To install click the Add extension button. That's it.
The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.
How to transfigure the Wikipedia
Would you like Wikipedia to always look as professional and up-to-date? We have created a browser extension. It will enhance any encyclopedic page you visit with the magic of the WIKI 2 technology.
Try it — you can delete it anytime.
Install in 5 seconds
Yep, but later
4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
The industrial rock band KMFDM has released more than two hundred songs in their over-forty-year-long career spanning more than fifty unique releases.
YouTube Encyclopedic
1/5
Views:
228 972
10 102
8 218
127 369
8 784
KMFDM - Angst (1993) full album
KMFDM - Retro (FULL COMPILATION 1998)
KMFDM - Xtort (1996) full album
KMFDM - Nihil (1995) full album
KMFDM - UAIOE (1989) full album
Transcription
Artwork
Beginning with the British release of 1986's What Do You Know, Deutschland?, British artist Aidan "Brute!" Hughes has designed the artwork for nineteen of KMFDM's twenty-one studio albums and all but two of their singles. He has also designed the artwork for their three remix albums and two live albums, and their 2010 compilation releases.[1]
All of his work shares a distinct visual style inspired by Golden Age comic artists, Russian Constructivists, ItalianFuturists, and woodcut artists.[2] The design and complexity of the works have varied over time from primarily simple mono- or bi-color motifs (early albums) to highly detailed multi-color schemes (Attak, WWIII).
The remaining cover artwork has been a mixture of photos and work done by other artists.
US release on Wax Trax! Records did not contain the songs "More & Faster"/"Rip the System"/"Naff Off", whereas the domestic, German-based label Cashbeat Records version did (and the UK version by Strike Back Records adds the additional song "Virus" as well). Wax Trax! instead offered a domestic US release of a 12" single entitled 'More & Faster' containing the 3 aforementioned songs. The song "Virus" could also only be found on a Wax Trax! single release.
Removed from distribution in 1993 due to an unlicensed sample of Carl Orff's "O Fortuna" on the track "Liebeslied". It was reissued as Naïve/Hell to Go in 1994 with several tracks remixed, and reissued again in 2006 with tracks from both releases on Metropolis/KMFDM Records. Only the original release of Naïve contains the original version of "Liebeslied" and has become a collector's item.
Nihil is one of only a handful of KMFDM releases that do not feature cover artwork by Brute!. The cover features a painting by Francesca Sundsten, wife of drummer Bill Rieflin. Reissued in 2007 on Metropolis/KMFDM Records. 209,000 copies sold.[4]
Adios was intended to be KMFDM's final album due to an escalating rift among the core members of the band. It marks the last appearance of core members En Esch and Günter Schulz on a KMFDM record. Reissued in 2007 on Metropolis/KMFDM Records.
Attak marked the return of KMFDM after a three-year hiatus and the last to feature Tim Sköld as a main collaborator (he would later contribute to Blitz and the collaborative record, Skold vs. KMFDM). See also MDFMK.
While it was initially promoted with a working title of FUBAR, Hau Ruck broke a long-standing KMFDM tradition of five-letter album titles. It includes a cover of "Mini Mini Mini" by Jacques Dutronc.
Chronicles KMFDM's world tour in support of their album WWIII.
4 September 2014
WE ARE
Metropolis/KMFDM
KMFDM self-released video version in 2015 is titled 'We Are KMFDM'. The DVD version released in 2016 as a companion disc to the deluxe edition of the compilation/remix album 'ROCKS (Milestones Reloaded)' is simply entitled 'Live 30th Anniversary Concert'.
Retro was originally a promotional disc released to radio stations as a playlist. It was reissued as a "greatest hits" compilation in 1998. All tracks are taken from earlier KMFDM albums.
Joint project between Sascha Konietzko and former KMFDM/MDFMK member Tim Skold.
Singles/EPs
Most of these singles have been reissued as special edition 7" records (limited to 250 copies each) from March 2008 to February 2010 in a series called 24/7.