The Bells (Lou Reed album)

The Bells
Studio album by
ReleasedMay 1979
Recorded1979
StudioDelta Studios (Wilster, West Germany)
Genre
Length40:37
LabelArista
ProducerLou Reed
Lou Reed chronology
Live: Take No Prisoners
(1978)
The Bells
(1979)
Growing Up in Public
(1980)
Lou Reed studio album chronology
Street Hassle
(1978)
The Bells
(1979)
Growing Up in Public
(1980)
Singles from The Bells
  1. "City Lights"
    Released: June 1979[1]
  2. "Disco Mystic"
    Released: 1979 (ESP)

The Bells is the ninth solo studio album by American rock musician Lou Reed, released in May 1979 by Arista Records.[2] It was recorded in binaural sound at Delta Studios in Wilster, West Germany. Production was handled by Reed with Michael Fonfara serving as executive producer. Three out of nine songs on the album are the product of a short-lived writing partnership between Reed and Nils Lofgren. More of the team's work appeared on Nils' solo studio album Nils, released the same year. Lofgren released his version of "Stupid Man" as "Driftin' Man" on Break Away Angel (2001).[3] Lofgren resurrected five songs he wrote with Reed in the late 70s on Blue with Lou (2019).[4]

A jazz-rock and art rock album, The Bells features contributions from Michael Fonfara, Ellard "Moose" Boles, Don Cherry, Marty Fogel and Michael Suchorsky. The album peaked at No. 13 in New Zealand, No. 44 in Sweden, No. 58 in Australia, and No. 130 in the United States, and received mixed reviews from music critics.

Recording

Following a short European tour, Reed recorded The Bells in binaural sound at Delta Studios, a studio in Wilster, West Germany owned by Manfred Schunke, with trumpeter Don Cherry and the Everyman Band.[5] The pastoral studio was based in a converted farmhouse with housing for the musicians, a communal dining hall and, according to saxophonist Marty Fogel of the Everyman Band, "a place to hang out and drink Johnnie Walker Black. And then there was the recording facility, which was really high-tech, but it was in the middle of farm country."[5] Reed said: "I mastered the art of recording known as 'capture the spontaneous moment and leave it at that'. The Bells was done like that, those lyrics were just made up on the spot and they're absolutely incredible. I'm very adept at making up whole stories with rhymes, schemes, jokes".[6]

In a 1996 interview with Ian Penman of The Guardian, Reed noted that the binaural sound experiment was unsuccessful for him, adding that "the process worked but it didn't translate to vinyl AT ALL. Not only didn't I get the effect – which I still think is one of the most amazing things I've ever heard in my life when it's done right – not only didn't it translate but it also didn't record things so they sounded very good either, which was disappointing."[7]

Composition

Free jazz trumpeter Don Cherry, who appears on The Bells.

The Bells has been described as a jazz-rock fusion album.[8] According to Jazz Times writer Aiden Levy, it is an eclectic jazz rock and art rock album which "[blends] jazz, disco and a deeply personal songwriting ethos, with no eye toward a potential market."[5] The album is also characterised by its reliance on keyboards.[9] Reed joked: "If you can't play rock and you can't play jazz, you put the two together and you've really got something."[10] Biographer Anthony DeCurtis wrote that "[t]he album's jazz components, and its descent into atmospheric noises and effects, especially on the title track, are part of its intense experimental impulses." He added that the album moves between more commercial material and music that "[pushes] well beyond the boundaries of mainstream acceptability."[10]

"Stupid Man" is characterised by piano.[11] "Disco Mystic" has been described as a "funk workout" typical of the time[9] and "an exercise in churning R&B".[8] Containing saxophone from Marty Fogel,[11] it is effectively an instrumental, with the title "chanted in a deep, mock-impressive voice".[12] "I Want to Boogie with You" is a straight funk song[11] on which Reed portrays "a soulful seducer".[12] "With You" contains "improvised interpolations" from Fogel and Cherry." According to Fogel: "I did a little horn arrangement for myself and Don, and maybe there would be two beats at the end of the measure, and when we were rehearsing the tune, Don was playing this free stuff in those two beats. I looked at him and I go, 'What are you doing?' And he said, 'Whenever you get an opportunity to take it out, you've got to take it out.' So that's what we did."[5] "City Lights" is a tribute to Charlie Chaplin, sung in a "bass-goon voice"[12] One critic describes Reed's singing as "a muted croak, so deep that it's hardly recognisable. Ghoulish and...funny."[11]

On "All Through the Night", Reed evokes a "desperate carouser"; the song also contains "self-consciously sleazy conversation going on in the background", similarly to Reed's earlier song "Kicks" (1975).[12] "Families" has been dubbed "a meditation on the dysfunctional American nuclear family".[5] On the closing title track, notionally inspired by Edgar Allan Poe's poem of the same name,[5] Reed uses a guitar synthesizer while Don Cherry provides free jazz trumpet work.[9] Containing an "atmospheric, droning quality",[13] the track has been described as "an atmospheric nine-minute free-jazz collective improvisation",[5] and a "slow, dark whirlpool".[8] Some of its lyrics were improvised by Reed in the studio; the musician also asked Cherry to interpolate a portion of Ornette Coleman's "Lonely Woman" (1959) in the song's intro.[5] According to critic Mark Deming, the track is "both a brave exploration of musical space and a lyrically touching sketch of loss and salvation."[9]

Release

The Bells was Reed's fourth album in his five-album deal with Arista. However, according to DeCurtis, the album contained no single material, "and whatever hopes Reed and [label head] Clive Davis had once entertained about Reed's reaching a wider audience had been buried." According to Reed, Davis sent him a letter explaining that he believed the album was unfinished and needed further work, a suggestion which the musician dismissed, but in doing so, he believed the label underpromoted the record. He said: "It was released and dropped into a dark well."[10] In a 1996 interview with Penman, Reed said that the album's master tapes no longer existed, requiring him to buy a copy from "one of those speciality record stores" and "put it through a computer program" for preservation/remastering.[7]

Critical reception

Contemporary reviews

According to Aiden: "Though not everyone understood or appreciated Reed's foray deeper into jazz- and art-rock, Lester Bangs, despite their fraught history, concluded that his career had finally reached an apotheosis."[5] In his contemporary review for Rolling Stone, Bangs wrote, "With The Bells, more than in Street Hassle, perhaps even more than in his work with The Velvet Underground, Lou Reed achieves his oft-stated ambition—to become a great writer, in the literary sense". He also praised Reed's band, saying they provide "the only true jazz-rock fusion anybody's come up with since Miles Davis' On the Corner period."[8] The Village Voice critic Robert Christgau said that Reed "is as sarcastic as ever", but added that "the music's jazzy edge and warmly traditional rock and roll base" afford Reed a more "well-rounded" character than on Street Hassle, adding: "The jokes seem generous, the bitterness empathetic, the pain outfront, the tenderness more than a fleeting mood. And the cuts that don't work-there are at least three or four-seem like thoughtful experiments, or simple failures, rather than throwaways. I haven't found him so likable since The Velvet Underground."[14]

Jon Savage of Melody Maker praised the production and musicianship, though felt Reed's "personal inspiration is drying up" in both the lyrics and music. He described The Bells as "a more consistent work throughout, yet at present lacks anything so memorable or cutting as Street Hassle."[11] In his review for New Musical Express, Charles Shaar Murray believed that the album is instantly notable for Reed having eschewed his typical singing voice for "a more demonstrative, expressive and black-influenced style." However, he believed this resembled "someone attempting an impression of David Bowie and failing." He praised "Disco Mystic" and "Families" but believed the overall instrumental sound to be "heavy, turgid, synth-laden, indigestible, lumpy" and the vocal sound "quavery, unstable, unsteady, insubstantial".[12] Don Snowden of The Los Angeles Times dismissed The Bells as "a dismal, turgid effort." He wrote: "He's broken with past tradition by collaborating with rocker Nils Lofgren, free-jazz trumpeter Don Cherry and various band members on the material, but the experiment doesn't work. The music is positively lethargic and uninspired and the lyrics – while retaining the unflinching emotional honesty of Reed's best work – merely revisit old turf without providing new insights."[13]

Retrospective assessment

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[15]
Chicago Tribune[16]
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music[17]
The Great Rock Discography5/10[18]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[19]
Select[20]
Spin Alternative Record Guide7/10[21]
The Village VoiceB+[14]

Reviewing the 1992 reissue, Dave Morrison of Select commented that Reed was "not at his best" in the mid-late 1970s, adding that "The Bells saw his music disappearing down the pan. Even self-parody is barely achieved in these half-assed songs played by a bunch of dullards, with Lou sounding painfully uninspired."[20] The Rough Guide to Rock contributor Roy Edroso ted that Reed's feud with Arista was reflected in The Bells, an album he deemed to comprise "mostly grooves and riffs built around slabs of inchoate feeling (sometimes effectively, as with the ruined reunion of 'Families'). At decade's end, Reed appeared to be in a mood as bad as his Metal Machine Music era."[22]

In a positive assessment, the Chicago Tribune reviewer Greg Kot described the album as a "jazzier, warmer detour" for Reed.[16] AllMusic's Mark Deming wrote that The Bells musically represented a slight step back for Reed from the tormented Street Hassle to "the more listener-friendly, keyboard-dominated sound of Rock and Roll Heart", but considered the lyrics to move the singer "away from the boho decadence of most of his 1970s work and toward a more compassionate perspective on his characters". Considering the album to have aged well, he concluded that it "gains depth with each playing and now sounds like one of Reed's finest solo efforts of the 1970s."[15]

In his book The Great Rock Discography, Martin C. Strong said that, following the "tedious" Live: Take No Prisoners (1978), Reed "started to show uncharacteristic signs of maturity in both his music and lyrics" with The Bells and its follow-up Growing Up in Public (1980).[18] Critic Tom Hull considered The Bells to potentially be Reed's "most ambitious work", adding: "Returning to Coney Island Baby's confessional mode and incorporating a subtle jazz influence, Reed makes one of his strongest musical statements. Reed's razor-edge frankness is riveting throughout."[23] In The Rolling Stone Album Guide, Hull deemed the record to be "another twist" in Reed's career: "cut with jazz trumpeter Don Cherry, it offered exceptionally dense but not really jazzy music."[19] Fellow Rolling Stone contributor Will Hermes deemed The Bells to be among Reed's less memorable albums but highlighted the title track as a "nine-minute spiritual-jazz elegy for a man standing on a ledge, which at the time Reed surely was."[24]

Reed's opinion

Reed showed a fondness for the album in later times; in a 1996 Mojo interview, when asked by Barney Hoskyns what his most underrated album, Reed replied: "The Bells. I really like that album. I think it sold two copies, and probably both to me."[25] Similarly, in a 2004 Uncut interview, when asked by Jon Wilde which of his albums "are ripe for critical rehabilitation", Reed singled out The Bells for being "one of my favourites. I think that's a great-sounding album. The older I get, the more meaningful it becomes to me. Whether, as you say, it's ripe for reappraisal, is another matter. No one liked it when it came out and nobody seems to have changed their mind about it since. I love it, though."[26]

Track listing

All tracks are written by Lou Reed, with additional writers noted.

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Stupid Man"Nils Lofgren2:33
2."Disco Mystic"
4:30
3."I Want to Boogie with You"Fonfara3:55
4."With You"Lofgren2:21
5."Looking for Love" 3:29
6."City Lights"Lofgren3:22
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
7."All Through the Night"Don Cherry5:00
8."Families"Boles6:09
9."The Bells"Fogel9:17
Total length:40:37

Personnel

Credits are adapted from The Bells liner notes.[27]

Musicians

Production and artwork

Charts

Chart (1979) Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[28] 58
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[29] 13
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[30] 44
US Billboard 200[31] 130

References

  1. ^ "The Great Rock Discography". p. 681.
  2. ^ "The Great Rock Discography". p. 681.
  3. ^ "Nils Lofgren: Rock's Most Valuable Player". 3 June 2021.
  4. ^ https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/nils-lofgren-new-album-lou-reed-blue-with-lou-802325/%7Caccess-date=November 5, 2022
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Levy, Aidan (April 25, 2019). "Rock & Roll & Free Jazz". Jazz Times. Retrieved April 3, 2023.
  6. ^ DiMartino, Dave (September 1980). "Lou Reed Tilts The Machine". Creem. Rock's Backpages. Retrieved March 20, 2021 – via Yahoo!. Alt URL
  7. ^ a b Penman, Ian (February 16, 1996). "Lou Reed: Life After the Leather Jacket". The Guardian.
  8. ^ a b c d Bangs, Lester (June 14, 1979). "The Bells". Rolling Stone. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
  9. ^ a b c d Deming, Mark. "The Bells Review by Mark Deming". AllMusic. Retrieved 3 April 2023.
  10. ^ a b c DeCurtis, Anthony (2017). "Chapter 13: The Bells". Lou Reed: A Life. Boston, Massachusetts: Little Brown & Co. ISBN 978-0316552424. Retrieved April 3, 2023.
  11. ^ a b c d e Savage, Jon (May 5, 1979). "Lou Reed: The Bells (Arista)". Melody Maker.
  12. ^ a b c d e Murray, Charles Shaar (28 April 1979). "Lou Reed: The Bells (Arista)". NME. Retrieved April 3, 2023.
  13. ^ a b Snowden, Don (January 24, 1979). "Lou Reed: The Bells". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 3, 2023.
  14. ^ a b Christgau, Robert (December 31, 1979). "Christgau's Consumer Guide". The Village Voice. New York. Retrieved July 29, 2013.
  15. ^ a b Deming, Mark. "The Bells - Lou Reed | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
  16. ^ a b Kot, Greg (January 12, 1992). "Lou Reed's Recordings: 25 Years Of Path-breaking Music". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved July 29, 2013.
  17. ^ Larkin, Colin (1997). "Lou Reed". The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music. London: Virgin Books. p. 1,003. ISBN 1-85227 745 9.
  18. ^ a b Strong, Martin C. (2006). "Lou Reed". The Great Rock Discography. Edinburgh: Canongate Books. p. 909. ISBN 1-84195-827-1.
  19. ^ a b Hull, Tom. "[The New] Rolling Stone Album Guide: Lou Reed [New Version]". Tom Hull. Retrieved April 2, 2023.
  20. ^ a b Morrison, Dave (November 1992). "Reviews: Reissues". Select: 95. Retrieved February 12, 2023.
  21. ^ Weisbard, Eric; Marks, Craig, eds. (1995). "Lou Reed". Spin Alternative Record Guide. New York: Vintage Books. p. 326. ISBN 0-679-75574-8.
  22. ^ Edroso, Roy (1999). "Lou Reed". In Buckley, Jonathan; Duane, Orla; Ellingham, Mark; Spicer, Al (eds.). The Rough Guide to Rock (2nd ed.). London: Rough Guides. pp. 813–814. ISBN 1-85828-457-0.
  23. ^ Hull, Tom. "[The New] Rolling Stone Album Guide: Lou Reed [Old Version]". Tom Hull. Retrieved April 2, 2023.
  24. ^ Hermes, Will (October 27, 2013). "Lou Reed's Essential Albums". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on May 19, 2022. Retrieved April 3, 2023.
  25. ^ Hoskyns, Barney (March 1996). "A Dark Prince at Twilight: Lou Reed". Mojo.
  26. ^ Wilde, Jon (May 2004). "Lou Reed: The Uncut Questionnaire". Rock's Backpages. Retrieved 3 April 2023.
  27. ^ The Bells (CD booklet). Lou Reed. Arista Records. 1979.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  28. ^ Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 249. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
  29. ^ "Charts.nz – Lou Reed – The Bells". Hung Medien. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
  30. ^ "Swedishcharts.com – Lou Reed – The Bells". Hung Medien. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
  31. ^ "Lou Reed Chart History (Billboard 200)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2021.

Read other articles:

Halaman ini berisi artikel tentang model sosla dan ekonomi di Eropa utara. Untuk model sosial-ekonomi di benua Eropa, khususnya Jerman, lihat model Rhenish. Untuk ideologi politik yang sering dikaitkan dengan model Nordik, lihat Demokrasi sosial. Bagian dari seriSistem ekonomi Ideologi Anarkis Kapitalis Komunis Korporatis Dirigis Fasis Georgis Islam Laissez-faire Sosialis pasar Merkantilis Neo-merkantilis Partisipan Proteksionis Sosialis Kapitalis negara Sindikalis Arah Tertutup (autarki) Ter...

 

Allisyn Ashley ArmLahir25 April 1996 (umur 27)Glendale, California, U.S.PekerjaanAktris, KomedianTahun aktif1998–sekarangSitus webAllisynAshleyArm.com Allisyn Ashley Arm (lahir 25 April 1996)[1][2] adalah seorang aktris remaja asal Amerika. Arm yang paling dikenal karena perannya utamanya sebagai Zora Lancaster di seial Sonny with a Chance dan So Random!. Karier Allisyn Ashley Arm yang paling dikenal karena perannya utamanya sebagai Zora Lancaster di seial Sonny w...

 

1989 novel by Patrick O'Brian The Thirteen-Gun Salute First editionAuthorPatrick O'BrianCover artistGeoff HuntCountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglishSeriesAubrey–Maturin seriesGenreHistorical novelPublished1989 Collins (UK)Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback) & Audio Book (Compact audio cassette, Compact Disc)Pages319ISBN0-00-223460-2 first Collins edition, hardbackOCLC23692637Dewey Decimal823/.914 20LC ClassPR6029.B56 T45 1991Preceded byThe Letter of Marque ...

Kongres Nasional Partai Komunis Tiongkok ke-11 diselenggarakan pada 12-18 Agustus 1977, sekitar lima tahun sebelum Kongres Nasional ke-12 dan empat tahun setelah Kongres Nasional ke-10. Kongres ini secara resmi mendeklarasikan bahwa Revolusi Kebudayaan telah berakhir setelah berlangsung selama 11 tahun, mengakhiri babak panjang sejarah Tiongkok. Kelompok Empat sepenuhnya dikritik karena peran mereka dalam Revolusi Kebudayaan. Hua Guofeng secara resmi terpilih sebagai Ketua Komite Sentral ke-1...

 

Ukrainian tennis player Oleksii KrutykhKrutykh at the 2023 French OpenCountry (sports) UkraineResidenceKyiv, UkraineBorn (2000-03-10) 10 March 2000 (age 24)Kyiv, UkraineHeight1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)PlaysRight-handed (two-handed backhand)Prize money$278,030SinglesCareer record3–4Career titles0Highest rankingNo. 160 (27 February 2023)Current rankingNo. 295 (25 December 2023)Grand Slam singles resultsAustralian Open1R (2023)French OpenQ2 (...

 

Low oxygen conditions or levelsGlobal map of low and declining oxygen levels in the open ocean and coastal waters, 2009.[1] The map indicates coastal sites where anthropogenic nutrients have exacerbated or caused oxygen declines to <2 mg/L (<63 μmol/L) (red dots), as well as ocean oxygen minimum zones at 300 m (blue shaded regions).[2] Part of a series onPollutionAir pollution from a factory Air Air quality index Atmospheric dispersion modeling Chlorofluorocarbon Combus...

American journalist, radio host (born 1968) This article is about the broadcast journalist. For the American actor and singer, see A Martinez. A MartínezBornGeorge MartínezOccupationRadio hostCareerShowMorning EditionNetworkNPRPrevious show(s)Take Two (2012-2021)In The Zone (2007-2012) George (or Jorge[1][2]) Louis “A” Martínez is an Ecuadorian American journalist who is currently a host of Morning Edition on National Public Radio. He joined Morning Edition in July 2021...

 

Football stadium in Saurimo, Angola Estádio das MangueirasFull nameEstádio das MangueirasLocationSaurimo, AngolaOwnerState-ownedCapacity7,000ConstructionRenovated16 August 2012; 11 years ago (2012-08-16)Construction cost$7.500.00,00Main contractorsGrupo Sete CunhasTenantsBikuku FC Estádio das Mangueiras is a football stadium located at the Dr. Agostinho Neto neighborhood in the city of Saurimo, Lunda Sul province, Angola. The state-owned stadium is currently used mostly f...

 

Fort in Bharatpur, Rajasthan, India Bijai Garh External wall of Bijai GarhTypeFortSite informationControlled byJadaun king VijayapalSite historyBuilt1040 CEIn useHistoric Bijai Garh, also known as Vijayamandirgarh or Bijaigarh, is a fort located in Bayana in Bharatpur district.[1] It is approximately 25km from the nearest city, Hindaun. The fort was built by Jadaun Rajput king Vijayapal in 1040 CE. Bijaigarh contains several old temples and red stones pillars bearing an Insc...

谢赫·穆吉布·拉赫曼Sheikh Mujibur Rahmanশেখ মুজিবুর রহমান第1任孟加拉總統任期1971年4月11日—1972年1月12日总理塔杰丁·艾哈迈德前任首任继任Nazrul Islam (Acting)任期1975年1月25日—1975年8月15日总理Muhammad Mansur Ali前任Mohammad Mohammadullah继任孔达卡尔·穆什塔克·艾哈迈德第2任孟加拉總理任期1972年1月12日—1972年1月24日总统阿布·赛义德·乔杜里Mohammad Mohammadullah前任Tajud...

 

Частина серії проФілософіяLeft to right: Plato, Kant, Nietzsche, Buddha, Confucius, AverroesПлатонКантНіцшеБуддаКонфуційАверроес Філософи Епістемологи Естетики Етики Логіки Метафізики Соціально-політичні філософи Традиції Аналітична Арістотелівська Африканська Близькосхідна іранська Буддій�...

 

South African politician (1825–1904) This article is about the South African politician. For others of the same name, see Paul Kruger (disambiguation). Paul KrugerKruger c. 18905th State President of the South African RepublicIn office9 May 1883 – 31 May 1902Vice PresidentPiet JoubertCornelis Johannes BodensteinChristiaan Johannes JoubertNicolaas SmitPiet JoubertSchalk Willem BurgerPreceded byTriumvirateSucceeded bySchalk Willem Burger (acting)Member of the TriumvirateIn ...

中國生產黨中國生產黨标志主席施精健荣誉主席盧月香成立2010年2月28日(成立)2014年1月11日(重組)解散2020年4月29日,​4年前​(2020-04-29)总部 中華民國台北市中正區忠孝西路一段41號6樓之1党员約4萬意識形態中国统一保守主義政治立場右翼至極右翼官方色彩  藍色立法委員0 / 113直轄市長0 / 6直轄市議員0 / 380縣市長0 / 16縣市議員0 / 532縣市議長0 / 22鄉鎮市區...

 

Outlying island in Hong Kong Lamma Island南丫島Aerial photo of Yung Shue Wan, Lamma IslandLamma IslandGeographyLocationSouthwest of Hong Kong IslandCoordinates22°12′N 114°07′E / 22.200°N 114.117°E / 22.200; 114.117Area13.55 km2 (5.23 sq mi)Length7 km (4.3 mi)Highest elevation353 m (1158 ft)Highest pointMount Stenhouse山地塘AdministrationHong KongRegionNew TerritoriesDistrictIslands DistrictDemographicsPopulatio...

 

Detane Детане Vue de Detane Administration Pays Serbie Province Serbie centrale Région Stari Vlah Raška/Sandjak District Raška Municipalité Tutin Démographie Population 194 hab. (2011) Géographie Coordonnées 42° 58′ 07″ nord, 20° 16′ 51″ est Altitude 884 m Localisation Géolocalisation sur la carte : Serbie Detane Géolocalisation sur la carte : Serbie Detane modifier  Detane (en serbe cyrillique : Детан�...

Questa voce o sezione sugli argomenti storia d'Italia e storia della Francia non cita le fonti necessarie o quelle presenti sono insufficienti. Commento: Sembrano ricerche originali, esposte come tali anche qui Puoi migliorare questa voce aggiungendo citazioni da fonti attendibili secondo le linee guida sull'uso delle fonti. Segui i suggerimenti del progetto di riferimento. I Lingoni erano un popolo celtico della Gallia, stanziato tra i fiumi Senna e Marna (Francia). Indice 1 Storia 2 R...

 

Halte Tangsil Tangsil+259 m Kondisi Halte Tangsil tahun 2024 saat diadakan penelusuran oleh Direktorat Jenderal Perkeretaapian bersama Komunitas Indonesian Railway Preservation Society (IRPS)LokasiTenggarang, Tenggarang, Bondowoso, Jawa TimurIndonesiaKoordinat7°54′35″S 113°51′18″E / 7.90972°S 113.85500°E / -7.90972; 113.85500Koordinat: 7°54′35″S 113°51′18″E / 7.90972°S 113.85500°E / -7.90972; 113.85500Ketinggian+259 mOper...

 

الدوري الماسي   سباق 800 متر للسيدات في الدوري الماسي 2021 في بروكسل معلومات عامة الرياضة ألعاب القوى  انطلقت 2010 المنظم الإتحاد الدولي لألعاب القوى التواتر سنوية الموقع الرسمي www.diamondleague.com التسلسل الزمني للمنافسة الدوري الذهبي    تعديل مصدري - تعديل   الشعار الساب�...

Animated television series KulipariTitle card for season 1GenreComedy-DramaFantasyActionAdventureCreated byTrevor PryceBased onCharacters createdby Trevor PryceDeveloped byTrevor PryceSplash EntertainmentVoices ofJosh KeatonKeith DavidMark HamillWendie MalickCharlie AdlerComposerMichael TaveraCountry of originUnited StatesIrelandOriginal languageEnglishNo. of seasons2No. of episodes23 (list of episodes)ProductionExecutive producersMike YoungTrevor PrycePaul CumminsNicholas Atlan (season 1)Ste...

 

This article may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject, potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral. Please help improve it by replacing them with more appropriate citations to reliable, independent, third-party sources. (July 2012) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Rugby teamSkyactivs Hiroshima マツダスカイアクティブス広島Full nameSkyactivs HiroshimaUnionJapan Rugby Football UnionNickname(s)SkyactivsCoach(es)Kazun...