Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Tattoo the Earth was a concert tour from 2000 to 2002 in the United States. [1] Scott Alderman, the festival's creator, believed that the tour would help "catch the vibe" between the musical artists and the body artists, saying in a prepared statement, "Nothing represents the counter youth culture like music and body art.
This short series of shows took place after the summer's Tattoo the Earth tour. October 24, 2000: Walker: United States: DeltaPlex Arena — October 25, 2000: Trotwood: Hara Arena — October 27, 2000: Washington, D.C. 9:30 Club: Mudvayne, Hatebreed: October 28, 2000: 9:30 Club/WHFS Show October 29, 2000: Asbury Park: Asbury Park Convention ...
There is only one officially released Oldfield live audio album, Exposed, although others have been released on video: Warner's Sight&Sound edition of The Art in Heaven Concert includes a CD of Oldfield's new millennium live performance in Berlin; and the special edition of Music of the Spheres also contains the only live performance of the piece by Oldfield (Bilbao 2008).
Earth is a live album by Neil Young and Promise of the Real, released on June 17, 2016 on Reprise Records.Recorded during the band's Rebel Content Tour in 2015, the album was produced by Young and John Hanlon and features live performances augmented by studio overdubs and additional nature and animal sounds.
In the United States, the album reached peak positions of number 63 on the Billboard 200, [32] number 5 on the US Folk Albums chart [33] and number 14 on the US Rock Albums chart. [34] Carlile's next album, Bear Creek, released June 5, 2012, was produced by Trina Shoemaker. [35] The album is a collaboration between her and the Hanseroth twins.
The Collection is a box set by American rock band Toto.It consists of the band's first seven albums on CD, and a DVD of Greatest Hits Live and More (released in 1992 on VHS under the title Toto Live, then on DVD in 2002), a concert recorded at Le Zénith, Paris, in October 1990.
Critics acknowledged the sharp transformation in the band's sound and were generally favorable towards Hex.Writing for Pitchfork, Austin Gaines described the album as a "surprisingly beautiful instrumental album" that exchanged distorted riffing for "the austere beauty of a telecaster roaming the Western U.S." [7] In Exclaim!, Kevin Hainey praised the album as "an elegant and singular effort ...
God Hates Us All is the ninth studio album by American thrash metal band Slayer, released on September 11, 2001, by American Recordings.It was recorded over three months at The Warehouse Studio in Vancouver, and includes the Grammy Award-nominated song "Disciple".