1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines
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1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines
Summary
1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines is an album[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- 1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines's instance of is recorded as 1st Decade in the Machines — instance of (P31): album[3].
- 1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines's genre is 1st Decade in the Machines — genre (P136): glitch[4].
- 1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines's genre is 1st Decade in the Machines — genre (P136): ambient music[5].
- 1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines's genre is 1st Decade in the Machines — genre (P136): noise music[6].
- 1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines was produced by 1st Decade in the Machines — producer (P162): Kristoffer Rygg[7].
- 1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines was performed by 1st Decade in the Machines — performer (P175): Ulver[8].
- 1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines's record label is recorded as 1st Decade in the Machines — record label (P264): Jester Records[9].
- 1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines is part of 1st Decade in the Machines — part of (P361): Ulver's albums in chronological order[10].
- 1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines was released on April 29, 2003[11].
- 1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines's form of creative work is recorded as 1st Decade in the Machines — form of creative work (P7937): remix album[12].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Among the performers on 1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines was 1st Decade in the Machines — performer (P175): Ulver[8]. It was produced by 1st Decade in the Machines — producer (P162): Kristoffer Rygg[7].
Publication
1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines was published on April 29, 2003[11]. Genres include 1st Decade in the Machines — genre (P136): glitch[4], 1st Decade in the Machines — genre (P136): ambient music[5], and 1st Decade in the Machines — genre (P136): noise music[6]. It is part of 1st Decade in the Machines — part of (P361): Ulver's albums in chronological order[10].
Why It Matters
1993–2003: 1st Decade in the Machines has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]