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Degradation Trip is the second solo album by Alice in Chains guitarist and vocalist Jerry Cantrell, released on June 18, 2002. [1] It marks his difficult transition from Columbia Records to Roadrunner , and was dedicated to Alice in Chains lead singer Layne Staley , who died two months before the album's release.
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Degradation Trip Volumes 1 & 2 is a double album by Jerry Cantrell, released on November 26, 2002, through Roadrunner Records. [1] It is an expanded limited edition of Cantrell's Degradation Trip album, which was released five months earlier. All the songs were written long prior to the first release of Degradation Trip. [7]
DMZ has re-formed periodically; a 1993 set appears on the Live at the Rat album (along with eight tracks from a 1976 show). Early drummer David Robinson (who had previously been in The Modern Lovers) left DMZ to join The Cars. Bassist Mike Lewis later joined the Lyres and later recorded with The A-Bones and Yo La Tengo. Guitarist Peter ...
Digital Mystikz are a dubstep production duo consisting of Mala (born Mark Lawrence), and Coki (born Dean Harris, 26 August 1980) from the South London suburb of Norwood. [1] [2] Along with Loefah and SGT Pokes, who make up the group ASBO (All Soundbwoy Out), they operate the DMZ record label and host the influential [3] bimonthly [4] nightclub DMZ, held at the Mass club complex in Brixton ...
It was the lead single from his 2002 solo album, Degradation Trip. [3] Cantrell's fourth single overall, the track made its radio debut in early April 2002. [1] [2] The single spent 18 weeks on Billboard's Mainstream Rock Tracks chart [8] and peaked at No. 10. [8] "Anger Rising" begins with a choir-like, non-lexical vocal harmony over acoustic ...
Cantrell's harmonized chorus is an irresistible sing-along, even in its devastating refrain: "Every time you let it show/I didn't want to know/By the time I had lost my soul/You had to go." The track begins as a ballad but brews into a real rocker midway through, building on Cantrell's layers of edgy and chiming guitars."
AllMusic gave This Is Space four and out of five stars, calling it "a worthy collection of mostly beatless recordings throughout the ages" and "a surprisingly solid collection of space recordings from the 1970s, '80s and '90s, with Kraftwerk, Tangerine Dream, Eno, Gong, Klaus Schulze, Fripp & Eno, Roxy Music, David Bowie and Hawkwind representing the first onset of ambience."