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the cure metallica punk gothic t shirts
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Code: CURT0250 |
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THIS T-SHIRT IS NEW.
MATERIAL %100 COTTON.
STRAIGHT FROM THE
MANUFACTURE.
High Quality Silk Printed Image.
Not some cheap iron.
You can wear it as many times as you want,
but the picture will be like new.
Do not shrink after washing.
We guarantee uniqueness in most
alterna-oriented and gothic club movements.
In 1977, The Easy Cure auditioned for Hansa Records and received a recording
contract worth £1000. A year later, following disagreements about the direction
the group should take (Smith said he felt the band was signed simply because the
label liked their picture and he refused to play covers of songs such as I
Fought the Law), the band (newly renamed The Cure) were signed as a trio (minus
Porl Thompson) on former Polydor Records scout Chris Parry's new Fiction label
(distributed by Polydor). However,
The Cure released their
first single "Killing an Arab" on the Small Wonder label. "Killing an Arab"
garnered both acclaim and controversy: while the single's provocative title led
to accusations of racism, the song is actually based on French existentialist
Albert Camus' story The Stranger. The single was packaged with a sticker label
that denied the racist connotations. The sticker was also featured on the 1986
compilation, Standing on a Beach, but the song was conspicuously absent from the
2004 Rhino "deluxe edition" of Three Imaginary Boys. |
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