Untitled (Selections from 12)

Untitled (Selections From 12) is a 1997 promotional-only EP from German band The Notwist which was released exclusively in the United States. Though the release of the EP was primarily to promote the band's then-current album 12, it contains one track from their 1992 second record Nook as well as the non-album cover of Robert Palmer's "Johnny and Mary". The version of "Torture Day" on this EP features the vocals of Cindy Dall.

Track listing

  • "The String" – 3:43
  • "The Incredible Change of Our Alien" – 4:59
  • "Johnny and Mary" – 4:52
  • "Torture Day (Loup)" – 6:12
  • "Noah" – 5:44
  • Untitled (Marc and the Mambas album)

    Untitled is the first studio album by the British singer/songwriter Marc Almond's band Marc and the Mambas. It was released by Some Bizzare in September 1982.

    Background

    Untitled was Almond's first album away from Soft Cell and was made concurrently with the latter's The Art of Falling Apart album. Almond collaborated with a number of artists for this album, including Matt Johnson of The The and Anni Hogan. The album was produced by the band, with assistance from Stephen Short (credited as Steeve Short) and Flood.

    Jeremy Reed writes in his biography of Almond, The Last Star, that Untitled was "cheap and starkly recorded". He states that Almond received "little support from Phonogram for the Mambas project, the corporate viewing it as non-commercial and a disquieting pointer to the inevitable split that would occur within Soft Cell". An article in Mojo noted that "from the beginning, Almond and Ball had nurtured sideline projects, though only the former's - the 1982 double 12 inch set Untitled - attracted much attention, most of it disapproving." The article mentions that Almond "who preferred to nail a song in one or two takes" stated that it was all "about feel and spontaneity, otherwise it gets too contrived" when accused of singing flat.<ref name"mojo">Paytress, Mark. "We Are The Village Sleaze Preservation Society". Mojo (September 2014): 69. </ref>

    Untitled (West)

    Untitled is an outdoor 1977 stainless steel sculpture by American artist Bruce West, installed in Portland, Oregon, in the United States.

    Description

    Bruce West's Untitled is installed along Southwest 6th Avenue between Washington and Stark streets in Portland's Transit Mall. It was one of eleven works chosen in 1977 to make the corridor "more people oriented and attractive" as part of the Portland Transit Mall Art Project. The stainless steel sculptures is 7 feet (2.1 m) tall. It was funded by TriMet and the United States Department of Transportation, and is administered by the Regional Arts & Culture Council.

    See also

  • 1977 in art
  • Sculpture Stage (1976), another Portland sculpture by Bruce West
  • References

    External links

  • Untitled at the Public Art Archive
  • TriMet Max Green Line Public Art Guide (PDF), TriMet
  • Deluxe

    Deluxe may refer to:

    Corporations

  • Deluxe Corporation, check printers
  • De Luxe Motor Car Company, an American automobile manufacturer
  • Media and Entertainment

  • DeLuxe Color, a brand of color photography used in motion pictures, especially those made by Twentieth Century-Fox since late 1953
  • Deluxe Entertainment Services Group Inc., parent company of
  • Deluxe Digital Studios
  • Deluxe Laboratories
  • Deluxe Music, a German music television channel
  • Matsuko Deluxe
  • Music

  • Deluxe, a rock musician (Xoel López) from Galicia, Spain
  • Deluxe, an electronic group from Aix-en-Provence, France
  • Deluxe, an album by Harmonia
  • Deluxe, an album by Better Than Ezra
  • De Luxe Records, a record label
  • Deluxe Records, a record label
  • Samy Deluxe, a German rap musician
  • Delux, a Mexican punk/alternative rock band
  • See also

  • DX (disambiguation)
  • Boxy Boy

    Souko Ban Deluxe (倉庫番DELUXE Sōkoban Derakkusu), known as Boxy Boy in the United States is a puzzle arcade game released by Namco in 1990; it runs on Namco System 1 hardware, and is based on the Sokoban game series, by Thinking Rabbit. It is a graphically enhanced implementation of the then-8-year-old Japanese puzzle game phenomenon, and is the only implementation of Sokoban to be released in the arcades - and while it features all the rules of regular Sokoban it also has a timer which determines how long the player character, "Rabi-kun" will have to clear the current round, before the game ends - and even if the player decides that he or she has to start the round over, the timer will not be reset. If the player runs out of time, he or she can insert another coin to continue from the current round, with a full timer; there are fifty-five in all, and the player can start from the first, twelfth, twenty-third, thirty-fourth and forty-fifth ones. The five rounds whose numbers are multiples of eleven are also indicated with a question mark - and, after the player clears one of the five rounds whose numbers are multiples of ten, he or she shall actually get to see the following (question-marked) round. If the player clears a round in enough steps (a step is counted every time the player pushes the joystick, or presses the Reverse Button to undo one of his or her previous moves), he or she will also receive a "Best Steps" or "Good Steps" bonus - and some of the music in this game was later reused in Namco's unreleased prototype game Puzzle Club (although it was never actually released in the arcades).

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