The Special 12 Singles Series
The Special 12 Singles Series is a series of twelve, 7 inch singles released by Gold Standard Laboratories in 2005; one for each month. Subscriptions were available for either January through June, July through December, or all 12 singles. Select tracks from this series were released as a digital album on iTunes on October 3, 2006, with an extended version of "Live Private Booths". Alavaz Relxib Cirdec is a pseudonym used by Cedric Bixler-Zavala and in fact, it's his name backwards. There were 500 copies of each single pressed by GSL and are now fairly rare.[1]
The Special 12 Singles Series | ||||
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Compilation album by Various artists | ||||
Released | 2005 | |||
Length | 39:00 | |||
Label | Gold Standard Laboratories | |||
Omar Rodríguez-López chronology | ||||
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John Frusciante chronology | ||||
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Omar Rodríguez-López & John Frusciante chronology | ||||
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The tracks by Omar Rodríguez-López and John Frusciante were recorded in Spring 2003.
Track listing
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
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1. | "The Piano Has Been Drinking" | Free Moral Agents | 3:27 |
2. | "If You Can't Say Love" | Free Moral Agents | 4:03 |
3. | "Drugged Ink" | Kill Me Tomorrow | 3:03 |
4. | "Red Croissant" | Xiu Xiu | 2:53 |
5. | "I Lost My Bees" | The Starlite Desperation | 4:13 |
6. | "0 = 2" | Omar Rodríguez-López, John Frusciante | 4:07 |
7. | "0" | Rodríguez-López, Frusciante | 4:11 |
8. | "Live Private Booths" | Alavaz Relxib Cirdec | 8:13 |
9. | "Sapta Loka" | Alavaz Relxib Cirdec | 4:50 |
Total length: | 39:00 |
gollark: I've read two and heard of one other dystopia novel built around the "disputes settled with single combat" thing, which is kind of a bad sign for the idea of allocating resources that way.
gollark: But... otherwise yes.
gollark: Oh, sure, fights with people who actually want to participate in them would be okay.
gollark: You still run into externalities like, er, carbon dioxide.
gollark: Ideally we'd be able to partition Earth into... lots of... different areas, set up different governments in each with people who like each one in them, magically fix externalities between them and stop them going to war or something, somehow deal with the issue of ensuring children in each society have a reasonable choice of where to go, and allowing people to be exiled to some other society in lieu of punishment there - assuming other ones will take them, obviously. But that is impractical.
References
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