想い出波止場热门歌曲下载

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歌曲 专辑 时长
1
大音楽 04:07
2
天敵 Black Hawaii 00:43
3
Route 99999 水中JOE 03:37
4
こころ Vuoy 03:15
5
Sugar Clip Vuoy 02:46
6
Delayed Sky Vuoy 03:38
7
Come on! Me! Mantako 03:06
8
Heaven Born Devils Mantako 02:14
9
Shooting Dub 水中JOE 00:40
10
Shelter Beerhall Black Hawaii 05:06

想い出波止場最新专辑下载

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大阪・ラ
大阪・ラ
2004-10-23
录音室专辑
Vuoy
Vuoy
1997-01-01
录音室专辑
Mantako
Mantako
1994-08-22
录音室专辑
水中JOE
水中JOE
1992-01-01
录音室专辑
Black Hawaii
Black Hawaii
1992-01-01
录音室专辑
大音楽
大音楽
1990-01-01
录音室专辑

想い出波止場歌手简介

by Erik Hage The Japanese group the Boredoms -- who meld punk/hardcore frenzy, the cosmic free-form of Sun Ra's Arkestra and downright silliness -- was founded on the principle that the individual members would never be restricted to one band. Guitarist Yamamoto Seiichi, who joined the Boredoms in 1986, has embraced this notion to a dizzying degree, having been involved in as many as nine projects at once. (As a parallel to his music career, Yamamoto has long been running the Osaka, Japan club Bears, which is sort of Osaka's version of CBGB.) Omoide Hatoba is one such non-Boredoms venture, providing Yamamoto with an outlet for noise experiments and extended guitar freakouts. As the prolific nature of the group attests, this is far more than simply a side project for Yamamoto; the group has served as a primary outlet for the guitarist's more abstract compositions. Omoide Hatoba debuted with the album Daiongaku in 1990, following that with Suchi Joe in 1991. 1992's Black Hawaii represents some of the group's finest work -- and includes a cover version of Country Joe and the Fish's "Feel Like I'm Fixin' to Die Rag." (At least that's their story and they're sticking to it; the listener may have a hard time discerning the song.) Mantako came out in 1994, while the follow-up, 1995's Kinsei, saw the group's lineup expanded beyond a trio, with sax and tuba augmenting the sound.