Until Tomas Kubowicz , that is. The Swedish guitarist and songwriter was li… Read Full Bio ↴Until Tomas Kubowicz , that is. The Swedish guitarist and songwriter was living in his native Norrköping when, years after it had first come and gone, he heard this music for the first time. "Sweden is, musically, quite Anglo-inspired; many of my friends listened to this kind of music, and that's the way I got hooked on it," he recalls. "Stone Roses was kind of an introduction - I never had any high thoughts of their debut album when I first listened to it, but when I picked up the album again a couple years later and had a listen, it totally exploded. It's a masterpiece. I've never left them since."
In 2005, Tomas relocated to Stockholm, where he met bassist Anton Lindberg. Unable to find simpatico bandmates after a year of searching, the pair moved to London in summer of 2006. "We struggled quite hard to find the right people," says Tomas. "The music we had to offer was [perceived as] being a bit uncool in London, which was more into post-punk, thousands of sub-Libertines and Arctic Monkey bands, and also the nu-rave scene was at its peak. But I never was disheartened by it, and just continued to write songs."
Eventually, however, they found drummer Alfonso Tammaro, and the newly solidified trio (with Tomas also providing vocals) quickly made an impression upon producer Mark Wallis, who has worked with the Smiths, the La's, the Go-Betweens, and many others. Also whilst in London the trio found Jonathan Sutcliffe (main vocals) and Andrew Needle (rhythm guitar). The fruits of the band's sessions with Mark make up their official debut, Tour de Force, a limited-edition CD/7-inch released by Shelflife Records.
In 2005, Tomas relocated to Stockholm, where he met bassist Anton Lindberg. Unable to find simpatico bandmates after a year of searching, the pair moved to London in summer of 2006. "We struggled quite hard to find the right people," says Tomas. "The music we had to offer was [perceived as] being a bit uncool in London, which was more into post-punk, thousands of sub-Libertines and Arctic Monkey bands, and also the nu-rave scene was at its peak. But I never was disheartened by it, and just continued to write songs."
Eventually, however, they found drummer Alfonso Tammaro, and the newly solidified trio (with Tomas also providing vocals) quickly made an impression upon producer Mark Wallis, who has worked with the Smiths, the La's, the Go-Betweens, and many others. Also whilst in London the trio found Jonathan Sutcliffe (main vocals) and Andrew Needle (rhythm guitar). The fruits of the band's sessions with Mark make up their official debut, Tour de Force, a limited-edition CD/7-inch released by Shelflife Records.
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Another Man Fades Dawn
The Ruling Class Lyrics
No lyrics text found for this track.
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
@MrBruinman86
The thing has some of the greatest non-CGI special effects I've ever seen. That's saying a lot given it's over 40 years old.
@Pete-eb3vo
Correction: Some of the best special effects of all time. No tedious computer generated crap is gonna compare to it.
@bonchidude
I think the last point where the special effects were not cgi were the best effects because it builds on past use of s e. @@Pete-eb3vo
@NordicDan
My daughter (11 years old at the time) and I watched The Thing back in June of this year. It was her first legitimate horror movie...............and she LOVED it! She's now a genuine horror junkie and we've been having a blast watching old and new horror movies.
I'm also glad to see that I'm far from the only one who's had their mind completely FARKED by Fire in the Sky. My daughter and I won't be watching THAT one any time soon (if ever).
@sudilos1172
I've become rather, un-affected by gore and death. In my older years. I realize the deep hidden harm that watching gore flicks did to my psyche. I loved it, I really did. The satanic stuff didn't sit to well with me. But I enjoyed the exorcism and religious warding and banishing of evil. When you vegge out to a movie. It's like it's your dream. It does influence you.
@richardtrue2758
That scene from Alien when the chestbuster pops out came out so good because only John Hurt knew it was gonna happen part of the reason Lamberts actress pass out
@KillurGod666
how does one expect to innovate without "going too far"? a lot of iconic art are concepts pushed to their perceived limits of the time.
@ArcanePath360
Fire in the Sky is so underrated it's criminal. Fantastic movie that more people should be aware of.
@annnichols3091
The scene from John Carpenter's "The Thing" reminds me of when I was babysitting a boy who went off to play with our Atari while I watched the film on HBO. He was confident that he would know when "the good parts" started by my screaming. Poor kid. I had not only been reared by a horror movie fan father, but my sister and I were slasher flick fans. I did not scream.
@yodaco
Fire in the sky just absolutely ruined my childhood sleep patterns lol still love it though. It is quite disturbing and compelling for that reason.