 9 i x
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! I | \ | *--- I \ i 1 2 I x
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! I | \| l i \ | 3 5 i x
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+=-=-=- ________ o o *~~~~~ l \| 87653 ======= zxxxxxz
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CYbERPUNk I N f O R M A t i O N E - Z i N E
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| L i N E N O i Z ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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I S S U E - ! @ M A R C H 1 1 , 1 9 9 4
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: File !
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: Intro to Issue 12
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: Billy Biggs <ae687@freenet.carleton.ca>
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: File @
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: Anonimosity and whitehouse.gov
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: <anonymous>
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: File #
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: Square One (Part two)
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: Kipp Lightburn <ah804@freenet.carleton.ca>
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: File $
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: Erland Rating System Explained
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: Origionally posted by Al Crawford <awrc@dcs.ed.ac.uk>
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: File %
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: Nibbles of Information
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: Billy Biggs <ae687@freenet.carleton.ca>
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: File ^
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: REVIEW: NIN's "The Downward Spiral"
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: Bones, <U38956@uicvm.uic.edu>
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File - !
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Finnaly we have issue 12. Out and around. I have put LN up on America On-line
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so greets to people there.
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I would really like to see more opinion articles by people out there. I feel
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there are alot of issues out there that I am not covering because I'm just
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not recieving stuff. I have started to write more, but I would really
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appriciate some help.
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Issue 13 is already well in the making and should be out very soon.
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-Billy Biggs, editor.
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--NOTICE:
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IF you subscribed and HAVEN't recieved any issues, mail me and I'll fix the
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problem.
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-*- Subscription Info -*-
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Subscriptions can be obtained by sending mail to:
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dodger@fubar.bk.psu.edu
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With the words:
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Subscription LineNoiz <your address>
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In the body of the letter.
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Back Issues can be recieved by sending mail to the same address with the
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words BACK ISSUES in the subject.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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File - @
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=== Anonymosity and whitehouse.gov =========================================
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By: <anonymous>
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>Newsgroups: alt.2600
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>From: germnose@expert.cc.purdue.edu (germnose)
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>Subject: whitehouse.gov
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>Date: Sat Feb 26 10:40:32 1994
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>
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>just read this in the newspaper yesterday:
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>seems as if a University of Illinois freshman used port 25 to send
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>the following message to president@whitehouse.gov:
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>
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>"I am curious, Bill, how you would feel about being the
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> first president to be killed on the same day
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> as his wife...It would be best, I think, to not
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> continue your immediate plans. Perhaps a vacation.
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> You will die soon. You can run but you cannot
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> hide. -OVERLORD"
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>
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>he sent the message as ALLMIGHTY@NEVER.GONNA.CATCH.ME
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>
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>seeing as threatening the presidents life (even in jest)
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>is a felony, the Secret Service opened an investigation
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>and poor little overlord has been arrested...he now faces
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>up to 5 years in prison and a $250,000 fine...
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>
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>pretty lame, eh?....I guess this means that SOMEONE reads
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>the whitehouse email....anyhow, watch yourselves with
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>that anon email, it's obviously not as anon as it seems...
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>
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>Fuck our Government (the bastards),
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>
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>germ
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A recent post in alt.2600 featured above brought to my attention a
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disturbing fact. I am not talking about 'gee that's a bit tough on the guy'
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or 'uh-oh look what trouble port 25 can get you in' (or the jerk got what
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was comming to him). I'm talking about the fact that the guy was tracked down.
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I like the idea of anonymous mail, the ability to say your opinion without
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worrying about your image or your social status (all that's left on the net).
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As you can see, this article is posted anonymously and I'm feeling proud
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about that. So now we can see that port 25 mail can be tracked, something I'm
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sure most people knew, but this was the first proof of this I have seen.
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>From this little excursion (thanks to 'Overlord'), we can now assume that:
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- We now know that the Secret Service obviously looks into the whitehouse
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e-mail, which makes you wonder if they're poking around on the internet.
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- It also means that you must watch what you say from now on, which is
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very very scary.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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File - #
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>From: ah804@freenet.carleton.ca (Kipp Lightburn)
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SQUARE ONE (PART TWO)
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---------------------
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BY
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KIPP LIGHTBURN
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--------------
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Petrol fumes invade my senses as consciousness penetrates my
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soul.
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Blurry afterimages of the woman and the gun, mix with the
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flesh coloured paisley designs that obstruct my vision. My head
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spins. My body rocks.
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I'm wedged into the back seat of a car. The bottled sound of
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an orchestra is filtered through cheap speakers.
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My body rocks.
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The image of the woman and the gun locked in firefight fleets
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in and out of my half dazed mind.
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I stare up through bloodsoaked eyelashes at the driver in the
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front. Short, dark, curly hair hangs above his shirt collar like the
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dot on an i. The rear-view hands me a vision of his eyes. Dark
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like his hair, and black like his shirt collar.
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And then the thought stings me. Two men carrying me to a
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van, while the woman protects them with hot fury from cold steel.
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I'm in a car.
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My body so numb. Still. I force the pain into my
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throat, "....van..wheres the girl."
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The driver throws a glance out of his window and chuckles.
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".....the girl...where is she?"
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The response is silence.
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".....who are...you?"
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He finally looks into my line of sight, and his eyes speak to
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me through the rear-view,"Soon you won't care. Just go back to
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sleep."
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Sitting up makes me look down, as one leg refuses to
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respond. I see everything at once. Holes. Bulletholes. Blood
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gently escaping them. Left leg moves at the thigh when I ask it to,
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but the rest, the knee down, hangs from torn flesh. My body is still
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naked and numb. But my skin is tinted red, with the occasional splash
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of pink. As I straighten up, the car seat, blanketed with my blood,
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clings affectionately to me, and lets go with a sound like velcro.
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"Whoa there buddy. You better lay your ass down if you know
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whats good for you." The mirror shows me his panic, as if this
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naked, half dead chassis of mine could actually do anything harmful.
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One arm strays from the wheel into the seat next to him. I
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hear metal scraping on leather, as he pulls something closer in.
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The car hurtles through the dark, as headlights paint a path
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ahead of us.
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".....where's the girl." I try again as I look at the
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dash. The clock reads 11:05:27. We're going eighty as he eyes me in
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the mirror.
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"Look pal, I said lay your ass down! I mean it!" His hand
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strays to his metal next to him. The car accelerates as his body
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weight shifts to look at me face to face. His nose has been broken
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a few times before and he hasn't shaven in days,"LAY DOWN!" Panic,
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fear and anger write lines on his face. He swings his arm up and
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levels the gun at my head.
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Instinct.
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My good leg pushes me into him. One hand grabs his gun, the
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other pushes the arm down at the joint, forcing his forearm back and
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the gun into his face. He lets go of the wheel and spins right
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around. I squeeze my thumb into the trigger guard, over his finger,
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pressuring it back.
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The windshield is sprayed with crimson as his head falls
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apart.
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His body slides back, down the seat, and jams itself under
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the dash. My body is thrown into the wet, sticky seat when the car's
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speed increases. His ass pushes down on the pedal. The stump of his
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neck rubs the steering wheel. My dried blood cradles me as the car
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slams left and I go right.
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Headlights shine pink through the drivers blood. The
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distance to the approaching vehicle drops instantly.
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And again I'm flying.
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The weightless journey through one windshield and into
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another plays itself out slowly. As my body shatters this cars
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windshield, someone crashes through the one in front of me. We soar
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past each other, trading places. I grate through jagged glass and
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flop down into the front seat. I'm still numb from the hypo-patches
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I applied at the hospital. I pray the effect doesn't wear off
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anytime soon.
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Motionless. The woman. Mind won't let me forget her.
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Keeps hammering her image out. I don't recognize her but I feel as
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though I should.
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A loud hissing noise cries out, as the air bag on the drivers
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side finally kicks in. It inflates without a thought next to me.
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Ninety-nine percent effective. He's lying in the other car proving
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the margin for error.
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I bleed as red as the flashing lights when they come to take
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me to the hospital. Back to the hospital...
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I black out again as they pull me onto the stretcher...
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--
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----------------------------------------------------------------
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|/ | [ email at ] -------------
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|\IPP |_IGHTBURN [ ah804@freenet.carleton.ca ] -------------
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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File - $
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Subject - Erland Rating System Explained
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I thought it would be benificial to post this in here, as I plan to use this
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scale for reviewing music.
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I would encourage people who wish to write reviews for Line Noiz to use the
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Erland scale, it will simplify things.
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>Newsgroups: rec.music.industrial
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>From: awrc@dcs.ed.ac.uk (Al Crawford)
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>Subject: Re: Review: Front 242 - 05:22:09:12 Off
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>Date: Tue Aug 31 07:02:58 1993
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>
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>And lo, sclover@swell.actrix.gen.nz (Stephen Clover) spake unto the masses saying:
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>>
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>> umm.. whats the erland scale and what is it's range
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>
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>Here's the standard description...
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>
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>] Article 8715 of rec.music.industrial:
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>] Path: dcs.ed.ac.uk!awrc
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>] From: awrc@dcs.ed.ac.uk (Al Crawford)
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>] Newsgroups: rec.music.industrial
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>] Subject: Re: What is the Erland rating?
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>] Keywords: meaning?
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>] Message-ID: <32722@skye.dcs.ed.ac.uk>
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>] Date: 29 Apr 92 14:21:11 GMT
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>] References: <29APR199203185966@juliet.caltech.edu>
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>] Sender: nnews@dcs.ed.ac.uk
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>] Reply-To: awrc@dcs.ed.ac.uk (Al Crawford)
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>] Organization: The University Of Edinburgh - Department Of Computer Science
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>] Lines: 69
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>]
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>] And lo, jaywb@juliet.caltech.edu (Bromley, Jay W.) spake unto the masses
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>] saying:
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>]
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>]> Hi, just curious, what exactly is the Erland rating system?
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>]
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>] Confusing :-)
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>]
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>]> or is it in the FAQ?
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>]
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>] Nope, it's not an r.m.i. exclusive thing, I use it in *all* my reviews, be
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>] they r.m.i. relevant or not.
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>]
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>] I've had a few pieces of mail about the rating system so it's time for an
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>] explanation. Those to whom I've mailed explanations previously might notice
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>] that this is different from the one I mailed them. This is to be expected,
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>] since the Erland Rating has a certain undefinable quality :-)
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>]
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>] The Erland rating system was first used in rec.music.misc a year or two
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>] ago. It was invented by Erland Sommarskog, hence the name. At the time, I
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>] thought it would be a good idea to try and arrive at some sort of ratings
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>] standard system, and Erland's system seemed as good as any, so I started
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>] using it. Needless to say, nobody else on the planet seems to use it
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>] anymore, not even Erland, and it's probably the least standard standard
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>] ever. Nonetheless...
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>]
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>] The Erland Rating is on a -5 to +5 scale. The bottom end is -5, the top end
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>] is +5. The scale *isn't* linear though. Nor is it exponential. It can be
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>] roughly summarised as...
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>]
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>] +5 - Probably the all-time greatest album in the history of the universe.
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>] +4 - truly an all-time classic, one to buy and cherish forever.
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>] +3 - a very good album indeed, and highly recommended.
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>] +2 - a good album but with limited appeal or an album that has wider
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>] appeal but is slightly less good.
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>] +1 - a good album. Pleasant to listen to and certainly worth a listen.
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>] +0 - competent but unoutstanding. It's not a *bad* record as such, it just
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>] isn't particularly *good* either
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>] -1 - an album you should have reservations about. It's not *really* bad, in
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>] fact you'll probably decide to keep it, but you probably won't play it
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>] that much.
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>] -2 - the sort of album which, unless you are completely fanatical about the
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>] artist concerned you probably shouldn't buy.
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>] -3 - the sort of album which, even if you are completely fanatical about
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>] the artist concerned you probably shouldn't buy.
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>] -4 - really a very bad album indeed. Connosieurs of really bad albums
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>] should buy this.
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>] -5 - An album so bad you are unlikely ever to hear its like again.
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>]
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>] Over the sum total of my reviewing I've dealt with about 75 releases. The
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>] lowest I've ever given is -2, the highest +3. The extremes of the scale
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>] will probably never be reached. My bias towards higher ratings I put down
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>] to the fact that I *buy* my albums with my own money rather than getting
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>] them as free promos, so I'm not likely to put out money on something I'm
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>] going to dislike. Actually, the stuff at the very bottom of the scale is
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>] probably worth keeping for the entertainment value.
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>]
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>] The same scale applies for singles, although I don't generally pay the same
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>] amount of attention to them - if I review an album, chances are I'll have
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>] listened to it at least 4 times and probably more than 10 times before
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>] writing a review, whereas I'll typically only listen to a single 4 times at
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>] most before posting a review.
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>]
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>] --
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>] Al Crawford - awrc@dcs.ed.ac.uk
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>] "Breakdown. Splinter. A thousand fragments disperse and die."
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>
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>--
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> Al Crawford - awrc@dcs.ed.ac.uk
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> Department Of Computer Science, The University of Edinburgh
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> Rm 1410, JCMB, Kings Buildings, Mayfield Rd, EDINBURGH, EH9 3JZ, Scotland
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> Tel: +44 (0) 31 650 5165 Fax: +44 (0) 31 667 7209
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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File - %
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.. nibbles of information /by billy biggs
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o Internet site spot : Neato stuff to check out
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------------------
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[ One thing everybody should be on is CUD. I recommend it very highly ]
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[ This is taken from the list of e-zines, available from johnl@netcom.com ]
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[ (John Labovitz) ]
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Computer Underground Digest
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"An open forum dedicated to sharing information among computerists
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and to the presentation and debate of diverse views."
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Editor(s): Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer <TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET>
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Format: ASCII text
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Gopher: etext.archive.umich.edu:/CuD
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gopher.cic.net
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FTP: etext.archive.umich.edu:/pub/CuD
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aql.gatech.edu:/pub/eff/cud
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ftp.ee.mu.oz.au:/pub/text/CuD
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nic.funet.fi:pub/doc/cud
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ftp.warwick.ac.uk:pub/cud
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Usenet: comp.society.cu-digest
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Compuserve: DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of LAWSIG, DL1 of
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TELECOM
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America Online: PC Telecom forum under "computing newsletters"
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FidoNet: File Request from 1:11/70
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Other: GEnie: PF*NPC RT libraries, VIRUS/SECURITY library
|
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Delphi: General Discussion database of the Internet
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SIG
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PC-EXEC BBS (+1 414 789 4210)
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Rune Stone BBS (IIRG WHQ) (+1 203 832 8441)
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NUP:Conspiracy
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RIPCO BBS (+1 312 528 5020)
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ComNet in LUXEMBOURG BBS (+352 466893)
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Bits against the Empire BBS (+39 461 980493) (Italy)
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Phone: +1 815 753 0303
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Fax: +1 815 753 6302
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Postal: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL
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60115, USA
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------------------
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o The Music Review Corner : Reviews of stuff, old and new, bad and good...
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------------------
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Artist: Kraftwerk Date: 1991
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Album: The Mix Length: 11 tracks, 65:14
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Review: I felt like buying something I hadn't heard before, yet had heard of.
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Kraftwerk was a bit of a dissapointment at first, the loads of synth sounds
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mixed with distinctly german-english vocals. The laughable songs like
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'Computerlove', 'Pocket Calculator' and 'Autobahn' make you wonder whether
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the group is a joke, or for real. I must admit though, that I like it.
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While the sound is not too far from techno, it lacks alot of the quality.
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The sound is at times very thin, lacking the depth of many instruments. The
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group has influenced many in it's course, and although I would not buy any
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of their other stuff, I was relitively pleased with the sound. -bB
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Erland Rating: +1
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------------------
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Artist: the Waterboys Date: 1991
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Album: The best of ... '81 - '90 Length: 12 tracks, 53:23
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Review: British rock group the Waterboys' best of album is one of my
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favorites. The sound ranges from rock to a more folk-like sound, providing
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a wide variety of sound. The use of the saxaphone with the acoustic
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guitar and piano add substance to the music. The group changed their
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format a few times during the decade that this CD encompases, the sound
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going from rock to folk and then back to more rock. It is a good CD for
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variety, quality and is generally appealing. -bB
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Erland Rating: +3
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------------------
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Artist: the Waterboys Date: 1993
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Album: Dream Harder Length: 12 tracks, 43:49
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Review: So after I was so happy with the Waterboys' best of CD, I went out
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and got their new one instead of some of their older stuff. Bad move.
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The group seems to have lost the most appealing thing about them, the
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saxaphonist. The sound is now all vocals, keyboard guitar and drums. I
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guess if you're looking for guitar music, this would be a good buy. I
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found the CD lacking in quality and the lyrics stupid compared to the older
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stuff. The first track, 'The New Life', is the only one I would consider
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to be musically appealing. It has suttle vocals and many separate guitar
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lines. Overall, for a 45 minute CD (I find that a bit short) and one
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moderate song, I would not buy it again. -bB
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Erland Rating: -1
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------------------
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From: jkettune@cs.joensuu.fi (Juha Kettunen)
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Artist: Advanced Art Date: 1993
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Album: PRODUCT Length: 10 tracks, 43 min
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Review: My favourite album. Nearly perfect. At least best Finnish music
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I've ever heard.
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Description: Advanced Art's music is something special. It's neither
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commercial techno nor industrial, but contains elements from both. The
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BPM rates range from 100 to 140, usually being quite high. There are both
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simple & fast and complicated & slower rhythms. Other typical instruments
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are low-pitched synths and chords, numb basses, occasional machine noises
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and samples, screaming metal in general, and (perhaps most importantly)
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the voice of a male singer, who sounds so sad, ironical and desperate.
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That is when it's hearable under the stream of machine music, sometimes
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it's nothing but a whisper. This gives an impression that the machines
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have already won, and there's no point to fight anymore. The _excellent_
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lyrics strongly support this impression. Extremely dark, pessimistic and
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depressing. Stories of failures, fears, pains and this crazy life. Even
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the cover image - a dark grayscale picture of a surface that could be a
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stone wall, concrete or rock - puts you in the right mood. The general
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atmosphere of PRODUCT leaves you in a dead, masochistic, sarcastic and
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suicidial state of mind, call it ecstacy, trance, shock or whatever your
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pleasure. A great example of what's starting to go on in your head when
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you live in a country where its's cold, dark and lonely most of the time.
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-Juha.
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------------------
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File - ^
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From: Bones, <U38956@uicvm.uic.edu>
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Newsgroups: rec.music.industrial
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Subject: REVIEW: NIN's "The Downward Spiral"
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Date: Fri Mar 4 13:25:35 1994
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I finally got the CD "The Downward Spiral" and was finally able to give it a
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good listen. Before getting into it, let me include some of the information
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that was given in the press release that came with it.
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First off, the street date of the album is March 8, 1994. Three labels again
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are on the CD, TVT, Interscope, and Nothing, the label started by Trent Reznor
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and his manager John a Malm, Jr. Artists already signed to the label in-
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clude Marilyn Manson, Pop Will Eat Itself, Prick, Coil, and Trust Obey. Four
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videos will be available from the new album, which is roughly 65 minutes long.
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Of interest is to note that according to the release, only 50,000 US copies
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of _Fixed_ have been pressed up. _The Downward Spiral_ was recorded at Le Pig,
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in Beverly Hills, Trent's own studio. Interesting to note is that this is
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the infamous site of the Manson family murders in the 60s, and the name hails
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most likelyfrom the bloody "PIG" that was scrawled in blood on the door, where
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today only a thin coat of white paint seperates the beholder from the beheld.
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OK, anyways...track listing is aas follows:
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1. mr. self destruct
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2. piggy
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3. heresy
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4. march of the pigs
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5. closer
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6. ruiner
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7. the becoming
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8. i do not want this
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9. big man with a gun
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10. a warm place
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11. eraser
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12. reptile
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13. the downward spiral
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14. hurt
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mr. self destruct
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-----------------
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A teeny tiny but disappointing as an opener, but thrashy nonetheless. It
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kind of grabs you, yells, "I'm back!" and throws you into a wall. The
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programming sounds really cool, like banging on a playground slide, and sounds
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a little bit like Aphex Twin's (or rather Polygon Window's) "Quoth." But
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not to fear, Trent has not done like most other bands and gone techno...
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but he isn't _Pretty Hate Machine_ in this either. . .
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piggy
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-----
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This song slows the album to a near grinding halt prematurely, but the plus
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side of this track is that it features more of the strange convuluted sounds
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that were characteristic of PHM, but they are a little ruined by the lyrics.
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Come on, "Piggy"?!?
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heresy
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------
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OK, cool....the aggressiveness comes back and is near overwhelming, but the
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underlying vocals sound too much like Trent doing his best high-pitched
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Prince imitation (I suppose I wasn't the only one to pick up on this).
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At least they're distorted and his regular vocals eventually come in as
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an overdubbing accompaniment. Guitar work, in lead position, is very
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effective here as well.
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march of the pigs
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-----------------
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VERY catchy drum opener which borders "Ballroom Blitz," it prepares you for
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the udden bounce you get from a very aggressive vocal and guitar segment
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sure to inspire heavy moshing. If that doesn't shock you enough, how about
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the sudden break of continuity by a quiet, lone, piano solo with Trent singing
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lke a romantic nightclub act, then returning to the assault? Irony galore!
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closer
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------
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A funky groove tune which is a little bit uninspired at first then suddenly
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comes back with the typical Reznor refrain.
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ruiner
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------
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Enters almost as a sequal to "closer", and turns to a Front Line Assembly-
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oriented intro before switching to a very hardcore refrain of near incompre-
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hensible distorted screaming set to a keyboard riff that sounds like FLA
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side project Will. Sound is definitely experimented with here. The sole gui-
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tar solo is even filtered through synthesizing media.
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the becoming
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------------
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Probably one of the most amazing songs on the album, it begins with a jaunty
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yet tinny synth intro then is followed by the most twisted thing: a con-
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stant, continual sample of people suffering, wailing in misery, as if Trent
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was recorded playing a gig for the prisoners of a medieval dungeon. Note
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the discreet entrance of acoustic (?) strumming along with Trent's dog
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Maise howling in the background, and you've got the ultimate in NIN "screw
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your musical rules" songs.
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i do not want this
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------------------
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Melts in as "the becoming" leaves. A slow crooner at first with piano key-
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boards and sinister percussion sounds which ever so shortly break into an
|
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incredibly thrashy metallic segment. It then adds more electronic wizardry
|
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to tease the listener a little bit more and manages to be a bit trance
|
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inducive before turning into an avalanche of audio samples much like the
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end of "ringfinger." Trent's voice becomes a distorted hissing like an evil
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mechanical snake by the song's end.
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big man with a gun
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------------------
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Seesh, probably the most moronic song on the album, perhaps even in Ttrent's
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career! Musically, it sounds great, much like the song "The Land of Rape
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and Honey" , but the lyrics are near rubbish, doing nothing more than show off
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Trent's insecurities ("i'm every inch a man, and i'll show you somehow" "i
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am a big man/ (yes i am)")...as if we didn't know. Maybe he purposely put this
|
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song on just to prove a point. But in any case, the 1.5 minute track must've
|
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just been filler. . .
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a warm place
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------------
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What's this? A single-length, completely instrumental and ambient NIN song?
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No this is more like it (we'll forget about "big man with a gun" for now,
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Trent), and friggin' brilliant too! Doubles as excellent, almost tender back-
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ing music, and borders early Skinny Puppy ala Riverz, or Intermix's "Voices",
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or more accurately, "Medusa" by Clan of Xymox. Arguably one of the best pie-
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ces on the album.
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eraser
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------
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Fading in from the calm of "a warm place" comes a nearly nightmarish wash
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of what must be a stalling engine combined with a drum which sounds almost
|
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like a This Mortal Coil drum intro. Nearly enharmonic guitar plucking ensues
|
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and Trent returns with minimalistic lyrics and a guitar rift that mirrors
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Ministry's song "Psalm 69". Reznor fittingly ends with improv.
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reptile
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-------
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A sudden quite dominates, and the only sounds present are the quite beeping of
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machinery. As if we are suddenly plunged into a post-nuclear war era of
|
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devices, the song leaps at you and offers a cyberpunky (for lack of a better
|
|
term) musical piece which features the constant whir of power tools, sampled
|
|
with the same type of drugs that the "hey hey" of Ministry's "N.W.O." does.
|
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It works quite well, and aids all other audio aspects of the song to stand up
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enter the fray.
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the downward spiral
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-------------------
|
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if you're not careful, this song may pass as yet another instrumental, but
|
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the truth of it is the barely audible vocals seem to be a testament to the
|
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impossible helplessness and resultant suidice of the victim it claims.
|
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A look into the thoughts of someone who is giving up as he puts the gun
|
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to his head and pulls. . .
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hurt
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----
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Trent's claim to the goth-rock fame. Another slow one, with lyrics showcasing
|
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your typical gothis flavor:"i hurt myself today/to see if i still feel/i focus
|
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o the pain/the only thing that's real." A decent song, and an equally decent
|
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close to the album.
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I was a bit surprised at the sound of TDS. I have to admit I was expecting
|
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Trent to abandon the technical aspect of PHm--the samples, the synthesizers,
|
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the drumboxes--in favor of the growing trend of heavy, churning guitars.
|
|
I expected it to be more like _Broken_ where guitr was the main focus. Nothing
|
|
wrong with that, but I would have missed the PHM sound. Trent, however, did
|
|
not concentrate on guitars alone like I expected. Although, there ARE heavy
|
|
riffs like in _Broken_, they are just not as numerous, and the musical taste
|
|
of PHM still prevails. Alot of the computerized bits do sound reminiscent
|
|
of early Curve, possibly because Curve producer and Toni Halliday beau
|
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Alan Moulder mixed the tracks with Trent, and also because Flood appears
|
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producer.
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Interesting to note is that Trent credits his live band...and all the
|
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members are new: Robin Flick (guitar), Danny Lohner (keys, guitars, and bass),
|
|
James Woolley (keys), and Chris Vrenna, taking over the late Jeff Ward's spot
|
|
on drums. Jeff himself appears in the production liners: "we miss you jeff
|
|
ward."
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|
|
The packaging of the disc is kinda neat. One word of advice though: carefully
|
|
slit the plastic lining to get the contents out and save the plastic as a
|
|
jacket. The CD itself comes in a thin CD single jewelbox (much like UK
|
|
imports here in the US) with artwork by Russell Mills and David Buckland,
|
|
and the external CD booklet (with lyrics and more art of course) slides
|
|
in with the jewelbox into a cardboard sleeve that includes more art and
|
|
is labeled "halo eight."
|
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|
|
Overall, I liked the CD because it was pretty much the musical equivalent
|
|
of PHM, plus some. The lyrics, however, were a bit disappointing. They DID
|
|
have their moments, but they weren't a continual, momentous flow of meaning
|
|
like PHM, which is arguably Trent's best work.
|
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|
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And of course, Trent has a reason for that. . .
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|
|
|
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******************************************************************************
|
|
* Honors Algebra Quiz--Word Problem Solving. Show all Work. *
|
|
* Name: Bones, Inner Sanctum of Sanctuary, U38956@UICVM.UIC.EDU *
|
|
*----------------------------------------------------------------------------*
|
|
* In the song "ringfinger" by Nine Inch Nails, Trent Reznor says: "If I was *
|
|
* twice the man I could be, I'd still be half the man you need." *
|
|
* Assuming Trent is 1 man, how much man would his former girlfriend need? *
|
|
* (10 pts, SHOW ALL WORK) Answer ======>__________ *
|
|
******************************************************************************
|
|
|
|
>From: Bones, <U38956@uicvm.uic.edu>
|
|
Newsgroups: rec.music.industrial
|
|
Subject: one more NIN thing
|
|
Date: Fri Mar 4 14:27:14 1994
|
|
|
|
A tour is scheduled to begin in April
|
|
|
|
Boes
|
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|
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|
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[ You think you can write a review too, then do so! ]
|
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
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>> <<
|
|
>> Ish 13 2 b out soonly...... <<
|
|
<< >>
|
|
>> <<
|
|
>> <<
|
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|
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END LINE_NOIZ.12
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
Billy Biggs Ottawa, Canada "When all else fails,
|
|
ae687@Freenet.carleton.ca read the instructions"
|