Part 7: about the 5500 NGOs, connected to the UN, who do so-called charity work. Upon investigating their very own financial papers, we discovered that NGOs are nothing but the perfect business model to launder money (billions of dollars!), to avoid paying tax, and to invest in the Cabal's main target: depopulation and world dominance. Join us to peel off a few more layers of this onion, to found who the Cabal truly is!
By Janet Ossebaard & Cyntha Koeter Music: Alexander Nakarada, Y2mate This is part 7 of 17 parts in total.
Monster Movie is the debut studio album by German rock band Can, released in August 1969 by Music Factory and Liberty Records.
In 1968 Can had produced an album entitled Prepared to Meet Thy PNOOM, which no record company agreed to release (recordings were eventually released on LP in 1981 as part of Delay 1968). Monster Movie was Can's attempt at a more accessible record. The album is credited to "The Can", a name suggested by vocalist Malcolm Mooney and adopted by democratic vote. Previously the band had been known as "Inner Space", which later became the name of their purpose-built recording studio. Some copies of the LP bore the subtitle "Made in a castle with better equipment", referring to Schloss Nörvenich, the 14th-century castle in North Rhine-Westphalia where the band recorded from 1968-69.
The image on the cover is a retrace of Galactus, as originally depicted by Jack Kirby (inked by Vince Colletta) in Marvel's Thor #134 - page 3, released in 1966.
Released: 1969
Country: Germany
Genre: Krautrock
Label: United Artists/Sound Factory
Producer: Can
Tracklist:
00:00 Father Cannot Yell
07:03 Mary, Mary So Contrary
13:22 Outside My Door
17:30 Yoo Doo Right
Personnel:
Can:
Irmin Schmidt – keyboards
Jaki Liebezeit – drums
Holger Czukay – bass
Michael Karoli – guitar
Malcolm Mooney – vocals
"Go for Soda" is a song by Canadian singer Kim Mitchell. It was released in 1984 as the lead single from his first full-length solo album, Akimbo Alogo. The song reached number 22 in Canada and was Mitchell's only charting single on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States, reaching number 86. It remains his best-known song outside of his native Canada.
1. Intro (includes narration, with segments of "The Camera Eye" live version) 0:00
2. "Limelight" 2:24
3. "Tom Sawyer" (Lee, Lifeson, Peart, Pye Dubois), 7:02
4. "The Trees", 11:50
5. "Xanadu", 12:32 (narration at the beginning) 16:30
6. "Freewill", 29:40
7. "Closer to the Heart" (Lee, Lifeson, Peart, Peter Talbot), 35:18
8. "YYZ" (Lee, Peart) (segments of the live version, with interview audio) 38:47
9. "By-Tor and the Snow Dog", 40:20
10. "In the End" (Lee, Lifeson), 44:25
11. "In the Mood" (Lee), 46:08
12. "2112: Grand Finale", 47:41
13. End Credits ("YYZ"), 49:57
The concert footage documented in Exit... Stage Left was filmed March 27, 1981, at the Montreal Forum, in Montreal, Quebec.
Exit... Stage Left is the second live album by the Canadian rock band Rush, released as a double album in October 1981 by Anthem Records. After touring in support of their eighth studio album Moving Pictures (1981), the band gathered recordings made over the previous two years and constructed a live release from them with producer Terry Brown. The album features recordings from June 1980 on their Permanent Waves (1980) tour, and from March 1981 on their Moving Pictures tour.
The album received a mostly positive reception from music critics and reached number 6 in the United Kingdom, 7 in Canada, and 10 in the United States. It was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America for selling one million copies in the latter country. A same-titled home video was released in 1982 that documents the band on the Moving Pictures tour. Exit... Stage Left was voted the ninth best live album of all time by Classic Rock magazine in 2004.
Episode aired May 13, 1972
The Doctor is forced to help the Marshal cover up his actions with the Investigator but Jo and the others attempt to escape to expose him.
Catherine Wheel formed in 1990, comprising singer-guitarist Rob Dickinson (cousin of Iron Maiden's Bruce Dickinson), guitarist Brian Futter, bassist Dave Hawes, and drummer Neil Sims. Hawes had previously played in a Joy Division-influenced band called Eternal. They took their moniker from the firework known as the Catherine wheel, which in turn had taken its name from the medieval torture device of the same name.
"A Quality of Mercy" is episode 80 of the American television anthology series The Twilight Zone, which originally aired on December 29, 1961. The title is taken from a notable speech in William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice, quoted in Serling's closing narration at the end of the episode.