Promyshlennaya Arkhitektura

Promyshlennaya Arkhitektura (Russian: Промышленная архитектура, Russian for Industrial Architecture) was a Soviet punk band from Novosibirsk that existed from 1988 to 1989. It was founded by Dmitry Selivanov and was disbanded shortly following his death.

Promyshlennaya Arkhitectura
OriginSoviet Union
GenresPunk
Industrial
Years active1988—1989
MembersDmitry Selivanov
Oleg Chekhovsky
Evgeny Skukovsky
Rinat Vakhidov
Igor Shchukin

History

The band was founded in 1988 by Dmitry Selivanov a few weeks after his departure from Grazhdanskaya Oborona.

In 1988, the band recorded the album "Love and Technology" ("Любовь и технология") at the Electron Student Club of NETI. That same year, the album was discovered by the organizers of the Syrok Moscow Rock Festival, who then invited the band to perform at the event. However, the show was disrupted because the sound was turned off.

After their failure in Moscow, the band returned to Novosibirsk and recorded their concert in the Palace of Culture of Railway Workers. This became the basis for their album “Live Arhitekture,” which was almost a complete re-recording of their previous album.

The group disbanded after the suicide of Dmitry Selivanov in April 1989.[1]

Reviews

Russian mathematician Misha Verbitsky:[2]

Industrial Architecture, with a deadly cold electronic sound, drum machines, songs about the impending inevitable Holocaust, war and predestination – is experiencing a situation AFTER the collapse of human will and consciousness. Even the most optimistic listener of Industrial Architecture will not find here joy or satisfaction – only cold, melancholy and hopelessness.[3]

Albums

  • Love and Technology (1988)
  • Live Arhitekture (1988)

Music videos

  • The Children of the Hospitals
gollark: That's easy. Just flip bits at random.
gollark: I once used tar for my backup system. This was a terrible, terrible idea and I stopped.
gollark: POSIX commands. Really.
gollark: It's sad that Reika's mods will probably not go past 1.7 ever.
gollark: Looks like some sort of bad noise reduction filter.

See also

References

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