Posted: 01/26 @ 01:01 pmRumpke mountain boys –”pigs (three different ones)”
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The Rumpke Mountain Boys at the “John Hartford Memorial Festival”– June 3, 2011…. |
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The Rumpke Mountain Boys at the “John Hartford Memorial Festival”– June 3, 2011…. |
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rare 8mm videoclip – Anaheim Stadium – May 7th 1977… |
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Pigs (Three Different Ones) – The Australian Pink Floyd Show 8.29.2010 Pittsburgh PA @ The Benedum Center… |
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Madison Square Garden New York,NY July 3,1977… |
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‘Pigs (Three Different Ones)’ – The Australian Pink Floyd Show – UK Tour 2010 The O2, London – Friday 23 April 2010… |
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Municipal Stadium Cleveland,OH June 25,1977… |
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El Monstero December 17th 2010. “Beyond the wall 2010″ 12th annual tribute to Pink Floyd. Pigs (Three Different Ones)… |
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Animals is the tenth studio album by English progressive rock group Pink Floyd, released in January 1977. A concept album, it provides a scathing critique of the social-political conditions of 1970s Britain, and presents a marked change in musical style from their earlier work. Animals was recorded at the band’s studio, Britannia Row, in London, but its production was punctuated by the early signs of discord that several years later would culminate in keyboardist Richard Wright leaving the band. The album’s cover image, a pig floating between two chimneys on Battersea Power Station, was conceived by bassist and writer Roger Waters, and photographed by long-time collaborators Hipgnosis…. |
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Animals is the tenth studio album by English progressive rock group Pink Floyd, released in January 1977. A concept album, it provides a scathing critique of the social-political conditions of 1970s Britain, and presents a marked change in musical style from their earlier work. Animals was recorded at the band’s studio, Britannia Row, in London, but its production was punctuated by the early signs of discord that several years later would culminate in keyboardist Richard Wright leaving the band. The album’s cover image, a pig floating between two chimneys on Battersea Power Station, was conceived by bassist and writer Roger Waters, and photographed by long-time collaborators Hipgnosis…. |
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UFO Club friday 24 Febbraio 1967, Tottenham Court Road, Londra (The Return of the Invisible Pink Floyd) different scenes Swinging London è un termine che viene genericamente applicato ad un insieme di tendenze e dinamiche culturali che si svilupparono in Gran Bretagna (ea Londra in particolare) negli anni sessanta. Gran parte di questo fenomeno vide la gioventù orientarsi verso il nuovo e il moderno, e risultò in una rivoluzione culturale nel Regno Unito. Fu un periodo di ottimismo e di edonismo, come furono gli anni sessanta per gran parte del mondo occidentale. Riguardò soprattutto la musica pop del periodo, quando gli artisti britannici dominavano l’industria discografica mondiale, ma anche la moda, la fotografia, il cinema e le arti (pop art, ecc.). I suoi simboli principali furono probabilmente i Beatles, i Rolling Stones, gli Who e le minigonne. Uno dei catalizzatori di questo fenomeno fu il recupero dell’economia inglese dopo il periodo di austerità e razionamenti del dopoguerra, che durò per gran parte degli anni cinquanta. Blow-Up, il film del 1966 di Michelangelo Antonioni, illustra il gusto dell’epoca. Un altro film, decisamente più leggero, ambientato nella Swinging London è Absolute Beginners (1986), diretto da Julien Temple, tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di Colin MacInnes (intitolato Principianti assoluti nell’edizione italiana). Un documentario fortemente rappresentativo del periodo è Tonite Let’s All Make Love in London di Peter Whitehead. fonte: Wikipedia …. |