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                    [Summary] => Aside from love, pain is often the most manipulated, misappropriated emotion in pop music. It is often mangled and wrenched like a newly laundered flag until every last drop of authenticity is removed from its fabric, leaving behind only a dry rag to hang and blow in the gusts. Whether it be the caterwauling of almost every so-called diva to designer-thug growls of most NU-metal™, it becomes apparent the currency of being in pain – no matter how fraudulent – is briskly changing hands in the mass market.
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                    [AuthorName] => Erwin T. Romulo
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                    [Title] => Kamikazee in PULP
                    [Summary] => They first bombed the crowd during the PULP Summer Slam II, tossing incendiary renditions of Britney Spears’ Lucky and Ariel Rivera’s Sana Kahit Minsan. They tugged at the heartstrings of audiences with their self-depreciating humor, a sort of stand-up hara kiri in between songs. Their music reeks with punk influences. But are they really a punk band? Letter writers have repeatedly asked for them.
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                    [Title] => Kamikazee in PULP
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                    [Title] => Kamikazee in PULP
                    [Summary] => They first bombed the crowd during the PULP Summer Slam II, tossing incendiary renditions of Britney Spears’ Lucky and Ariel Rivera’s Sana Kahit Minsan. They tugged at the heartstrings of audiences with their self-depreciating humor, a sort of stand-up hara kiri in between songs. Their music reeks with punk influences. But are they really a punk band? Letter writers have repeatedly asked for them.
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                    [Title] => Kamikazee in PULP
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                    [Title] => Kamikazee in PULP
                    [Summary] => They first bombed the crowd during the PULP Summer Slam II, tossing incendiary renditions of Britney Spears’ Lucky and Ariel Rivera’s Sana Kahit Minsan. They tugged at the heartstrings of audiences with their self-depreciating humor, a sort of stand-up hara kiri in between songs. Their music reeks with punk influences. But are they really a punk band? Letter writers have repeatedly asked for them.
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                    [Title] => Kamikazee in PULP
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CRAIG NICHOLLS
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                    [Title] => SCARY MONSTERS or ‘1984’ AND A HALF
                    [Summary] => Aside from love, pain is often the most manipulated, misappropriated emotion in pop music. It is often mangled and wrenched like a newly laundered flag until every last drop of authenticity is removed from its fabric, leaving behind only a dry rag to hang and blow in the gusts. Whether it be the caterwauling of almost every so-called diva to designer-thug growls of most NU-metal™, it becomes apparent the currency of being in pain – no matter how fraudulent – is briskly changing hands in the mass market.
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                    [Title] => Kamikazee in PULP
                    [Summary] => They first bombed the crowd during the PULP Summer Slam II, tossing incendiary renditions of Britney Spears’ Lucky and Ariel Rivera’s Sana Kahit Minsan. They tugged at the heartstrings of audiences with their self-depreciating humor, a sort of stand-up hara kiri in between songs. Their music reeks with punk influences. But are they really a punk band? Letter writers have repeatedly asked for them.
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                    [Title] => Kamikazee in PULP
                    [Summary] => They first bombed the crowd during the PULP Summer Slam II, tossing incendiary renditions of Britney Spears’ Lucky and Ariel Rivera’s Sana Kahit Minsan. They tugged at the heartstrings of audiences with their self-depreciating humor, a sort of stand-up hara kiri in between songs. Their music reeks with punk influences. But are they really a punk band? Letter writers have repeatedly asked for them.
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                    [Title] => Kamikazee in PULP
                    [Summary] => They first bombed the crowd during the PULP Summer Slam II, tossing incendiary renditions of Britney Spears’ Lucky and Ariel Rivera’s Sana Kahit Minsan. They tugged at the heartstrings of audiences with their self-depreciating humor, a sort of stand-up hara kiri in between songs. Their music reeks with punk influences. But are they really a punk band? Letter writers have repeatedly asked for them.
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                    [Title] => Kamikazee in PULP
                    [Summary] => They first bombed the crowd during the PULP Summer Slam II, tossing incendiary renditions of Britney Spears’ Lucky and Ariel Rivera’s Sana Kahit Minsan. They tugged at the heartstrings of audiences with their self-depreciating humor, a sort of stand-up hara kiri in between songs. Their music reeks with punk influences. But are they really a punk band? Letter writers have repeatedly asked for them.
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                    [Title] => Kamikazee in PULP
                    [Summary] => They first bombed the crowd during the PULP Summer Slam II, tossing incendiary renditions of Britney Spears’ Lucky and Ariel Rivera’s Sana Kahit Minsan. They tugged at the heartstrings of audiences with their self-depreciating humor, a sort of stand-up hara kiri in between songs. Their music reeks with punk influences. But are they really a punk band? Letter writers have repeatedly asked for them.
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                    [Title] => Kamikazee in PULP
                    [Summary] => They first bombed the crowd during the PULP Summer Slam II, tossing incendiary renditions of Britney Spears’ Lucky and Ariel Rivera’s Sana Kahit Minsan. They tugged at the heartstrings of audiences with their self-depreciating humor, a sort of stand-up hara kiri in between songs. Their music reeks with punk influences. But are they really a punk band? Letter writers have repeatedly asked for them.
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                    [Title] => Kamikazee in PULP
                    [Summary] => They first bombed the crowd during the PULP Summer Slam II, tossing incendiary renditions of Britney Spears’ Lucky and Ariel Rivera’s Sana Kahit Minsan. They tugged at the heartstrings of audiences with their self-depreciating humor, a sort of stand-up hara kiri in between songs. Their music reeks with punk influences. But are they really a punk band? Letter writers have repeatedly asked for them.
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