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BANNERTRIAL


Datarock's new, self-titled album is now available at:

Itunes

Amazon

Emusic

D A T A R O C K
...

音樂資料

廠牌:

Young Aspiring Professionals

廠牌類型:

Indie

音樂流派:

Other, Pop, Classic Rock

簡歷:

It starts with pink and green lazers criss-crossing the sky, billowing clouds of dry ice, and a spotlight picking out two hooded, beshaded figures. Above the EnormoStadium stage, a house-sized Commodore 64 scrolls out the words: “Dearly beloved, we are gathered here today, to give you DATAROCK.”

“‘The Blog’ is a nice opening,” Fredrik Saroea, frontman of Norwegian dance-rockers Datarock is telling me. “Because it’s almost apocalyptic, there’s something grandiose about the sound.”

Amidst a sensory overload of canned applause, nattering samples from nu-media godheads Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee, and floating on elegiac Sign O’ The Times-synths, Datarock announce their arrival in the Information Age in spine-tingling, anthemic form.

“We know this blog is long-awaited!” Fredrik bellows at a virtual stadium of cheering Datarock fans, “Just couldn’t be done on C64s!” It’s an attempt by technology-fetishists Datarock to romanticise the early utopian promise of the Internet, before it became something that people just took for granted and got annoyed by. It’s total retrofuturism. It is the opening statement of a time-travelling album that ramraids the years 1975 through 1985 with the power of modern studio technology.

Datarock Datarock, the party album of 2005 and Datarock’s debut, mixed relentless punk-funk with warped Happy Mondays humour. Red has lost none of Fredrik and musical partner Ketil Mosnes’ aptitude for so-classic-you-must-have-heard-it-before hooks, but this follow-up is an altogether more concept-driven beast.

Take “Give It Up.” The lead single was actually an idea for a music video before it became a song, paraphrasing “Beat It,” “Bad,” the 1961 film West Side Story and the 1996 film of Romeo & Juliet.

“You have a dance battle,” explains Fredrik, “where a Datarock gang meets the bad guys, and we have a dance off, and then everybody becomes the Datarock gang. And I’m like Mercutio, trying to tell Romeo to shape up, snap out of it, give it up.”

“Thing is, just singing a song about dancing… it’s too simple. Everyone’s gonna dance anyway. So it’s nice to do something insane in the lyrics, like paraphrasing, you know, Romeo & Juliet!”

As an album, Red is a thoroughly unashamed LOVELETTER to the influences that made Datarock what they are today. DEVO, Yellow Magic Orchestra, Haruki Murakami, Don Delilo’s White Noise, Scott Walker and the works of John Hughes and Peter Greenaway are all referenced, but “True Stories” is the most explicit: a song made out of nothing but songtitles. Talking Heads’ songtitles.

It works as a tribute precisely because it plays the kind of mindgames with authorship that classic Talking Heads – who once wrote a song based on an NME review describing what Joy Division sound like; a band they’d never heard – pioneered back in the day, and not just because it sounds like Talking Heads. If anything, Datarock’s music seems to be informed less by the way Talking Heads sound, as much as the way David Byrne dances.

And then there’s “Molly,” a love song to Molly Ringwald. If you haven’t got it yet, a theme is emerging. “Molly Ringwald is still out there somewhere,” laughs Fredrik. “We need to find her. She was the It Girl for a very special period of time in my heart!”

All people of our generation know of the Eighties is half-remembered pop videos and the deathlessly young heroes and heroines of teen films. Pop cultural fluff that is meaningful, because invoking them now, as adults, is a sharp reminder from a more innocent time that we should ALWAYS be having more fun than we are right now.

Think of how the sublime “Amarillion” sounds, EXACTLY like how it would feel to skate along the ice to an Aha soundtrack. Suddenly everything is graceful, sleek and fast, and you’re Morton Harkett. On ice.

An Aha-quoting love song, the titular “Amarillion” is the avatar name of a Second Life character, pursued by Fredrik from the safety of his college dorm. Throughout Red, Eighties and modern-day references are intertwined and mangled. “You can point at the early Eighties and say ‘personal computers!’, ‘information society!’, ‘cultural relativism!’” Fredrik says. “What I wanted to do with the whole album was to say this day and age is just as interesting as the early Eighties.”

And a big part of what makes this day and age interesting to Datarock is our love-hate relationship with technology and communication. Red’s centrepiece, “The Pretender.” is a clarion call pop song that sounds like marching band music made to mobilise the entire Internet. “I am The Pretender!” Fredrik announces, “In love with my avatar!”, before reeling off a list of the multiple duplicitous identities available to him online – North Korean? South American? Presbyterian? He is a believer, praying for a better world. Real sweet and tender. He’s what you’re looking for.

“We are not political,” Datarock state on their own MySpace blog, “we are more like cultural researchers, with a shared fascination for events and phenomena that have changed popular culture and music.”

Of course, the futuristic, anachronistic Red isn’t just a socio-political tract about the fluid nature of identity in the Internet age. It’s also a eulogy for nostalgia – an abstract notion in an era of instant data retrieval – and the party album of 2009.

It ends with the world turning to pixels, Datarock zooming off in a flying DeLorean to a better age, a past that never really existed except in their heads. The world ends with you, cheering and dancing like you can dance through time.






























































































"We just want to make people do the dirty! The dirty dancing!"



BUY DATAROCK´S DEBUT ALBUM AT iTUNES:



- AUSTRALIA



- CANADA



- FRANCE




- GERMANY




- NORWAY




- UNITED KINGDOM



- USA











BUY EXCLUSIVE DATAROCK STUFF AT www.houseoftelle.com











Datarock is teaming up with The Sims On Stage™ to give their fans the chance to win cool Datarock memorabilia! Create a movie mashup using any of the three Datarock songs as the audio soundtrack for a chance to win a Datarock hoodie, t-shirt or a signed album! It’s easy and tons of fun! Visit The Sims On Stage™ to enter the contest today! Hurry, the contest ends March 3!
To enter,click here.


Many moons ago, atop one of seven mountains surrounding a picturesque Norwegian countryside, two scruffy-faced individuals-Fredrik Saroea and the man known simply as Ket-Ill-made a pact to alter the face of contemporary music as we know it by single-handedly transforming themselves into what they called the peak of pop evolution.



A big undertaking, but somebody had to do it.



Already home to indie-pop luminaries like the Kings of Convenience, Röyksopp, Annie, Ralph Myerz, and Even Johansen of Magnet, Bergen's southwest coast would be a fertile proving ground for their exploits, but far be it from Fredrik and Ket-Ill to sit back and let the buzz come to them.* DIY punk rockers by nature, but heavily influenced by the distinctive style and stage presence of groups like Talking Heads and Devo, the boys decided to ditch the thrash guitars in favor of the simple yet versatile Casio MT-64 keyboard and a Roland Groovebox. Toss in matching red track suits, a penchant for Transformers and John Hughes flicks, and two pairs of vintage Porsche wraparound sunglasses and you've got a little something called DATAROCK.



“In Norwegian, you would call a computer a 'data machine,'” Saroea explains. “So in the beginning, Datarock was making fun of all the rock people that thought electronic music was simply computer-generated music. But in English, 'data' means information, which is even more appropriate because Datarock is essentially the product of 30 years of the information society. But for some reason, we're constantly going back to the years between 1977 and 1982.”



In December of 2000, Fredrik and Ket-Ill made their debut performance at Annie's monthly club night, “Pop Till You Drop,” setting off a high-energy disco inferno fuelled by sparse electro-rock rhythms and infectious pop guitar hooks. Their low-fi live shows soon became the stuff of legend, attracting guest performers from all corners of the Bergen scene, from Amulet drummer Jonas Thire and avant-jazz saxophonist Kjetil Møster to members of Purified in Blood and Norwegian Black Metal band Enslaved. Sophisticated multimedia shows soon followed, along with regular accompaniment by a traditional men's choir.** Then there was the gig with a modern theatre group that performed aerobics on stage. Not to be confused with the show that featured a full high school marching band. That one was different.



After releasing a split 10-inch on local label Tellé Records, Fredrik and Ket-Ill decided it was time to up the ante. In 2002, the pair recorded a handful of new songs, burned them onto 400 hand-painted, three-inch CD's, and distributed them through ten different countries. In 2003, they found themselves playing the main stage at Barcelona's Sónar Festival.



With the release of the “Computer Camp Love” EP later that year, Fredrick and Ket-Ill finally hit their stride. A stomping call-and-response, the track pays homage to Revenge of the Nerds, Grease's famous “Summer Nights,” and the archetypal Commodore 64, all in the span of 180 seconds.*** It's this hyper jubilant, rapid fire reminiscing of 80's entertainment culture that would come to define Datarock's sound and vision.



“Someone once said that Datarock is taking the piss at everyone,” says Saroea, whose videos are equally in tune with the band's retro aesthetic. “But I don't think he meant it as negative. I think Datarock is having fun with a lot of different concepts of humankind.”†



In a brilliant show of foresight-and possibly a bit of obsessive compulsivity-Fredrik and Ket-Ill did what any young aspiring professionals would do upon recognizing the rapid growth of their empire-they formed a label on which to release their material. This label, in yet another display of innovation, was dubbed Young Aspiring Professionals. Datarock has since played over 300 shows in 16 different countries, including 15,000+ at the Good Vibrations Festival in Sydney and 10,000+ screaming maniacs at the Meredith Music Festival near Melbourne.



Their first full-length CD, Datarock Datarock (Nettwerk Music Group; June 12, 2007), takes the feel-good vibe of “Computer Camp Love,” turns it up to 11, and blasts a power chord of throwback nostalgia that'll knock you straight out of your Reebok Pumps. Love letters to Laurie Anderson (“Laurie”) and references to Close Encounters of the Third Kind (“Princess”) are just the tip of the iceberg. The album's infectious first single, “Fa Fa Fa,” pairs up dance-rock drums with funk-strummed guitars and a chorus that'll have you jonesing for the nearest copy of Talking Heads' 77. “Ugly Primadonna,” meanwhile, is pure four/four Groovebox robotics and space age Casiotone melodies.†† On “I Will Always Remember You” (featuring Annie), Fredrik does his best Wayne Newton, verbally undressing you with his velvety pipes over a bed of freeze-dried strings before formally “sexing you down” on “Sex Me Up.” But more so than any other track on the album, the opening “Bulldozer” perhaps best encapsulates the band's true modus operandi. Whereas Kraftwerk glorified the Trans-Europe Express and the Tour de France, Datarock prefer to sing the praises of a more proletarian method of transportation: the BMX. Which, according to the Fredrik and Ket-Ill, “is better than sex.”



By the time you read this, Datarock will have put the finishing touches on their newest song; a little ditty entitled “Molly.††† Which begs the question: Can one become the peak of pop evolution by cleverly and respectfully mining the vaults of our most beloved generation? If you happen to be two scruffy-faced, young aspiring professionals from the seaside town of Bergen, then the answer is yes.












"Doubting Datarock is the future of indie dance? You're taking the piss, right?"

-James Jam, new bands editor, NME



"...the urge to cheer them from the sideline remains strong."


-Sharon O'connel, Uncut



"Datarock may be treading the disco-ball lined path already well worn by Devo, but damned if they don't drop a couple of catchy fucking tunes in the process"

-Music Week



"Finally, a band to fall madly in love with"

-The Fly Magazine



"There's never a bottom line with bands like this, but the bottom line with Datarock is the songs shoot for instant pleasure and accidentally end up being much more than that. (7.8)"

-Nick Sylvester, Pitchfork



"Note to all festival booking agents and...sod it...all other booking agents for that matter - stick

Datarock to a stage and just send us a cheque for telling you to do so"


-Caz McBain, Loud & Quiet



"It makes for quite a party"

-John Robinson, Q Magazine



"Norwegian duo Fredrik Saroea and Ketil Mosnes are lively digital dance-rock bunnies who know how to have fun without becoming a laughing stock."

-Daily Mirror (UK)



"Their record kills me like all good 'playing with genre stereotypes' records do--funny but not Weird Al about it, whimsical but not trivial, all the result of band leaders Fredrik having killer vox and Ketil laying down unquestionably funky low-end."

-The Village Voice



"I suppose it only makes sense that all the coolest electro-pop has been coming from our Nordic neighbours in Scandinavia."

-Montreal Mirror




FOR MORE INFO PLEASE GO TO OUR HOMEPAGE www.datarock.no









成員:

Fredrik Saroea: vocals, guitars, drums, percussion, keyboards.
Ket-ill: bass, background vocals, programming, keyboards

Join Datarock's Mailing List for All the Latest News!

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藝人主頁:

www.datarock.no

禮物

嗚。。我沒有禮物.
你可以做第一個送禮物給我的人!
現在就送禮物給我吧!

資料

基本
個人
  • 個人簡介:It starts with pink and green lazers criss-crossing the sky, billowing clouds of dry ice, and a spotlight picking out two hooded, beshaded figures. Above the EnormoStadium stage, a house-sized Commodore 64 scrolls out the words: “Dearly beloved, we are gathered here today, to give you DATAROCK.”

    “‘The Blog’ is a nice opening,” Fredrik Saroea, frontman of Norwegian dance-rockers Datarock is telling me. “Because it’s almost apocalyptic, there’s something grandiose about the sound.”

    Amidst a sensory overload of canned applause, nattering samples from nu-media godheads Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee, and floating on elegiac Sign O’ The Times-synths, Datarock announce their arrival in the Information Age in spine-tingling, anthemic form.

    “We know this blog is long-awaited!” Fredrik bellows at a virtual stadium of cheering Datarock fans, “Just couldn’t be done on C64s!” It’s an attempt by technology-fetishists Datarock to romanticise the early utopian promise of the Internet, before it became something that people just took for granted and got annoyed by. It’s total retrofuturism. It is the opening statement of a time-travelling album that ramraids the years 1975 through 1985 with the power of modern studio technology.

    Datarock Datarock, the party album of 2005 and Datarock’s debut, mixed relentless punk-funk with warped Happy Mondays humour. Red has lost none of Fredrik and musical partner Ketil Mosnes’ aptitude for so-classic-you-must-have-heard-it-before hooks, but this follow-up is an altogether more concept-driven beast.

    Take “Give It Up.” The lead single was actually an idea for a music video before it became a song, paraphrasing “Beat It,” “Bad,” the 1961 film West Side Story and the 1996 film of Romeo & Juliet.

    “You have a dance battle,” explains Fredrik, “where a Datarock gang meets the bad guys, and we have a dance off, and then everybody becomes the Datarock gang. And I’m like Mercutio, trying to tell Romeo to shape up, snap out of it, give it up.”

    “Thing is, just singing a song about dancing… it’s too simple. Everyone’s gonna dance anyway. So it’s nice to do something insane in the lyrics, like paraphrasing, you know, Romeo & Juliet!”

    As an album, Red is a thoroughly unashamed LOVELETTER to the influences that made Datarock what they are today. DEVO, Yellow Magic Orchestra, Haruki Murakami, Don Delilo’s White Noise, Scott Walker and the works of John Hughes and Peter Greenaway are all referenced, but “True Stories” is the most explicit: a song made out of nothing but songtitles. Talking Heads’ songtitles.

    It works as a tribute precisely because it plays the kind of mindgames with authorship that classic Talking Heads – who once wrote a song based on an NME review describing what Joy Division sound like; a band they’d never heard – pioneered back in the day, and not just because it sounds like Talking Heads. If anything, Datarock’s music seems to be informed less by the way Talking Heads sound, as much as the way David Byrne dances.

    And then there’s “Molly,” a love song to Molly Ringwald. If you haven’t got it yet, a theme is emerging. “Molly Ringwald is still out there somewhere,” laughs Fredrik. “We need to find her. She was the It Girl for a very special period of time in my heart!”

    All people of our generation know of the Eighties is half-remembered pop videos and the deathlessly young heroes and heroines of teen films. Pop cultural fluff that is meaningful, because invoking them now, as adults, is a sharp reminder from a more innocent time that we should ALWAYS be having more fun than we are right now.

    Think of how the sublime “Amarillion” sounds, EXACTLY like how it would feel to skate along the ice to an Aha soundtrack. Suddenly everything is graceful, sleek and fast, and you’re Morton Harkett. On ice.

    An Aha-quoting love song, the titular “Amarillion” is the avatar name of a Second Life character, pursued by Fredrik from the safety of his college dorm. Throughout Red, Eighties and modern-day references are intertwined and mangled. “You can point at the early Eighties and say ‘personal computers!’, ‘information society!’, ‘cultural relativism!’” Fredrik says. “What I wanted to do with the whole album was to say this day and age is just as interesting as the early Eighties.”

    And a big part of what makes this day and age interesting to Datarock is our love-hate relationship with technology and communication. Red’s centrepiece, “The Pretender.” is a clarion call pop song that sounds like marching band music made to mobilise the entire Internet. “I am The Pretender!” Fredrik announces, “In love with my avatar!”, before reeling off a list of the multiple duplicitous identities available to him online – North Korean? South American? Presbyterian? He is a believer, praying for a better world. Real sweet and tender. He’s what you’re looking for.

    “We are not political,” Datarock state on their own MySpace blog, “we are more like cultural researchers, with a shared fascination for events and phenomena that have changed popular culture and music.”

    Of course, the futuristic, anachronistic Red isn’t just a socio-political tract about the fluid nature of identity in the Internet age. It’s also a eulogy for nostalgia – an abstract notion in an era of instant data retrieval – and the party album of 2009.

    It ends with the world turning to pixels, Datarock zooming off in a flying DeLorean to a better age, a past that never really existed except in their heads. The world ends with you, cheering and dancing like you can dance through time.






























































































    "We just want to make people do the dirty! The dirty dancing!"



    BUY DATAROCK´S DEBUT ALBUM AT iTUNES:



    - AUSTRALIA



    - CANADA



    - FRANCE




    - GERMANY




    - NORWAY




    - UNITED KINGDOM



    - USA











    BUY EXCLUSIVE DATAROCK STUFF AT www.houseoftelle.com











    Datarock is teaming up with The Sims On Stage™ to give their fans the chance to win cool Datarock memorabilia! Create a movie mashup using any of the three Datarock songs as the audio soundtrack for a chance to win a Datarock hoodie, t-shirt or a signed album! It’s easy and tons of fun! Visit The Sims On Stage™ to enter the contest today! Hurry, the contest ends March 3!
    To enter,click here.


    Many moons ago, atop one of seven mountains surrounding a picturesque Norwegian countryside, two scruffy-faced individuals-Fredrik Saroea and the man known simply as Ket-Ill-made a pact to alter the face of contemporary music as we know it by single-handedly transforming themselves into what they called the peak of pop evolution.



    A big undertaking, but somebody had to do it.



    Already home to indie-pop luminaries like the Kings of Convenience, Röyksopp, Annie, Ralph Myerz, and Even Johansen of Magnet, Bergen's southwest coast would be a fertile proving ground for their exploits, but far be it from Fredrik and Ket-Ill to sit back and let the buzz come to them.* DIY punk rockers by nature, but heavily influenced by the distinctive style and stage presence of groups like Talking Heads and Devo, the boys decided to ditch the thrash guitars in favor of the simple yet versatile Casio MT-64 keyboard and a Roland Groovebox. Toss in matching red track suits, a penchant for Transformers and John Hughes flicks, and two pairs of vintage Porsche wraparound sunglasses and you've got a little something called DATAROCK.



    “In Norwegian, you would call a computer a 'data machine,'” Saroea explains. “So in the beginning, Datarock was making fun of all the rock people that thought electronic music was simply computer-generated music. But in English, 'data' means information, which is even more appropriate because Datarock is essentially the product of 30 years of the information society. But for some reason, we're constantly going back to the years between 1977 and 1982.”



    In December of 2000, Fredrik and Ket-Ill made their debut performance at Annie's monthly club night, “Pop Till You Drop,” setting off a high-energy disco inferno fuelled by sparse electro-rock rhythms and infectious pop guitar hooks. Their low-fi live shows soon became the stuff of legend, attracting guest performers from all corners of the Bergen scene, from Amulet drummer Jonas Thire and avant-jazz saxophonist Kjetil Møster to members of Purified in Blood and Norwegian Black Metal band Enslaved. Sophisticated multimedia shows soon followed, along with regular accompaniment by a traditional men's choir.** Then there was the gig with a modern theatre group that performed aerobics on stage. Not to be confused with the show that featured a full high school marching band. That one was different.



    After releasing a split 10-inch on local label Tellé Records, Fredrik and Ket-Ill decided it was time to up the ante. In 2002, the pair recorded a handful of new songs, burned them onto 400 hand-painted, three-inch CD's, and distributed them through ten different countries. In 2003, they found themselves playing the main stage at Barcelona's Sónar Festival.



    With the release of the “Computer Camp Love” EP later that year, Fredrick and Ket-Ill finally hit their stride. A stomping call-and-response, the track pays homage to Revenge of the Nerds, Grease's famous “Summer Nights,” and the archetypal Commodore 64, all in the span of 180 seconds.*** It's this hyper jubilant, rapid fire reminiscing of 80's entertainment culture that would come to define Datarock's sound and vision.



    “Someone once said that Datarock is taking the piss at everyone,” says Saroea, whose videos are equally in tune with the band's retro aesthetic. “But I don't think he meant it as negative. I think Datarock is having fun with a lot of different concepts of humankind.”†



    In a brilliant show of foresight-and possibly a bit of obsessive compulsivity-Fredrik and Ket-Ill did what any young aspiring professionals would do upon recognizing the rapid growth of their empire-they formed a label on which to release their material. This label, in yet another display of innovation, was dubbed Young Aspiring Professionals. Datarock has since played over 300 shows in 16 different countries, including 15,000+ at the Good Vibrations Festival in Sydney and 10,000+ screaming maniacs at the Meredith Music Festival near Melbourne.



    Their first full-length CD, Datarock Datarock (Nettwerk Music Group; June 12, 2007), takes the feel-good vibe of “Computer Camp Love,” turns it up to 11, and blasts a power chord of throwback nostalgia that'll knock you straight out of your Reebok Pumps. Love letters to Laurie Anderson (“Laurie”) and references to Close Encounters of the Third Kind (“Princess”) are just the tip of the iceberg. The album's infectious first single, “Fa Fa Fa,” pairs up dance-rock drums with funk-strummed guitars and a chorus that'll have you jonesing for the nearest copy of Talking Heads' 77. “Ugly Primadonna,” meanwhile, is pure four/four Groovebox robotics and space age Casiotone melodies.†† On “I Will Always Remember You” (featuring Annie), Fredrik does his best Wayne Newton, verbally undressing you with his velvety pipes over a bed of freeze-dried strings before formally “sexing you down” on “Sex Me Up.” But more so than any other track on the album, the opening “Bulldozer” perhaps best encapsulates the band's true modus operandi. Whereas Kraftwerk glorified the Trans-Europe Express and the Tour de France, Datarock prefer to sing the praises of a more proletarian method of transportation: the BMX. Which, according to the Fredrik and Ket-Ill, “is better than sex.”



    By the time you read this, Datarock will have put the finishing touches on their newest song; a little ditty entitled “Molly.††† Which begs the question: Can one become the peak of pop evolution by cleverly and respectfully mining the vaults of our most beloved generation? If you happen to be two scruffy-faced, young aspiring professionals from the seaside town of Bergen, then the answer is yes.












    "Doubting Datarock is the future of indie dance? You're taking the piss, right?"

    -James Jam, new bands editor, NME



    "...the urge to cheer them from the sideline remains strong."


    -Sharon O'connel, Uncut



    "Datarock may be treading the disco-ball lined path already well worn by Devo, but damned if they don't drop a couple of catchy fucking tunes in the process"

    -Music Week



    "Finally, a band to fall madly in love with"

    -The Fly Magazine



    "There's never a bottom line with bands like this, but the bottom line with Datarock is the songs shoot for instant pleasure and accidentally end up being much more than that. (7.8)"

    -Nick Sylvester, Pitchfork



    "Note to all festival booking agents and...sod it...all other booking agents for that matter - stick

    Datarock to a stage and just send us a cheque for telling you to do so"


    -Caz McBain, Loud & Quiet



    "It makes for quite a party"

    -John Robinson, Q Magazine



    "Norwegian duo Fredrik Saroea and Ketil Mosnes are lively digital dance-rock bunnies who know how to have fun without becoming a laughing stock."

    -Daily Mirror (UK)



    "Their record kills me like all good 'playing with genre stereotypes' records do--funny but not Weird Al about it, whimsical but not trivial, all the result of band leaders Fredrik having killer vox and Ketil laying down unquestionably funky low-end."

    -The Village Voice



    "I suppose it only makes sense that all the coolest electro-pop has been coming from our Nordic neighbours in Scandinavia."

    -Montreal Mirror




    FOR MORE INFO PLEASE GO TO OUR HOMEPAGE www.datarock.no









網誌

2008年5月15日 上午6點41分30秒D A T A R O C K


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2009年10月27日 22:3HI

gra7000
miss 23, 塞內加爾
My name is Miracle, Dear i get interested of your profile at (Zorpia.com)write me at my private email here(miracleand2000 @ yahoo.com)i have something important i will like to share with you to seek for help from you with all trust, also for you to know me well and i will send you my pictures directly to you there.

2009年9月9日 17:55hi guys

baaaa2
teresa 45, 安大略, 加拿大
cool keep rocking

2009年8月31日 5:26have a beautiful day , friend

tianyabingxue
Alice已驗証的會員 24, 成都, 四川, 中國
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Datarock's new, self-titled album is now available at:

Itunes

Amazon

Emusic