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rivet head culture?

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Pain8690

no leída,
9 mar 1997, 3:00:00 a.m.9/3/1997
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where does this term come from?

dj...@aol.com

no leída,
9 mar 1997, 3:00:00 a.m.9/3/1997
para

Rivethead is a word that chase basically made popular. There is a cd on reconstriction that is called rivethead culture. I have also heard rumors that iron maiden fans were called rivetheads as well as its another meaning for dick head. Because I have rivethead tattooed on me...I basically think of my self as a person that is into electronic music. The gear (which i also have on the tatoo) means other things too.

DJ Double D

xr6

no leída,
9 mar 1997, 3:00:00 a.m.9/3/1997
para

Pain8690 wrote:
>
> where does this term come from?


You really don't want to know. trust me.

GODLIKE423

no leída,
9 mar 1997, 3:00:00 a.m.9/3/1997
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chase

Chris Christian

no leída,
9 mar 1997, 3:00:00 a.m.9/3/1997
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pain...@aol.com (Pain8690) writes:
>where does this term come from?

it was the product of Chase's (Re-Constriction Records) deranged mind...


Jester
Not Speaking For Intel
--
Sonic-Boom Magazine
http://www.sonic-boom.com/

|_..ALiEN.._|

no leída,
10 mar 1997, 3:00:00 a.m.10/3/1997
para

In article <19970309175...@ladder01.news.aol.com>,
pain...@aol.com (Pain8690) wrote:

> where does this term come from?

Yes, I'm sure Chase was the one who popularized this, BUT there is another
defination for 'rivet' besides his. A rivet is like an industrial strength
screw for the purpose of heavy duty machines and the like. Therefore,
'rivetheads' are people into the industrial sub-culture (duh). My out of
date drafting book has a better description than mine, but that is at
school unfortunately. Anyhow, hope this helps.

--
al...@halcyon.com

Rowan-Morrison

no leída,
10 mar 1997, 3:00:00 a.m.10/3/1997
para

> where does this term come from?

I didn't originate the word, but I heard a friend use it a loooong time ago, and then I
popularized it with my Rivethead Culture compilation. The words I actually coined
were synthcore, torture-tech, digicore, and kitchen sequencing (granted, nobody has
ever used that last one, myself included). Brian McNelis over at Cleopatra used the term
'gutter-tech' in an issue of Nexus Six and DJ Adam at San Diego's Room 13 created the
word 'necrotech', both of which I think are cool.

boba chase

Thin White Duke

no leída,
11 mar 1997, 3:00:00 a.m.11/3/1997
para

In article <3324F1...@panhand.com>, Rowan-Morrison <ch...@panhand.com> wrote:

Æ > where does this term come from?
Æ
Æ I didn't originate the word, but I heard a friend use it a loooong time
ago, and then I
Æ popularized it with my Rivethead Culture compilation. The words I
actually coined
Æ were synthcore, torture-tech, digicore, and kitchen sequencing (granted,
nobody has
Æ ever used that last one, myself included). Brian McNelis over at
Cleopatra used the term
Æ 'gutter-tech' in an issue of Nexus Six and DJ Adam at San Diego's Room 13
created the
Æ word 'necrotech', both of which I think are cool.

I'm still trying to get this 'heatwave' music to catch on.

Thin White Duke, the choice of a new generation
(np: "dissolve" -- Plotkin/Harris)

--
"if you can't live with it, find a new channel... rmi *is* about being
elitist, abrasive and hate-filled. the more you're willing to flame, the
better you are. live with it. it's not going to change, nor should it change."
thus spake downfall of the lower case letters.

Thin White Duke € de...@columbia.eduhttp://www.columbia.edu/~dek17

Todd Clayton

no leída,
11 mar 1997, 3:00:00 a.m.11/3/1997
para

xr6 wrote:

>
> Pain8690 wrote:
> >
> > where does this term come from?
>
> You really don't want to know. trust me.

Sex, Drugs, and Star-Wars.

Terms like this come from sick minds that are obsessed with Boba-Fett.

--
Visit the web page! Feel the power of Jee-zuhs!

+-------------------------------------------------------------+
| DJ Todd aka Todd Clayton |
| Email: djt...@globalserve.net |
| The Armageddon Web Page: http://www.globalserve.net/~djtodd |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+

Ryan HTML

no leída,
11 mar 1997, 3:00:00 a.m.11/3/1997
para

<<I didn't originate the word, but I heard a friend use it a loooong time
ago, and then I popularized it with my Rivethead Culture compilation. The
words I actually coined were synthcore, torture-tech, digicore, and
kitchen sequencing (granted, nobody has ever used that last one, myself
included). Brian McNelis over at Cleopatra used the term 'gutter-tech' in
an issue of Nexus Six and DJ Adam at San Diego's Room 13 created the word

'necrotech', both of which I think are cool.>>

I think this is all a bunch of bullshit personally, I just felt like
adding that I've heard "necrotech" refering to gabber/hardcore techno

Jarrod Erwin

no leída,
11 mar 1997, 3:00:00 a.m.11/3/1997
para

Rowan-Morrison wrote:
>
> > where does this term come from?
>
> I didn't originate the word, but I heard a friend use it a loooong time ago, and then I
> popularized it with my Rivethead Culture compilation. The words I actually coined
> were synthcore, torture-tech, digicore, and kitchen sequencing (granted, nobody has
> ever used that last one, myself included). Brian McNelis over at Cleopatra used the term
> 'gutter-tech' in an issue of Nexus Six and DJ Adam at San Diego's Room 13 created the
> word 'necrotech', both of which I think are cool.
>
> boba chase

And don't forget about the term "coldwave" which I believe was coined by
Don Blanchard from 21st. Circuitry.

Jarrod R. Erwin
jar...@village.ios.com

Eli Bingham

no leída,
11 mar 1997, 3:00:00 a.m.11/3/1997
para

In article <3325FD...@village.ios.com>,
Jarrod Erwin <jar...@village.ios.com> wrote:
>Rowan-Morrison wrote:
> [various terms snipped]

Has it occured to anyone participating in this thread (or indeed this
newsgroup) how incredibly ASININE all of these terms are?

--
Eli Bingham
Wannabe polymath extraordinaire

Rowan-Morrison

no leída,
11 mar 1997, 3:00:00 a.m.11/3/1997
para

> And don't forget about the term "coldwave" which I believe was coined by
> Don Blanchard from 21st. Circuitry.

I think Jared from Chemlab coined that one, but Don popularized it. Jared also
introduced me to the word 'angel-dustrial'.

chase

nag...@miavx1.muohio.edu

no leída,
13 mar 1997, 3:00:00 a.m.13/3/1997
para

In article <19970309204...@ladder01.news.aol.com>, dj...@aol.com writes:
> Rivethead is a word that chase basically made popular. There is a cd on reconstriction that is called rivethead culture. I have also heard rumors that iron maiden fans were called rivetheads as well as its another meaning for dick head. Because I have rivethead tattooed on me...I basically think of my self as a person that is into electronic music. The gear (which i also have on the tatoo) means other things too.
>
> DJ Double D

Yes, it was a nickname for Iron Maiden fans, away back in the late 80's, though
not a very universal one.

bruce


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