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  1. Radiators from Space postpone Dublin show The Radiators have regretfully had to postpone their comeback show at the Academy, Dublin, on September 8th. The band, who recently released their acclaimed fourth studio album Sound City Beat, a tribute to the Irish rock scene in the 1960s, had been due to give their first show in over five years.

  2. Radiators From Space. より多くの画像. プロフィール: Irish band, active 1976-1981, 1987-1989, and 2004-2013. The group ended with the illness and death of member Philip Chevron, but other members founded the new band Trouble Pilgrims. Have also performed & recorded as "Radiators", "The Radiators", The Rads (3), and "The Radiators ...

  3. History 1977 - The Radiators from space 1976-2013. History1977. January 9 - Baggot Inn, Dublin (support to Arthur Phybes Band) 16 - Asgard House, Howth Co. Dublin. Entire audience walks out. Band plays its set anyway.

  4. 28 de mar. de 2012 · Find out more about how we review. Formed in the white heat of punk, the Radiators From Space were Dublin’s first spiky band, with an edge of Brecht and Weill that gave them a slight edge (no pun intended) over their contemporaries and successors. Their best-known song, TV Screen, doesn’t represent the breadth of their musical scope.

  5. Arranged By – Mark Megaray, The Radiators *. Design – Art On My Sleeve. Engineer – Johnny Byrne, Neil Richmond. Performer – Jimmy Crash *, Mark Megaray, Peter Holidai *, Phil Chevron *. Performer [Was] – Stephen Rapid. Photography By – Ian Finlay (2) Producer – Roger Armstrong.

  6. The Radiators from Space wurden ursprünglich von Pete Holidai als Greta Garbage and the Trashcans gegründet und nannten sich, bevor sie ihren endgültigen Namen fanden, zeitweise auch Rockette, Hell Razors und Rough Trade.Sänger und Gitarrist Philip Chevron bewarb sich um eine Mitgliedschaft in der Gruppe, nachdem er eine Zeitungsannonce Holidais gelesen hatte, in der nach gleichgesinnten ...

  7. 24 de jun. de 2014 · For the Radiators, much of their punk fanbase had peeled away by the time Ghostown was released over a year later. The delayed release did not help their cause and the band broke up in early 1981. Despite two project-focused but brief activities in the late 1980s the Radiators from Space were no more. UT#36 carries the story of the Ghostown album.