Classic second album from Krautrock's best never-quite-made-it act.
If tradition has it that any self-respecting rock combo must endure a "difficult second album" then few can have been as gloriously problematic as Harmonia's Deluxe. Side one is clearly a blueprint for Michael Rother's embryonic solo career with his tightly-structured guitar anthems - gathering storm force intensity via Guru Guru's Mani Neumeier's propulsive drums - firmly taking centre stage while the more usually chaotic Moebius and Roedelius respectfully follow with sympathetic melodic detail or shimmering texture from their keyboards. On side two, the album swings back towards the Cluster axis as Moebius and Roedelius' more unpredictable modus operandi begins to assert itself more strongly - whispering melodies, tacky synth strings, austere drones, ghost-in-the-machine noises. And yet the unpredictable chemistry between form and chaos works an absolute treat throughout this classic - which barely sold a few hundred copies in the band's lifetime but has since been name-checked by the likes of Bowie and Eno as hugely influential on their work.
Part 13: Final exposure of Bill Gates. His last evil schemes in the lime-lights...
By Janet Ossebaard & Cyntha Koeter
Music: Alexander Nakarada, Melody of my Dreams, Music4Video, Scott Buckley
c/o checktheevidence
Training wheels on Rails when Wheels
should run free rails of a one-way
school track to NPC take the market your
registration a roths Chilean plan for
our nation why where who how a thousand
year in human plan to take us all to the
land of heliosatan hold the line to each
man
vascular calcification of a trusting
population Mercury toothed innocence
exploited by adreno twats in high places
get out the kids because wisdom is risky
when you're running the biggest scam in
history
oblivious zomboidic population dead inside
but Essence is a power higher than Gaia
it's only the gift of The Giver so don't
give explode with a defiant rage in
voice not destruction rise above don't
succumb you are the powerful one and
when owning your power are the one they
run from
regretfully too late to stop the cycle
the present has a centuries inertia to
recoil so incubate formulate and
eventually reincarnate because power
begets greed greed begets hate hate
begets destruction which begets creation
they are the carbon we will burn when
the wheels of Ezekiel turn
peace be upon you as our binary pulses
fade and our bodies Decay we have only
one chance so live the day
-Anonymous
1974 Performance
"Dreamer" is a hit single from British band Supertramp's 1974 album Crime of the Century. It peaked at number 13 on the UK Singles Chart in February 1975.[3] In 1980, it appeared on the band's live album Paris. This live version was also released as a single and hit number 15 on the US charts,[4] number 36 in the Dutch Top 40,[5] and number one on the Canadian Singles Chart.[6] When "Dreamer" had been released in 1974, its B-side "Bloody Well Right" was more popular in North America leading it to chart instead, at No. 35 in the US and No. 49 in Canada, with "Dreamer" only charting in Canada, that being at No. 75. "Dreamer" also appeared on Roger Hodgson's album, Classics Live, recorded on tour in 2010.
An ancient magician frozen in time by a rival sorcerer is brought back to life in the present day by a deranged college professor. Bent on conquering the world, the resurrected magician creates chaos inside the university and around the city until Spider-Man shows up to save the day. Faced with powerful thousand-year-old magic, Spider-Man must find a way to defeat one of the most powerful villains he's ever encountered.