Hooton 3 Car
Hooton 3 Car was an English punk/melodic hardcore band, formed in 1989. The band's members were Graham Williams (guitar, vocals), Chris Petty (guitar, vocals), Hywell Maggs (bass, vocals) and Jon Jesson (drums, vocals). Their original drummer was Stephen Emm who left the band in 1992.
The name of the band derives from the indicators often seen on Merseyrail Wirral Line stations showing that the next train is a 3 coach train to Hooton.
Discography
- "Spot Daylight (12", J-RSTR 001, JSNTGM/Rumblestrip, 1994)
- "Danny (7", Out Of Step, 1995)
- "Driver (7", Out Of Step 1995)
- Cramp Like A Fox (cd/lp, Out Of Step, 1996)
- "Drone" (7", WOOS 10S, Out Of Step)
- "Carpetburn" (7", DAMGOOD121, Damaged Goods, 1997)
- Monkey Mayor (cd/lp, Rumblestrip, 1997)
- Jesse split (7", DUMP043, Rugger Bugger/Rumblestrip, 1997)
- Lovemen split (7", snuff-030, Snuffy Smile, 1997)
- Screaming Fat Rat split (7", snuff-038, Snuffy Smile, 1998)
- By Means Of Maybe (cd/lp, Rumblestrip, 1998)
- Recordings 1994-1998 (Crackle 016, Crackle!, 2003)
gollark: I mean, monad implies the other two, but still.
gollark: In fact, lists are functors, applicatives and monads.
gollark: `join` is essentially `flatten`, and `fmap` is like `map` on lists.
gollark: Technically functors have `fmap`, actually.
gollark: Functor: has `map`, lets you run an `a → b` over a `f a` to get a `f b`Applicative: has `<*>`, lets you run a `f (a → b)` over a `f a` to get a `f b` and `pure`, which lets you get a `f a` from an `a`Monad: has `join`, which does `f (f a)) → f a` or alternately `bind`, which is `f a → (a → f b) → f b`.
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