The Gauntlet: Hate Eternal Metal News
The News Review:
- The Gauntlet: Hate Eternal Metal News
- Napalm Death for Second Time in Bulgaria
- FANS CMMENT How good were the 1980s?
The Gauntlet: Hate Eternal Metal News
thegauntlet.com – Jan 22, 2007
Formed in 1997 Hate Eternal’s goal has always been to challenge musical limitations and create new boundaries with no compromise; to obtain goals aimed at by many yet reached by only a select few; to create music that not only defies all clich? but that creates a true sense of power dissonance and consonance heaviness and speed melody and brutality simply put horrific hymns. Guitarist Erik Rutan has crafted an impressive career by attaining that goal consistently for well over a decade with his legendary work in Ripping Corpse and Morbid Angel… This is completely amazing. We know we will forge on with all the support and confidence a band can ask for from their record label. We are proud to be a part of the hugely successful Metal Blade Family and look forward to bringing our music to the next level. Date: Jan 22 2007As Reported by: jason Tags:.
Napalm Death for Second Time in Bulgaria
News.bg – Jan 22, 2007
The show will take place in "Hristo Botev" hall on 26th of January. The bands that are going to warm up the public are: "Envy" "Propaganda" and "Urban Grey". "Napalm Death" was founded in 1982 in Birmingham England and it is considered as one of the fastest and "heaviest" group… The bands that are going to warm up the public are: "Envy" "Propaganda" and "Urban Grey". "Napalm Death" was founded in 1982 in Birmingham England and it is considered as one of the fastest and "heaviest" group.
FANS CMMENT How good were the 1980s?
Toffeeweb – Jan 22, 2007
Many including myself would argue that the early 1980′s were characterised by conflict the death of consensus politics the destruction of the manufacturing base of the British economy riots in many major cities of the UK and ‘Boy George’. Punk the most innovative trend in British Music since Mersey-beat was being replaced with a bunch of tossers; the sterile boorish posers known as the ‘New Romantics’ (what they had to be newly romantic about fuck only knows because most people I knew were either signing on or shitting themselves about impending redundancy). Merseyside felt the brunt of the ‘New Right’s’ love affair with monetarism and the hidden hand of the market took away jobs and we as a city were well and truly fucked over by the powers that be a reaction in the form of Deggsy Hatton and his Trotskyites helped bankrupt the city of Liverpool and all of a sudden ‘this town was indeed looking like a ghost town’. Sunday night all over the city blokes said goodbye to their wives girlfriends (or both!) and headed for their jobs in the South East South Coast Germany even Holland. To give you a personal example in 1980 the metal factory I worked in had 9000 weekly paid workers on its books and about 2000 monthly paid staff; by 1989 there were less than 800 people in total (Now it’s a shopping centre with a McDonalds McJobs within a McEconomy)But what of the football? Gentlemen the football was at times sublime and in the great tradition of Everton Football Club it could also be ridiculous. The truth is the best thing about the Everton revival of the 1980s it was all so unexpected nobody I know who went the match at that time could have predicted our five-season purple patch before it began and certainly nobody could have predicted how and why it eventually would come to an end… Merseyside felt the brunt of the ‘New Right’s’ love affair with monetarism and the hidden hand of the market took away jobs and we as a city were well and truly fucked over by the powers that be a reaction in the form of Deggsy Hatton and his Trotskyites helped bankrupt the city of Liverpool and all of a sudden ‘this town was indeed looking like a ghost town’. Sunday night all over the city blokes said goodbye to their wives girlfriends (or both!) and headed for their jobs in the South East South Coast Germany even Holland. To give you a personal example in 1980 the metal factory I worked in had 9000 weekly paid workers on its books and about 2000 monthly paid staff; by 1989 there were less than 800 people in total (Now it’s a shopping centre with a McDonalds McJobs within a McEconomy)But what of the football? Gentlemen the football was at times sublime and in the great tradition of Everton Football Club it could also be ridiculous. The truth is the best thing about the Everton revival of the 1980s it was all so unexpected nobody I know who went the match at that time could have predicted our five-season purple patch before it began and certainly nobody could have predicted how and why it eventually would come to an end. We’ve all got our pet theory about that team here’s mine for what it is worth. We had the best goalkeeper I’ve ever seen playing for any team at any time in any place and my memory goes back to Gordon Banks and Peter Shilton. If ‘Big Nev’ had have been born on the English side of the River Dee he’d have been made a knight (or a dame) by now.