Wednesday, 13 August 2008

Download KMFDM






KMFDM
   

Artist: KMFDM: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Rock
Alternative
Industrial
Electronic
Pop: Pop-Rock

   







Discography:


Tohuvabohu
   

 Tohuvabohu

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 11
The Best
   

 The Best

   Year: 2005   

Tracks: 20
Hau Ruck
   

 Hau Ruck

   Year: 2005   

Tracks: 11
WWIII [World War III]
   

 WWIII [World War III]

   Year: 2003   

Tracks: 11
WWIII Live 2003
   

 WWIII Live 2003

   Year: 2003   

Tracks: 14
Wwiii
   

 Wwiii

   Year: 2003   

Tracks: 11
Sturm and Drang Tour 2002
   

 Sturm and Drang Tour 2002

   Year: 2002   

Tracks: 13
Boots
   

 Boots

   Year: 2002   

Tracks: 4
Attak
   

 Attak

   Year: 2002   

Tracks: 11
Star Profiled
   

 Star Profiled

   Year: 2000   

Tracks: 14
Adios
   

 Adios

   Year: 1999   

Tracks: 10
Retro (Best Of, Compilation)
   

 Retro (Best Of, Compilation)

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 14
Agogo
   

 Agogo

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 10
Symbols
   

 Symbols

   Year: 1997   

Tracks: 10
Xtort
   

 Xtort

   Year: 1996   

Tracks: 10
Nihil
   

 Nihil

   Year: 1995   

Tracks: 10
Juke-Joint Jezebel - Giorgio Moroder Mixes (Single)
   

 Juke-Joint Jezebel - Giorgio Moroder Mixes (Single)

   Year: 1995   

Tracks: 6
Juke-Joint Jezebel
   

 Juke-Joint Jezebel

   Year: 1995   

Tracks: 6
Naive and Hell To Go
   

 Naive and Hell To Go

   Year: 1994   

Tracks: 11
Naive - Hell To Go
   

 Naive - Hell To Go

   Year: 1994   

Tracks: 11
Angst
   

 Angst

   Year: 1993   

Tracks: 10
Vogue
   

 Vogue

   Year: 1992   

Tracks: 4
Money
   

 Money

   Year: 1992   

Tracks: 11
Split
   

 Split

   Year: 1991   

Tracks: 4
Naive
   

 Naive

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 11
UAIOE
   

 UAIOE

   Year: 1989   

Tracks: 9
Don't Blow Your Top
   

 Don't Blow Your Top

   Year: 1988   

Tracks: 11
What Do You Know, Deutschland?
   

 What Do You Know, Deutschland?

   Year: 1986   

Tracks: 11
Opium
   

 Opium

   Year: 1985   

Tracks: 10






Such industrial alt-metal outfits as Nine Inch Nails and Ministry received the lion's donation of press and commercial success during the '90s, but on that point were a smattering of early bands that were slugging it out for just as long (if not thirster), including KMFDM. The band's name has been the subject of innumerable debates amongst fans all over the age as to what it stands for (their record company even went as far as property a contest in 1994 for fans to submit possible meanings, resulting in more than a k entries), just the confirmed substance is Kein Mitleid Für Die Mehrheit, when translated in English agency No Pity for the Majority. The German band has included multitudinous members all over the age, merely through it all, their leader has remained Sascha Konietzko, whose multi-tasks have included songster, producer, mixer, coder, sampler, vocalist, percussionist, bassist, and electronic gadgets.


To begin with formed in Paris, France, KMFDM was founded by Konietzko and German painter/multi-media performing artist Udo Sturm. The duette made their in concert debut on February 29, 1984, when they performed at an opening for an exhibition of European artists at the Grand Palais in Paris (with the show consisting of Sturm playing a synthesist that would dally feedback and Konietzko playing a five-string freshwater bass). The same year, KMFDM issued its debut discharge, Opium, merely Sturm exited the grouping concisely thereafter (some the same sentence, Konietzko was joined by drummer En Esch, wHO would stay with the group from then on out). With Sturm kayoed of the picture, Konietzko and Esch assign KMFDM on hold at first and joined up with New York industrialist Peter Missing to form the rig Missing Foundations. But in front the fresh outfit could issuing whatever recordings, both Konietzko and Esch had dropped out and returned back to KMFDM (Missing Foundations would carry on with replacement members and go on to matter albums on their own from the recent '80s through and through the early '90s).


KMFDM's sophomore elbow grease, What Do You Know Deutschland?, came in 1986 and was the group's first of many for Chicago's far-famed industrial label Wax Trax! But or else of if existence an record album of all new tracks, it was comprised of selections spanning from 1983 through and through 1986 (in fact, several were from prior to Esch's connexion). Around this clock time, KMFDM struck up a relationship with creative person Aidan Hughues (aka Brute!), world Health Organization would steadily furnish cover art for the mathematical group the images would become synonymous with KMFDM's hard-hitting music. Konietzko and ship's company pushed fore with such further '80s releases as 1988's Don't Blow Your Top and 1989's UAIOE, during which KMFDM establish themselves in the midsection of an resistance industrial trend (it didn't hurt matters that Wax Trax! quick became one of the prima industrial labels in the existence, as they were the home to such other likewise styled acts as Ministry, Revco, Front 242, My Life With the Thrill Kill Kult, etc.).


Merely KMFDM had so far to term of enlistment America by 1989 (having heavy toured Europe with the likes of Einstrüzende Neubauten, the Young Gods, and Borghesia, among others), something they sought to correct when they were offered a expansion slot opening a U.S. tour for labelmates Ministry, world Health Organization at the time were readying their classical The Mind Is a Terrible Thing to Taste discharge. With the tour lined up for a summertime launch, it was pushed endorse several times (due to Ministry leader Al Jourgensen falling ominous) and the turn at last got underway in December 1989. The tour successfully constituted KMFDM as a band to watch over in the industrial underground, as they returned endorse to Europe afterwards the tour's completion to do work on their fifth full-length tone ending overall, 1990's Naïve. Realizing that industrial's future lay in the U.S., Konietzko relocated KMFDM's homebase from Hamburg to Chicago during 1991. The same year, KMFDM's side-project Excessive Force was formed, issuance a debut liberation, Stamp down Your World, in 1992, the same year that KMFDM issued a new release as advantageously, Money.


Merely just as it appeared as though KMFDM was about to break through to a wider audience, Wax Trax! short establish itself on backbreaking times, resulting in the label being bought out by TVT Records. What followed for KMFDM were some of its best-known and strongest releases: 1993's Angst (which earned the grouping their low genuine exposure on MTV via the video clip for the track "Drug Against War"), 1995's Nihil, and 1996's XTORT. During the same time, Excessive Force issued a second release, 1994's Gentle Death, spell Konietzko relocated erstwhile more than, this meter to Seattle. Further releases followed in the late '90s (1997's Symbols, 1998's Agogo, and 1999's Good-by), before KMFDM disbanded on January 22, 1999. In the wake of the group's split, Konietzko assembled a new kit, MDFMK (yep, KMFDM spelled backward) and issued a sole self-titled firing in 2000 earlier KMFDM reunited in 2002 for an all-new album, Attak, and the live record album Sturm & Drang Tour 2002. 2003 power saw the departure of WWIII followed by WWIII Live 2003 a yr later. Released on KMFDM Records, 2005's Hau Ruck was classical KMFDM with its strong-growing industrial force. The Ruck Zuck EP followed in 2006 with the uncut Tohuvabohu landing in 2007. In rundown to astral KMFDM, Konietzko has as well worked with other artists either playing, producing, or remixing tracks/albums by Die Krupps, Front 242, kidneythieves, M People, Peter Murphy, Pig, Schwein, Sister Machine Gun, and Swamp Terrorists, among others.