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・ The Burgate School and Sixth Form Centre
・ The Burger and the Hot Dog
・ The Burger King
・ The Burgh Island EP
・ The Burghers of Calais
・ The Burghersdorp Gazette
・ The Burgies
・ The Burglar
・ The Burglar (1972 film)
・ The Burglar and the Lady
・ The Burglar's Christmas
・ The Burglar's Dilemma
・ The Burglars
・ The Burgomaster of Stilemonde
・ The Burgomeister (film)
The Burial
・ The Burial (metal band)
・ The Burial at Thebes
・ The Burial Mound
・ The Burial of St. Petronilla
・ The Burial of the Count of Orgaz
・ The Burial of the Sardine
・ The Burial of the Sardine in Murcia
・ The Burial Plot Bidding War
・ The Burial Society
・ The Buried
・ The Buried Giant
・ The Buried Life
・ The Buried Life (album)
・ The Buried Moon


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The Burial : ウィキペディア英語版
The Burial
The Burial were an Oi! band that incorporated ska, northern soul and folk influences into their music. Formed in 1981 in Yorkshire, England, they released one album, ''A Day On the Town'', in 1988, and worked with Bradford's anarchist rant-poet Nick Toczek on various projects under the name Britanarchists. They disbanded in 1988.
Two of The Burial's earliest recordings, "Backstreet Child" and "I Just Can't Forget", appear on the compilation album ''Oi! The Demos (80-83)'', whose liner notes describe them as "the prototype Skacore band". They have three songs on the compilation ''Oi! of Sex'' — two as The Burial ("Old Mans Poison", "Friday Night") and one as Nick Toczek's Britanarchists ("Stiff With a Quiff"). Their song "Sheila" appears on the compilation ''The Sound of Oi!'', and their song "Holding On" appears on ''Oi! Glorious Oi!''
Their sound is described in ''Spirit of '69: A Skinhead Bible'' as a "volatile Punk and Soul cocktail." In his article "Oi!: The Truth", Garry Bushell wrote: "Scarborough’s Burial cited Oi and 2-Tone as forebears and mixed the sounds of ska and rowdy bootboy punk in their set." 〔(Oi!: The Truth )〕 A song by Bushell's band The Gonads, "Joys of Oi!", included the lyric "Burial at number one". ''i-D'' magazine described The Burial as "probably the first skinhead band to ever play ska".〔(Ska Party )〕 The band were regularly featured in the traditional skinhead fanzine ''Hard as Nails'', and were described in Issue 4 as "Great Streetpunk hopes".
== Political views ==
Eric "Barney" Barnes was the chief leftist influence on the band. He was an active member of the Militant tendency, and he vigorously supported the National Union of Miners in its year-long strike action, as well as supporting working class revolutionary socialist groups such as Red Action, to whom The Burial gave an interview in which guitarist Chris said: "I've got short hair doesn't mean I'm a frigging Nazi. Don't mean I'm a Commie either."〔(Red Action Interview )〕 Barnes told ''i-D'' magazine:

I come from an iron ore mining village near Middlesbrough and a strong trade union background. A lot of my family were original skins and to us Skinhead was a working class movement and fascism is totally opposed to that. The strong grounding in working class politics has given Northern Skins an abhorrence of the National Front that London skins never had.〔

''i-D'' wrote: "They formed six years ago, emerging at the same time as The Redskins, but whereas the later responded to boneheads by moving into the student circuit, a strong feature of The Burial's gigs was the Nazi-bashing."〔 The article includes a quote from Paul McGinn of the Glasgow Spy Kids: "They were the first band to stand up and say what a lot of people felt".〔 The book ''Spirit of '69: A Skinhead Bible'' included a quote from singer Mick Hall at a concert in Stockton in 1985, in which he said to the audience: "You read in the papers all Skinheads are thick fascist thugs. I'm not a thick fascist thug. Are there any thick fascist thugs in here?"〔

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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