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State Children - Bomb Shelter For Money Making album

State Children - Bomb Shelter For Money Making album

  • Performer: State Children
  • Genre: Rock
  • Title: Bomb Shelter For Money Making
  • Released: 1985
  • Style: Punk, Hardcore, Noise
  • MP3 version size: 1372 mb
  • FLAC version size: 1517 mb
  • Other: VOX DTS AIFF AUD DXD MPC MOD
  • Rating: 4.2
  • Votes: 224

Description

State Children’s one-sided black flexi, recorded in October 1984, is one of the most obscure records of noise-core gems to ever come out. It is certainly one of the most expensive records on the collector's market today. almost no one outside of Japan knows this band. Thin, high-pitched feedback rises from beneath the sirens.

The Bomb Shelter, New Brunswick, New Jersey. Performance & event venue. 25 July 2016 ·. Yo, show tonight w//American Lions, The Blithedale Romance, and Milkmen. If you know our location come through, and if not hit us up. The Bomb Shelter.

A bomb shelter is a structure designed to provide protection against the effects of a bomb. Different kinds of bomb shelters are configured to protect against different kinds of attack and strengths of hostile explosives. An air-raid shelter is a structure built to protect against bomber planes dropping bombs over a large area. These were commonly seen during World War II, such as the "Anderson shelters" of the United Kingdom.

Current owner Karyn has lived in the 57-year-old home for 46 years and raised three children on the property. By Lauren Edmonds For Dailymail. Published: 14:35 EDT, 15 July 2019 Updated: 14:47 EDT, 15 July 2019.

How to plan to build the bomb shelter on a budget? What are the rules in bomb survival? What to do during the initial blast? Tips from professionals. People have different ideas on building a bomb shelter that would suit their needs. Many would like to have the comforts of home they were used to, so they would opt to have a modest bomb shelter that would have the basic necessities like rooms, a dining area and a toilet

Mrs. Prophet, likening the shelter to ''Noah's Ark in the earth,'' said in an interview that the elaborate plan for her and her followers to survive a nuclear war would continue despite today's legal setback. Mrs. Prophet declared that today marked the beginning of 12 years of ''intense negative karma'' that would. They are fed and sheltered by the church.

This album is a collection of reggae, ska, and dub songs taken from the catalogs of Trojan Records. Compiled around 2001 to 2002, the album was first released in the format of two 7-inch EPs and later released on CD format. Blunted in the Bomb Shelter. Compilation album by Madlib. Beat Konducta Vol. 0: Earth Sounds (2001). Blunted in the Bomb Shelter (2002). Shades of Blue (2003).

During the Cold War, bomb shelters were frequently found in American basements and backyards. Find this Pin and more on Nuclear War - Location - Bomb Shelter by The End. Tags. Nuclear War. Panic Rooms.

Tracklist

A1 Chaos
A2 Starve To Death
A3 Thirteen Step
A4 Contorol Mama

Companies, etc.

  • Manufactured By – Kojima Recordings, Inc. – PLM-064

Notes

The only available information is that the release year is 1985.

Video

Comments

Lavivan Lavivan
The text below (from riistetyt, June 2, 2012) is lifted from http://www.shit-fi.com/articles/JapaneseNoiseCoreRecords/StateChildren. I'm the original author. There is more to read and images to look at if you follow the link.
Sermak Light Sermak Light
State Children “Bomb Shelter for Moneymaking!” flexi (1984 - More 04) State Children’s one-sided black flexi, recorded in October 1984, is one of the most obscure records of noise-core gems to ever come out. It is certainly one of the most expensive records on the collector's market today. almost no one outside of Japan knows this band. In the intervening years bands like Atrocious Madness and Lebenden Toten have increased the legendary status of the record. In one sense, I can understand the desirability of this flexi. It includes some of the most charming broken English available on a Japanese record from the 80's. The stark sleeve artwork looks great (though the very flimsy paper stock makes a mint copy difficult to find). It certainly is rare as it comes around once every few years. And the music is some of the most bonkers noise-core ever, surpassing Gai in the “extremely basic” department, with a blinding noise attack sound and the vocals of an insane person. But these qualities unite in a sound that does not strike me as particularly easy to listen to, and the average collector, seeking a rare record with raging tunes, would probably be disappointed by the “acquired taste” this music engenders. The record begins with an explosion, followed by sirens and a voice announcing what seem to be evacuation orders in Japanese. Thin, high-pitched feedback rises from beneath the sirens. A very basic bass line quickly begins, accompanied by the rantings of a gang of lunatics, who shreik, caterwaul, moo, and grunt for 20 seconds or so. I get the feeling they are trying to express how utterly insane nuclear war is. Or maybe that paying $800 for this flexi is even more insane than nuclear war. Once the music actually starts, it’s a fairly tawdry affair. Throat-wrenching, mic-swallowing screams, mosquito-buzz guitar, and bargain-basement bass and drums. I’d say that drummer Zero got his name when the other band members calculated how many time changes his abilities could accommodate. That guitar sound is even more noisy/fuzzy/WTF than Confuse’s or Gai’s. It is more like ambiance than actual riffing. I defy anyone to discern the chord changes. Only the bass seems to change notes once in a while. Really, it must be heard to be believed because despite all the noise, the “songs” are memorable. No one would confuse State Children with Confuse or Gudon. State Children, unlike many Japanese hardcore bands of the era, seemed actually to espouse political beliefs. Their pacifist sentiment comes across as more than just sloganeering, though one would be hard-pressed to say that their music spreads the message well. Still, they seem more political than Gai or even Confuse. A short write-up of the band from before the flexi was released, along with lyrics to one song, and a note from bassist Death (one English word: “Lydon”) appeared in the first issue of a Japanese fanzine called 100 Club. This zine is clearly antiwar and includes an article on various nuclear disarmament campaigns around the world. I can’t read Japanese, but the piece on the ‘Children seems to indicate a few bits of trivia: there were at least two drummers during the year and three months the band existed (from formationed ‘til clashed); the existence of two tapes is mentioned; the flexi’s original planned title was “Fighting for Power Politics”; and they took influence from Discharge,Crass,Disorder and chaos uk.