Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Delete Yourself! is the debut album by German digital hardcore band Atari Teenage Riot. [ 2 ] The song "Speed" was used in the 2006 film The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift .
"Speed/Midijunkies" (according to the CD single) or Midijunkies/Speed (according to the 12" vinyl) is a single by Atari Teenage Riot, initially released in April 1995 to promote their debut full-length Delete Yourself!. The song "Speed" samples Powermad's "Slaughterhouse" [1] and was later used for the 2006 movie The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo ...
Atari Teenage Riot (ATR) is a German band formed in Berlin in 1992. Highly political, they fuse anarchist and anti-fascist views with punk vocals and a techno sound called digital hardcore , which is a term band member Alec Empire used as the name of his record label Digital Hardcore Recordings .
"ATR" ("Atari Teenage Riot") is a song by Atari Teenage Riot, released as their first single in 1993. It was later included on their debut album Delete Yourself! . Track listings
Destroy 2000 Years of Culture is a song by Atari Teenage Riot, released as the fourth and final single from their 1997 album The Future of War. The single was released as a 12" vinyl record and as a limited edition CD, with only 500 copies made. The CD edition contains an unlisted hidden track: An instrumental version of the B-side "Paranoid".
Reset is the fifth studio album by Atari Teenage Riot, ... "Erase Your Face" 6:15: 10. "We Are From the Internet" 4:52: Critical reception. Professional ratings;
Atari Teenage Riot: 1992–2000 is a greatest hits compilation by the seminal digital hardcore band Atari Teenage Riot. The album was released on band member Alec Empire 's Digital Hardcore Recordings on 3 July 2006 and features 18 tracks from the band's back catalogue.
Burn, Berlin, Burn! is a compilation album released by Atari Teenage Riot in 1997. Initially released in the United States by the Beastie Boys' record label Grand Royal (Mike D was quoted saying the music is "the most punk-rock shit ever" [4]), the album is a collection of tracks from their first two albums Delete Yourself! and The Future of War.