Bronze Age Apocalypse

SBS - Bronze Age Apocalypse (2023)  Movies

Posted by notbanned at Oct. 7, 2024
SBS - Bronze Age Apocalypse (2023)

SBS - Bronze Age Apocalypse (2023)
HDTV | 1920x1080 | .MKV/AVC @ 3095 Kbps | 1 h 27 min | 2.04 GiB
Audio: English MP2 256 kbps, 2 channels | Subs: English
Genre: Documentary

This documentary film delves deep into the mysterious and catastrophic collapse of ancient civilizations during the late Bronze Age, as empires from Greece to ancient Egypt were wiped off the map. It explores the various theories and hypotheses that have emerged to explain their sudden downfall, revealing the tumultuous events that brought an end to a once-thriving era of human history.

Evian Christ - Revanchist (2023) [Official Digital Download]  Vinyl & HR

Posted by delpotro at Oct. 22, 2023
Evian Christ - Revanchist (2023) [Official Digital Download]

Evian Christ - Revanchist (2023)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/44,1 kHz | Front Cover | Time - 45:26 minutes | 510 MB
Electronic, Deconstructed club | Label: Warp Records, Official Digital Download

Revanchist (2023) is the long-awaited debut album by Evian Christ, scheduled for release by WARP on 20th October 2023. The eight-track record explores the latent potential in Trance to evoke, beyond Euphoria, the fullest feeling of the Sublime. Revanchist draws from an unlikely and expansive pool of influences; compositing, at once, the suffocating throttle of Demiurge-era Emptyset (2011); the worldliness of Madonna and William Orbit’s Ray Of Light LP (1998); the acute uncanniness of Laibach’s Across The Universe (1988); and a highly stylized approach to mixing and sound design primarily inspired by Sasha’s seminal Xpander EP (1999).
Pink Floyd - Echoes: The Best Of Pink Floyd (2001) [Vinyl Rip 16/44] Re-up

Pink Floyd - Echoes: The Best Of Pink Floyd (2001)
Vinyl Rip 16/44 | Flac(Image + Cue) > 868 Mb | Artwork(jpg) > 301 Mb
EMI, 7243 5 361111 8 / EMI, 536 111 1 | 4LP Box Set
Psychedelic Rock / Progressive Rock

Being the quintessential album rock band, Pink Floyd hasn't had much luck with "best-of" and "greatest-hits" compilations, like A Collection of Great Dance Songs and the bizarro follow-up, Works. Since both of those were released in the early '80s (and time travel being unavailable even to Pink Floyd), they obviously left out any tracks from the post-Roger Waters era albums. While countless hours in dorm rooms have been spent laboring over whether or not the post-Waters recordings should even be considered the "real Floyd," the later albums nonetheless stand as a further progression in the band's evolution and warrant recognition…