Records
File:Foreigner - Records.jpg
Greatest hits album by Foreigner
Released November 29, 1982
Recorded 1976-1981
Genre Rock
Length 39:23
Label Atlantic
Producer Roy Thomas Baker,
Mick Jones,
Robert John "Mutt" Lange,
Gary Lyons,
Ian McDonald,
Keith Olsen,
John Sinclair
Foreigner chronology
4
(1981)
Records
(1982)
Agent Provocateur
(1984)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4.5/5 stars [1]

Records is a compilation album by American rock band Foreigner, released in 1982 to span the band's first four albums through 1981. Along with their sophomore effort, Double Vision, this album is the group's best-selling record. It has been certified 7 x platinum by the RIAA. Some notable hits, such as "Blue Morning, Blue Day" are omitted.

Contents

Track listing [link]

all songs by Lou Gramm and Mick Jones, except where noted

  1. "Cold as Ice" – 3:19
  2. "Double Vision" – 3:29
  3. "Head Games" – 3:37
  4. "Waiting for a Girl Like You" – 4:35
  5. "Feels Like the First Time" (Jones) – 3:28
  6. "Urgent" (Jones) – 3:57
  7. "Dirty White Boy" – 3:13
  8. "Juke Box Hero" – 4:03
  9. "Long, Long Way From Home" (Gramm, Jones, McDonald) – 2:47
  10. "Hot Blooded" (Live) – 6:55

When this album is bought on iTunes, the track "Hot Blooded" is the studio version of the song, not live.

Personnel [link]

Additional personnel

Production [link]

  • Producer: Roy Thomas Baker, Mick Jones, Robert John "Mutt" Lange, Gary Lyons, Ian McDonald, Keith Olsen, John Sinclair
  • Engineers: Jimmy Douglass, Dave Wittman, Geoff Workman
  • Remastering: Ted Jensen
  • Art direction: Lynn Dreese Breslin, Bob Defrin
  • Design: Lynn Dreese Breslin, Bob Defrin
  • Photography: Allen Levine, Frank Moscati

Certifications [link]

Region Certification Sales/shipments
Germany (BVMI)[2] Gold 250,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[3] Silver 60,000^
United States (RIAA)[4] 7× Platinum 7,000,000^

^shipments figures based on certification alone

Charts [link]

Chart (1983) Peak
position
US Billboard Pop Albums[5] 10

References [link]


https://wn.com/Records_(album)

1605 (record label)

1605 (pronounced as sixteen-o-five) is a techno and tech-house record label, founded in 2007 by a Slovenian DJ and producer UMEK. With 140 releases by more than 250 artists 1605 is the biggest label UMEK has founded since Recycled Loops and Consumer Recreation. UMEK started the label to promote tracks from talented artists, regardless of their fame and the strength of previous releases.

Creative concept

The label's creative concept is based on its sound as well as on its visual appearance.

1605's sound relies on UMEK's creative feeling as he acts as A&R manager and decides personally which tracks are signed by the label. Tracks are usually released digitally and sold online in various outlets such as Beatport, iTunes, Trackitdown, Juno and others. The only project, which was released also on a CD, was UMEK's 2010 album Responding to Dynamic.

1605's music can also be heard on the label's podcast and on websites such as Soundcloud and Mixcloud.

The label is also building its recognition by using a distinctive graphic design for artwork (release covers, promo material). Using only artwork in grayscale with occasional yellow tones, all release covers feature parts of vintage pictures from the 1930s Great Depression in the USA and personal drawings by the label's graphic designer.

78 Records

78 Records is a music store located in the central business district of Perth, Western Australia. The store also sells DVDs, clothing and tickets to music and comedy events. Due to the history of the business, the large variety of music sold, and promotion of local acts, the store has had a significant influence upon local culture and the music scene within Perth.

History

78 Records first opened on 19 June 1971 on the first floor of the Padbury Building in Forrest Place. Geoff "Hud" Hudson, John Hood, and John "Scruff" McGregor started the store to provide music that was unavailable from other outlets.

In its infancy, 78 Records boasted about 300 titles, all on vinyl and mainly imports, with a strong leaning towards blues but also encompassing an extensive range of other genres, though space was constrained as the store was housed in two small rooms. It was the three owners' love of the blues that inspired the store's logo, with its photographic representation of Blind Lemon Jefferson. The name 78 Records derives from the format on which his original recordings were released.

Cut

Cut may refer to:

  • The act of cutting, the separation of an object into two through acutely-directed force
  • Cut, a type of wound
  • Mathematics

  • Branch cut, a concept in complex analysis
  • Cut-elimination theorem
  • Cut (graph theory)
  • Dedekind cut, a partition of rational numbers
  • Computing

  • Cut, copy, and paste, a set of editing procedures
  • Cut (logic programming)
  • cut (Unix), a command line utility
  • Film and television

  • Cut (2000 film), a horror comedy film
  • The Cut (2007 film), a South Korean horror film
  • Cut (2011 film), a Japanese drama film
  • Cut (advertisement), a 2009 British advertising campaign on domestic violence
  • Cut (censorship), removal of a scene to meet censors' requirements
  • Cut (transition), a transition from one sequence to another
  • Cuts, a TV series
  • Music

  • Cut (music), an African-American music technique
  • Cut drum
  • Cut (C-Tec album)
  • Cut (Crack the Sky album)
  • Cut, an album by Flare Acoustic Arts League
  • Cut (Golden Earring album)
  • Cut (Hunters and Collectors album)
  • Cut (The Slits album)
  • Cut (EP), an EP by Aaron Yan
  • Wound

    A wound is a type of injury which happens relatively quickly in which skin is torn, cut, or punctured (an open wound), or where blunt force trauma causes a contusion (a closed wound). In pathology, it specifically refers to a sharp injury which damages the dermis of the skin.

    Classification

    According to level of contamination a wound can be classified as

  • Clean wound, a wound made under sterile conditions where there are no organisms present in the wound and the wound is likely to heal without complications.
  • Contaminated wound, where the wound is as a result of accidental injury where there are pathogenic organisms and foreign bodies in the wound.
  • Infected wound, where the wound has pathogenic organisms present and multiplying showing clinical signs of infection, where it looks yellow, oozing pus, having pain and redness.
  • Colonized wound, where the wound is a chronic one and there are a number of organisms present and very difficult to heal (i.e. a bedsore).
  • Open

    Open wounds can be classified according to the object that caused the wound. The types of open wound are:

    Cut (Hunters and Collectors album)

    Cut is the seventh studio album by Australian rock band, Hunters & Collectors. It was mostly produced by American Don Gehman with the group and issued by White Label/Mushroom on 5 October 1992. It reached No. 6 on the ARIA Albums Chart and No. 17 on the New Zealand Albums Chart. The band were nominated for Best Group at the 1992 ARIA Music Awards and Album of the Year for Cut in the following year.

    "Where Do You Go" was co-produced with Nick Sansano and released as a single in September 1991, prior to commencing the rest of the album with Gehman, but it was included on Cut. Subsequent singles were "Head Above Water" (July 1992), "We the People" (September), "True Tears of Joy" (November), "Holy Grail" (March 1993) and "Imaginary Girl" (August), all appeared on the ARIA Singles Chart Top 100.

    Background

    Hunters & Collectors' seventh studio album, Cut, was recorded from late 1991 and into 1992. The line-up of the group was John Archer on bass guitar; Doug Falconer on drums, backing vocals, programming, percussion and tape loops; Jack Howard on trumpet, keyboards and backing vocals; Robert Miles on live sound and art design; Barry Palmer on lead guitar; Mark Seymour on lead vocals and guitar,; Jeremy Smith on French horn, keyboards, guitars and backing vocals; and Michael Waters on keyboards and trombone.

    Acquaviva Collecroce

    Acquaviva Collecroce (also called Živavoda Kruč or, usually, just Kruč) is a small town and comune in the province of Campobasso, in the Molise region of southern Italy, between the Biferno and Trigno rivers.

    Like the smaller towns of Montemitro and San Felice del Molise, Acquaviva Collecroce is home to a community of Molisian Croats, most of whom speak a particular Croatian dialect (known as simply na-našo or naš jezik, meaning "our language") as well as Italian. There are differences in the dialects of the three towns, but they all descend from the Shtokavian-Ikavian dialect of Dalmatia. The language is considered an endangered diaspora language.

    Acquaviva is known for the production of a small, dark, zerniza figs grown there, as well as the fennel and white celery.

    History

    In the 12th century, Acquaviva was a base for the Knights of Malta.

    Though there is evidence of an earlier Slavic settlement in 1297, it is believed that the current inhabitants are not their descendants, but rather come from later migrations in the 15th and 16th centuries. These migrations may have been caused by Ottoman incursions into the Balkans.

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