Archivo para la Uncategorized categoría
Encuentro Steampunk Spain de Barcelona – 14 nov 2009
Publicado en Uncategorized el Noviembre 2, 2009 por zeroshop
Atelier de la Muerte Negra “art & rest” exhibition
Publicado en news el Octubre 29, 2009 por zeroshop
ZERO SHOP / Horario de invierno a partir del 1 de Septiembre
Publicado en news el Agosto 31, 2009 por zeroshopHola,
a partir del 1 de septiembre volvemos a nuestro horario normal:
de lunes a sabado de 11 a 2 y de 5 a 8:30
ZERO SHOP / Riera Baixa 12 / 08001 Barcelona / Telf 0034-934410194
Gracias
————————————————————————————-
Hello,
after september 1st we comeback to the normal opening hours:
monday to saturday – 11 to 2 and 5 to 8:30
ZERO SHOP / Riera Baixa 12 / 08001 Barcelona / Telf 0034-934410194
Thank you
ZERO SHOP / Horario de verano!!!
Publicado en news el Julio 2, 2009 por zeroshop
ZERO SHOP
Horario de verano:
de martes a viernes de 5:00 a 8:30
sabados de 11:00 a 2:00 y de 5:00 a 8:30
gracias y buenas vacaciones!
Zero Shop at Total Tattoo by Doralba Picerno
Publicado en Editorials el Febrero 16, 2009 por zeroshop




CRISIS Ends!
Publicado en news el Febrero 7, 2009 por zeroshop
The final live show of Crisis recorded on 10th May, 1980 at Surrey University, Guildford will be released soon on both CD and coloured vinyl LP.
Here’s the track listing:
HOLOCAUST
AFRAID
LAUGHIN’
ON TV
WHITE YOUTH
RED BRIGADES
ALL ALONE IN HER NIRVANA (Yes, that one!)
ALIENATION
S.P.G. (never before released)
UK 79
FRUSTRATION
KANADA KOMMANDO
The recording has been digitally remastered from the original bootleg recording released shortly after the performance.
There were other shows planned for Reading and Bristol after that but it was eventually decided that Punk was over for us and we should end in front of our home audience and in the same venue where Crisis had played its first gig 3 years previously in 1977.
Lux Interior R.I.P.
Publicado en news el Febrero 5, 2009 por zeroshopLux Interior, líder y frontman de The Cramps, falleció el pasado 4 de febrero a los 62 años, en el Glendale Memorial Hospital de Los Ángeles debido a una enfermedad cardiaca, según informó su agente.
The Cramps surgen en Nueva York en la segunda mitad de la década de los setenta. Interior (cuyo nombre real era Erick Lee Purkhiser) y su mujer Kristy Wallace (conocida como Poison Ivy) forman el grupo en 1976 para dar salida a su fascinación por la cultura basura de los años cincuenta y sesenta, las películas de serie B, los cómics, la magia negra y el rockabilly.
La explosión punk, con su iconoclasta negación de todo lo considerado de buen gusto, fue el vehículo ideal para su sonido y su estética. The Cramps se convierten en los más raros de ese mítico circuito de inadaptados compuesto por gente como The Ramones, Patti Smith o Richard Hell que se movía alrededor de clubs como el C.B.G.B. o el Max Kansas City.
A pesar de que sus cifras resultan ridículas (Billboard asegura que de los 14 álbumes publicados por The Cramps, el más vendedor fue Bad Music for Bad People, de 1984, con unas miserables 95.000 copias y que su último disco How To Make a Monster, de 2004, apenas colocó 11.000) la influencia de The Cramps ha sido colosal. No sólo son los inventores del psicobilly, combinación de todas sus pasiones. Sino que demostraron que el punk, además de rabioso podía ser teatral y divertido, y colocaron en el mapa a muchos de sus mitos con la reivindicación de leyendas olvidadas, como el hoy mítico cineasta Ed Wood y músicos como Link Wray, The Sonics o Hasil Adkins. De hecho gran parte de sus mayores éxitos son versiones hiperaceleradas de viejos temas de esos entonces ignotos pioneros del rock´n´roll que luego recopilarían en su colección Born Bad y que les proporcionaron esa reputación, de la que ellos estaban tan orgullosos, de profanadores de tumbas.

Cramps singer Lux Interior died early Wednesday of an existing heart condition at 62
Lux Interior, lead singer of influential garage-punk act the Cramps, died Wednesday morning (February 4) due to an existing heart condition, according to a statement from the band’s publicist. He was 62.
Born Erick Lee Purkhiser, Interior started the Cramps in 1972 with guitarist Poison Ivy (born Kristy Wallace, later his wife) — whom, as legend has it, he picked up as a hitchhiker in California. By 1975, they had moved to New York, where they became an integral part of the burgeoning punk scene surrounding CBGBs.
Their music differed from most of the scene’s other acts in that it was heavily steeped in camp, with Interior’s lyrics frequently drawing from schlocky B-movies, sexual kink and deceptively clever puns. (J.H. Sasfy’s liner notes to their debut EP memorably noted: “The Cramps don’t pummel and you won’t pogo. They ooze; you’ll throb.”) Sonically, the band drew from blues and rockabilly, and a key element of their sound was the trashy, dueling guitars of Poison Ivy and Bryan Gregory (and later Kid Congo Powers), played with maximal scuzz and minimal drumming.
Because of that — not to mention Interior’s deranged, Iggy Pop-inspired onstage antics and deep, sexualized singing voice (which one reviewer described as “the psychosexual werewolf/ Elvis hybrid from hell”) — the Cramps are often cited as pioneers of “psychobilly” and “horror rock,” and can count bands like the Black Lips, the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, the Reverend Horton Heat, the Horrors and even the White Stripes as their musical progeny.
Over the course of more than 30 years, the Interior and Ivy surrounded themselves with an ever-changing lineup of drummers, guitarists and bassists, and released 13 studio albums (the last being 2003’s Fiends of Dope Island). They also famously performed a concert for patients at the Napa State Mental Hospital in 1978 (which was recorded on grainy VHS and has since become a cult classic) and appeared on a Halloween episode of “Beverly Hills, 90210.” Their video for the song “Bikini Girls With Machine Guns” also drew rave reviews from Beavis and Butt-head on a memorable episode of the show.
Despite the band’s long history, fans generally agree that the group’s peak was in the early ’80s, with the albums Songs the Lord Taught Us and Psychedelic Jungle. Many clips of the Cramps’ chaotic live shows from the era can be found online; look for their version of “Tear It Up” from the 1980 film “URGH! A Music War.” One memorable (and typical) show in Boston in 1986 found Interior, clad only in leopard-skin briefs, drinking red wine from an audience member’s shoe, and ended with him French-kissing a woman (who wasn’t his wife) for 10 full minutes with his microphone in their mouths.
Due to their imagery, obsession with kitsch and dogged dedication to touring — they wrapped up their latest jaunt across Europe and the U.S. this past November — the Cramps commanded a loyal fanbase, and even earned a spot in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, in the form of a shattered bass drum that Interior had shoved his head through.





