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broken records

n. (broken record English)

Wikipedia
Broken Records (record label)

Broken Records was a Christian rock record label founded in 1985. The label closed in the early 1990s.

Broken Records became an important label in the development of both the West Coast Christian alternative music and Christian hip-hop scenes. It focused primarily on modern rock, punk and new wave music, paving the way for labels like Frontline Records. Artists signed to Broken Records included Level Heads, The Altar Boys, The Choir, Crumbächer, The 77s, 4-4-1, Riki Michele, Adam Again and Undercover. After having difficulties with its distributor, the label was for a time run successfully as Brainstorm Artists International.

Several Broken Records bands reunited in Irvine, California on August 19, 2005 for a reunion concert. The event, which was filmed for a possible DVD release by Take 2 Productions, included performances by the Altar Boys, 4-4-1, The Choir, Crumbächer and Undercover.

Broken Records (band)

Broken Records are a six-piece indie folk band from Edinburgh, Scotland, which formed in December 2006. The band are signed to 4AD and released their debut album, Until the Earth Begins to Part, in June 2009. Their second album Let Me Come Home was released in October 2010.

Usage examples of "broken records".

The thief had made off with every purchase Jeremy had made at Mariner, Jeremy had broken records getting back to their cabin to create the scene he'd walked in on.

He has invented, devised, created in every realm of human endeavour, and everywhere he has triumphed, broken records, achieved miracles.

The broken records of the times ^135 preserve some remembrance of their palace, their mint, their tribunal, their edicts, and the sword of justice, which, as late as the thirteenth century, was derived from Caesar to the praefect of the city.

The summer and early autumn of 1888 had broken records for chilly temperatures and heavy rainfall.

But she shouldn't have picked up the broken records and the music and the book and put them all neatly into a box.

I walk over to him, treading carefully to avoid rustling papers and broken records and stepping over a floorboard which I know creaks.