Yahoo Suche Web Suche

  1. Niedrige Preise, Riesenauswahl. Sicher bezahlen mit Kauf auf Rechnung. Kostenlose und einfache Rücksendungen für Millionen von Artikeln.

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Long Live Père Ubu! is an album by the American band Pere Ubu, released in 2009. It is a soundtrack to a musical adaptation of the play from which the band took its name. The band performed its adaptation at (Le) Poisson Rouge. David Thomas referred to Long Live Père Ubu! as the first "true" punk album to be released in 30 years.

  2. www.ubuprojex.com › pere-ubu-albums › pere-ubu-long-live-pere-ubuPere Ubu, Long Live Père Ubu

    As a bold experiment in fusing spoken word with post-rock, post-punk and ambient electronica, "Long Live Père Ubu!" is an unqualified success... it's trippy, twisted genius. Simon Harper, Bearded Magazine , 9/7/9

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Pere_UbuPere Ubu - Wikipedia

    The band's new album, Long Live Père Ubu!, released September 14 on Cooking Vinyl Records with the American release issued on Hearpen Records. The disc reprised the Ubu Roi story. Sarah Jane Morris guested on the disc as did Ubu's sound man Gagarin. The rest of the band comprised: Thomas, Moliné, Wheeler, Temple and Mehlman. During ...

  4. Explore the tracklist, credits, statistics, and more for "Long Live Père Ubu!" by Pere Ubu With Sarah Jane Morris. Compare versions and buy on Discogs

    • (30)
    • 18
  5. The Crowd Long Live Père Ubu! Narrator Père Ubu throws coins, tokens, forms, pamphlets, lottery tickets, and small pieces of official-looking paper into the crowd. Père Ubu Promise that you'll pay the taxes.

  6. 11. Sept. 2009 · Long Live Père Ubu! by Pere Ubu, Sarah Jane Morris released in 2009. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

  7. "Long Live Père Ubu!" is the album of songs that was the genesis of the entire mess. It was to be a great leap forward in our pursuit of hypernaturalistic recording techniques by which we replace microphones in the studio with wooden boxes, junked radio speakers, metal horns, and electrically charged window panes.