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Sepultura - Attitude [The Last Live Performance With Max Cavalera]
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Sepultura – Attitude [The Last Live Performance With Max Cavalera]

Live from the Brixton Academy Music Venue in London, England on the night of December 16th 1996 when Max Cavalera quit Sepultura. Some say the reason for him leaving is because the rest of the band didn’t want to renew Gloria’s (Max’s Wife) management contract, though this was never confirmed by Max or the remaining members of Sepultura as being true. The entire set from that night was recorded and released as a two disc album on September 24 2002 titled (Under A Pale Gray Sky).
Video Rating: 5 / 5

To part 4 www.youtube.com Fr/Wiki: New Badfinger recording sessions commenced in March 1970 with Mal Evans producing. Two songs were completed and submitted for the next single, including “No Matter What.” but rejected by Apple. Geoff Emerick then took over as producer; completing the album by late July 1970. No Dice, released in the US in late 1970, peaked at #28 on the Billboard charts. The re-mixed single “No Matter What,” peaked at #8 on the Billboard Hot 100 and was another worldwide Top Ten hit. More notably, another track from No Dice, “Without You”, as covered by Harry Nilsson, became an international hit in 1972, reaching the Billboard #1 slot. It was eventually covered by hundreds of artists and has become a ballad “standard” in the music business. While in America in April 1970 and scouting prospects for a tour, Bill Collins was introduced to New York businessman Stan Polley. Polley eventually signed the group to a business management contract in November 1970. Although Polley’s professional reputation was touted at the time, his dubious financial practices would only later become known to the group and helped lead to their downfall. Badfinger toured America for three months in late 1970 and were generally received well, although the group complained of constant comparison to The Beatles. For example, in his rave review of No Dice in 1970, Mike Saunders, a critic for Rolling Stone opined that “it’s as if John, Paul, George, and Ringo had been reincarnated as