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Noise/Horror Collision - Great Disasters Of The 20th Century flac album

Noise/Horror Collision - Great Disasters Of The 20th Century flac album
  • Performer Noise/Horror Collision
  • Title Great Disasters Of The 20th Century
  • Date of release 1997
  • Style Industrial, Noise, Abstract
  • Other formats RA MP3 MMF VOX AIFF ASF MOD
  • Genre Electronic
  • Size MP3 1690 mb
  • Size FLAC 1203 mb
  • Rating: 4.7
  • Votes: 923

Recorded at the Spent Member, The Padded Cell, The Ferral-Kat Studio & UCSA car park, Christchurch, New Zealand 1995. Digitally remixed & mastered at the Insanitorium October 1997. Special guest appearances by D. Khan, M. Goodwin & T. Pagey (UCSA Aug 1995).

Horror is a genre of speculative fiction which is intended to frighten, scare, disgust, or startle its readers by inducing feelings of horror and terror. which shocks, or even frightens the reader, or perhaps induces a feeling of repulsion or loathing". It creates an eerie and frightening atmosphere. Horror is frequently supernatural, though it can be non-supernatural.

A disaster film or disaster movie is a film genre that has an impending or ongoing disaster as its subject and primary plot device. Such disasters include natural disasters such as floods, earthquakes, tsunamis or asteroid collisions, accidents such as shipwrecks or airplane crashes, or calamities like worldwide disease pandemics.

This list looks at ten of the most terrifying natural disasters ever. Of all the seismic energy of the 20th Century, including the 2004 Indian Ocean quake, 25% was concentrated in the 1960 Chile quake. It caused 82 foot high waves to travel down the Chilean coast. Hilo, Hawaii was destroyed. The Great Flood of 1931. The deadliest natural disaster ever recorded occurred through the winter, spring, and summer of 1931 in central China. There are three major rivers draining this area, the Yangtze, the Yellow, and the Huai.

The Worst Natural Disasters Of The 21st Century. By All That's Interesting. In January 2010, one of the worst earthquakes ever recorded in history hit Haiti. It is estimated that 230,000 people died, 300,000 people were injured, and over one million were made homeless in one of history’s most devastating natural disasters. The destruction spread throughout the region, destroying a quarter of a million homes and 30,000 other buildings. Indian Ocean Tsunami, 2004

Plate 3: Lo mismo (The same). Goya gave the copy of the full album, now in the British Museum, to his friend Juan Agustín Ceán Bermúdez. It contains a title-page inscription in Goya's hand, is signed at the page edges, and has numbers and titles to the prints written by Goya.

The deadliest natural disasters have a combined estimated death toll of nearly 10 million people. Violent natural disasters have been a fact of human life since the beginning of the species, but the death counts of the most ancient of these disasters are lost to history. How many lives were lost? We'll never know. For other disasters, historians can at least make estimates. Known as the Jiajing Great Earthquake after the emperor whose reign it occurred in, the temblor reduced a 621-square-mile (1,000 square kilometers) swath of the country to rubble, according to the Science Museums of China. An estimated 830,000 people died as their homes collapsed and fires raged after the quake.

Great Disasters of the 19th Century. Fires, Floods, Epidemics, and Volcanic Eruptions Left Their Mark on the 1800s. The eruption of the enormous volcano on the island of Krakatoa in the Pacific Ocean generated what was probably the loudest noise ever heard on earth, with people as far away as Australia hearing the colossal explosion. Ships were pelted with debris, and the resulting tsunami killed many thousands of people.

Tracklist

1 Turbines
2 Stomper 1
3 Seizures
4 Several Reminders Of Mortality Pt. 1
5 Several Reminders Of Mortality Pt. 2
6 Curse (Pace)
7 Death By Desire
8 Orient
9 Fire Collapsing
10 Dining Alone/Fire Water
11 Burnout
12 Stomper 2
13 Violation
14 Distance
15 Dissipation

Credits

  • Performer, Engineer, Producer – Peter Wright

Notes

Recorded at the Spent Member, The Padded Cell, The Ferral-Kat Studio & UCSA car park, Christchurch, New Zealand 1995.
Digitally remixed & mastered at the Insanitorium October 1997. Special guest appearances by D. Khan, M. Goodwin & T. Pagey (UCSA Aug 1995).