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So What
So What may refer to: Law * Demurrer, colloquially called a "So what?" pleading Music Albums * ''So What'' (Anti-Nowhere League album) or the 1981 title song (see below), 2000 * '' So What?: Early Demos and Live Abuse'', by Anti-Nowhere League, 2006 * ''So What'' (George Russell album), 1987 * ''So What'' (Jerry Garcia and David Grisman album), 1998 * ''So What'' (Joe Walsh album), 1974 * ''So What?'' (Ron Carter album), 1999 * ''So What?'' (While She Sleeps album) or the title song, 2019 * ''So What'', an EP by Le Shok, 1998 Songs * "So What" (Miles Davis composition), 1959 * "So What", by Johnny Kidd & the Pirates, 1961 * "So What", by Bill Black, 1962 * "So What", by Ray Rush, 1962 * "So What", by Crass from '' The Feeding of the 5000'', 1978 * "So What", by the Cure from '' Three Imaginary Boys'', 1979 * "So What", by Liverpool Express, 1983 * "So What", by Ministry from ''The Mind Is a Terrible Thing to Taste'', 1989 * "So What", by Gilbert O'Sullivan, 1990 * ...
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The Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Taste
''The Mind Is a Terrible Thing to Taste'' is the fourth studio album by American industrial metal band Ministry, released on November 14, 1989 by Sire Records. The music took a more hardcore, aggressively guitar-driven direction, with Jourgensen inspired by Stormtroopers of Death and Rigor Mortis to add thrash metal guitars to the album and subsequent Ministry releases. As with most of Ministry's work, the album's lyrics deal mainly with political corruption, cultural violence, environmental degradation, nuclear war, drug addiction, and insanity. Background Jourgensen recalled the band's state as dysfunctional and the album's production as "complete chaos and mayhem", which gave the band a level of artistic freedom impossible had they planned it. Jourgensen says that despite being a fan favorite, it is not among his favorites because of the condition he was in at the time; he was heavily into drugs during recording and had a poor relationship with his bandmates. In one instan ...
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Gilbert O'Sullivan
Raymond Edward "Gilbert" O'Sullivan (born 1 December 1946) is an Irish singer-songwriter who achieved his most significant success during the early 1970s with hits including "Alone Again (Naturally)", " Clair", and " Get Down". O'Sullivan's songs are often marked by his distinctive, percussive piano playing style and observational lyrics using word play. Born in Waterford, Ireland, O'Sullivan settled in Swindon, England, as a child. In 1967, O'Sullivan began pursuing a career in music. Worldwide, he has charted 16 top 40 records including six No. 1 songs, the first of which was 1970's "Nothing Rhymed". Across his career, he has recorded 20 studio albums. The music magazine ''Record Mirror'' voted him the top UK male singer of 1972. He has received three Ivor Novello Awards, including “Songwriter of the Year” in 1973. Early life Raymond Edward O'Sullivan was born on 1 December 1946 in Cork Road, Waterford, Ireland. He was one of six children; his mother May ran a sweet s ...
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