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・ Chapter house (Navajo Nation)
・ Chapter I (Cryonic Temple album)
・ Chapter I of the Constitution of Australia
・ Chapter I of the United Nations Charter
・ Chapter II (Ashanti album)
・ Chapter II (Benga album)
・ Chapter II of the Constitution of Australia
・ Chapter II of the Indian Penal Code
・ Chapter II of the United Nations Charter
・ Chapter III (Agathodaimon album)
・ Chapter III (Allure album)
・ Chapter III Court
・ Chapter III of the United Nations Charter
・ Chapter IV of the United Nations Charter
・ Chapter IX of the United Nations Charter
Chapter Music
・ Chapter nine institutions
・ Chapter of Toledo
・ Chapter One
・ Chapter One (Collage album)
・ Chapter One (Ella Henderson album)
・ Chapter One (John Sykes album)
・ Chapter One (restaurant)
・ Chapter One (Viking Skull album)
・ Chapter One of the Constitution of South Africa
・ Chapter One... A Decade
・ Chapter Seven
・ Chapter Seven (album)
・ Chapter Six
・ Chapter Three


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Chapter Music : ウィキペディア英語版
Chapter Music

Chapter Music is one of Australia's longest-running independent record labels.〔 Chapter Music has worked with a broad range of mostly Australian artists, in genres such as rock and roll, indie pop, post punk, country and western and folk. Between 1992 and 2013, the label released around 45 titles, including several compilation albums, such as ''Can't Stop It! Australian Post-Punk 1978-82'' and ''Songs For Nao''. The label's 2014 roster features bands such as Dick Diver, Beaches and Twerps.
==History==
The label was founded by Guy Blackman in Perth, Western Australia in June 1992, after he released several issues of a Syd Barrett-inspired fanzine called ''Chapter 24'', started in October 1990, when Blackman was seventeen. Initially, Blackman released compilation cassettes of local Perth underground bands, the first of which was ''Bright Lights, Small City'' in July 1992. A Sonic Youth tribute tape called ''Kill Yr Idols!'' was the label's next release, followed by a new fanzine called ''Salty & Delicious''. The label released a further eight cassettes (mostly compilations), one CD, and four issues of the fanzine prior to Blackman's relocation to Melbourne, Australia. Blackman explained in 2012: "When I sold out of the first Chapter Music cassette on the night of the show, that was a huge success for me, as a 17-year-old boy."
Blackman relocated to Melbourne in mid-1995,〔 where he released Chapter Music's first seven-inch vinyl single, pressed at Corduroy Records, a new pressing plant in Australia at the time. The single, a Molasses/Minimum Chips split single—Blackman is a member of the latter band—was released in September 1995.〔 This was followed by a seven-inch single by Perth band Sulk, with a third release, a split single for Sleepy Township/Cannanes〔 released in October 1996.
The label briefly closed for 18 months in 2002 when Blackman and his partner, Ben O'Connor,〔 relocated to Japan. In a 2013 interview, Blackman explained that he made connections with an "little underworld of Japanese underground psychpop" during his time in Japan, in addition to playing his own live shows and collaborating with local artists. Blackman said that by the time his visa expired he felt like his time in Japan was merely starting; however, at the time of the interview, he explained that he retained connections with artists like Tenniscoats following his return to Australia.
Chapter Music reissued the 1980 self-titled live recording of Melbourne post-punk/noise band Primitive Calculators in 2004, which was the band’s sole official release at the time. The label released the 17-track ''Primitive Calculators and Friends'' compilation in 2007, which featured the only Primitive Calculators studio recording ever released and the ''Little Bands'' compilation. In a 2009 interview, Stuart, of Primitive Calculators, said: "I think Guy Blackman is a kind of angel to do what he does and stay who he is."
The label's 20th anniversary occurred in 2012 and the label was co-managed by Blackman and O'Connor by this stage. In an interview with the ''Sydney Morning Herald'' (''SMH'') in November 2012, O'Connor explained: "We've only ever done things that we love and care about",〔 while Blackman expressed his view on the label's longevity openly:

I've found myself becoming very sensitive to any perceived indifference to the anniversary ... To me it seems like a big deal. There's not that many record labels that last this long; Ben and I have watched a lot of them come and go.〔

Chapter Music released a compilation of rarities, ''20 Big Ones'', as part of the 20th anniversary commemoration—including a song by Minimum Chips〔—and an anniversary show was staged in Melbourne, during Melbourne Music Week, with performances from Crayon Fields, Twerps, Pikelet, Laura Jean and Primitive Calculators, among others.〔
In the 2012 ''SMH'' interview, Blackman described the label's health as "better than ever", and explained in an interview the following year that the label "can provide support for a long term career for a band ... The community aspect and the relationships are the most important thing about the label." During 2013, Chapter Music attended the CMJ Music Marathon and released albums by Dick Diver, Beaches, Primitive Calculators, Pikelet and Bushwalking.〔 The Primitive Calculators release, ''The World Is Fucked'', is the first-ever studio album by the band, which was 35 years old at the time of the release date.
An August 2014 announcement revealed that Twerps signed to US label Merge Records, while retaining their arrangement with Chapter Music for Australia and New Zealand. The ''Underlay'' EP—described by music journalist Anthony Carew as "the work of a band who’s already done a lap around the hype-bubble block and returned feeling jaded"—was released by the band in August 2014. Also in August 2014, Laura Jean released her self-titled album on Chapter Music, which was recorded in England, UK, with John Parish.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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