Night club escape trujillo: Best Night Escape Room At Trujillo Near Me

Best Night Escape Room At Trujillo Near Me

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5

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Address: Av. Mansiche 199, Huanchaco 13011, Peru

Guy: Bar



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Address: Pedro Murillo S/N, La Esperanza 13012, Peru

Schedule: Closed ⋅ Opens 9AM

Guy: Tourist attraction



Near Huaca “El Dragon”, Complejo Arqueológico Chan-Chan:

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4. 9

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Address: Valle de Moche, Moche, Peru

Schedule: Closed ⋅ Opens 9AM

Telephone: +51 44 221269

Guy: Tourist attraction


Web page: http://www.huacasdemoche.pe/


Near La Huaca del Sol:

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Address: VWVG+Q5C, Huanchaco, Peru

Schedule: Closed ⋅ Opens 10AM

Guy: Tourist attraction


Web page: http://www. chanchan.gob.pe/


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4.7

2017 reviews

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Address: Carr. campiña de moche, Moche 13600, Peru

Schedule: Closed ⋅ Opens 9AM

Guy: Tourist attraction


Web page: http://www.huacasdemoche.pe/


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4. 1

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Address: Jirón Bolivar 957, Trujillo 13001, Peru

Telephone: +51 44 222090

Guy: Hotel



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4.6

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Address: Carretera Campiña de Moche Km.5 s/n, Trujillo, Moche 13601, Peru

Telephone: +51 947 736 177

Guy: Hotel



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4. 7

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Address: Esquina de, Carr. Industrial, Trujillo 13100, Peru

Schedule: Closed ⋅ Opens 2PM Mon

Telephone: +51 949 650 496

Guy: Italian restaurant


Web page: http://www.la-toscana-trattoria.com/


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Trujillo: intervienen a 40 personas en night club en pleno toque de queda | Sociedad

Sociedad

Policía ingresó a local Scapes Club y halló a 23 mujeres y 17 hombres que no respetaban las normas de bioseguridad.

Policía continúa operativos contra locales que no respetan el toque de queda. Foto: PNP

Durante un operativo, la Policía intervino el jueves 25 de febrero el local nocturno de diversión Scapes Club, ubicado en la cuadra 4 de la avenida Mansiche, en la vía que va al balneario de Huanchaco.

Loa agentes llegaron al local a las 2.00 a. m. y detuvieron a 40 personas que se encontraban en el establecimiento incumpliendo el toque de queda y las medidas de bioseguridad, como el correcto uso de la mascarilla. Según contaron los encargados del operativo, cuando ingresaron los parroquianos mostraron su sorpresa y fastidio, y empezaron a ponerse las mascarillas que tenían en el bolsillo o en las carteras.

En total fueron 23 mujeres y 17 hombres los que fueron a parar a la Comisaría de la jurisdicción, en donde se les verificó su identidad y se les aplicó la multa respectiva.

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How the unrecognized state of Sealand lives — Bird In Flight

The history of Sealand – a tiny unrecognized state on an iron platform in the middle of the North Sea – is full of upheavals, conquests, machinations and unrealized techno-utopias. Ian Urbina of The Atlantic visited his few citizens.

The article is published in abbreviated form. Read the original on The Atlantic.

On Christmas Eve 1966, Paddy Roy Bates, a retired major in the British Army, sailed seven miles off the coast of England in a small outboard boat. The night before, he had sneaked out of the house in the middle of the night: Roy was about to give his wife Joan the perfect gift.

Using an anchor and a rope, he climbed an abandoned anti-aircraft platform in the North Sea and declared it captured. He later named her Sealand and introduced her to Joan.

The gift was, to put it bluntly, not a palace. Built at the beginning of 19In the 40s, as one of the five fortifications that defended the Thames, the abandoned Roughs Tower platform was a wide deck the size of two tennis courts, set on two hollow concrete towers 20 meters above the ocean. But Roy looked at his brutal outpost with such seriousness, as if he were at least Vasco da Gama.

During the war, the Roughs Tower housed a garrison of 100 British sailors and anti-aircraft guns to protect the coast from Nazi bombers. After the victory over Germany, the troops left the platform. Useless, abandoned by everyone, it gradually fell into disrepair – a forgotten monument to British vigilant vigilance. nine0003

The British authorities were not enthusiastic about Bates’ escapade and demanded to get off the platform. But Roy was a man absolutely fearless – and just as stubborn. At 15, he joined the International Brigades to fight in the Spanish Civil War for the Republic. Returning, he enlisted in the British Army and soon became the youngest major in the armed forces. During World War II he served in North Africa, the Middle East and Italy. Once, a grenade exploded right in front of his face, and he was seriously injured. Another time, his fighter plane crashed to the ground, and he himself was taken prisoner by the Greek fascists – but he managed to organize an escape. In general, Roy lived a full life. nine0003

Abandoned by everyone, the platform gradually fell into disrepair – a forgotten monument to British vigilant vigilance.

…First he set up a pirate radio station in Roughs Tower. The BBC, which at the time had a monopoly on the airwaves, played the Beatles, Kinks, Rolling Stones and other popular bands only late at night, much to the dismay of young audiences. In response, adventurers like Roy set up illegal radio stations on ships and ocean platforms where they could play music around the clock outside the UK. Having captured his platform, Roy stocked it with corned beef, flour and whiskey and began to live on it, sometimes not appearing on land for months. nine0003

After Roy gave the Roughs Tower to his wife for her birthday, he and Joan and a group of friends sat at the bar. “Now you have your own island,” he told his wife (as was often the case when it came to Roy, no one could be sure whether he was joking or completely serious). “The only pity is that there are no palm trees, the sun and its own flag,” she replied. “Why not create your own country on the platform?” one of my friends joked. Everyone laughed, but a few weeks later, Roy announced the founding of a new state – Sealand. The smallest maritime power in the world. nine0003

…The incredible story of Sealand is a mockery of international law. The Principality of Sealand (that’s how Roy positioned it) has its own passports, coat of arms and flag – red and black, with a white diagonal stripe in the middle. The official currency is the Sealand dollar (with a portrait of Joan). In recent years, Sealand has developed a Facebook page, a Twitter account, and a YouTube channel.

Six times they tried to capture Sealand by force – and they did not succeed.

Although no country officially recognizes Sealand, its sovereignty is hard to deny. Six times the British government and other interest groups tried to seize the platform by force – and they did not succeed. Each time, the Bates family frightened off the invaders by firing shotguns in their direction, hurling firebombs and knocking their ladders into the sea. Britain until recently controlled a huge “empire on which the sun never sets” – and now it was unable to do anything with an unrecognized micro-country, the size of which hardly exceeds the ballroom of Buckingham Palace. nine0003

It’s all about the principles of sovereignty: a country has the right to enforce its laws only within its borders, and Sealand is outside British territorial waters. In May 1968, Roy’s son, Michael, fired a .22 pistol at workers who were repairing a nearby buoy. Michael insisted that these were just warning shots to remind the workers of Sealand’s territorial sovereignty. No one was hurt, but the consequences for the British legal system – and for the geopolitical status of Sealand – were very serious. nine0003

The British government soon charged Michael with illegal possession and use of weapons. But the court ruled that Michael was outside British territory and therefore could not be tried under British law. After that, Roy boasted that, if desired, he could at least organize a murder on his territory: “I am responsible for the law in Sealand.

In Sealand’s fifty years of existence, no more than half a dozen people have lived here – guests of the Bates family. On top of the platform, instead of helicopters and anti-aircraft guns, there was now a wind generator that provided electricity to the heaters in Sealand’s ten rooms. Every month the boat delivered supplies to the residents of Sealand: tea, whiskey, chocolate, old newspapers. In recent years, the number of citizens permanently residing in Sealand has been reduced to one person – security guard Michael Barrington. nine0003

Sealand was very disturbing to British officials: they were afraid of the emergence of a “new Cuba” right at the doorstep of England.

As absurd as Sealand seemed, the British authorities took it seriously. Newly declassified documents from the late 1960s prove that Sealand was a great concern for British officials: they were afraid of the emergence of a “new Cuba”, this time right on the doorstep of England. Plans were even discussed (but rejected) to bomb the platform. In the decades since Sealand’s founding, it has become a playground for coups, counter-coups, and hostage-taking; a virtual haven for organized crime; the proposed site for a floating casino, a WikiLeaks base, and countless techno-fantasies, none of which, however, has been successfully implemented. Sealand seemed like a kind of libertarian dream that I just had to fall into. nine0003

It took months (and endless phone calls) to convince the Bates family to let me come. In the end, three years later, I did arrive on the platform, accompanied by my son and grandson Roy Bates: 64-year-old Michael and 29-year-old James.

On a cold, windy October morning, just before dawn, they picked me up on their boat in the port city of Harwich. Short and broad-shouldered, with a shaved head and a missing front tooth, Michael looked like a retired hockey player. James, in contrast, was thin and reserved. Where James chose his words carefully, his father preferred to speak sharply: “You can write whatever the hell you want about us! – he said shortly after meeting. “Don’t we care?” But I suspected he didn’t care at all. nine0003

The hour-long journey in a small boat through huge waves was like a rodeo. I was already exhausted when I finally saw the concrete “legs” and a wide platform at the top. As we got closer, it became clear that the principality’s best defense was its height. Nearly invulnerable from below, the platform provided no mooring, pier, or ladder. We left our boat near one of the concrete pillars as a crane appeared from the edge of the platform, six stories above.

Bright-blue-clad security guard Michael Barrington, a grizzled, pot-bellied man in his sixties, lowered a cable with a small wooden seat that looked like a backyard swing. I settled into the seat, and Barrington lifted me up onto the platform (in strong winds, it’s a pleasure). The place looked like a junkyard: rows of plastic boxes, tangled wires, piles of rusty junk, and in the center a wind turbine that looked like it could fall at any moment. When the waves rose, the whole structure groaned like an old suspension bridge. nine0003

The place looked like a dump: rows of plastic boxes, tangled wires, piles of rusty rubbish.

Barrington picked up James and Michael in turn. Finally, he lifted the boat as well and left it hanging in the air. “Precautions,” he explained.

Michael Bates escorted me to the kitchen, which serves as the seat of the government of Sealand. “Let’s go through customs,” he said calmly, studied my passport and stamped it. I looked at the man carefully, trying to figure out if it was okay to laugh. Nothing happened. nine0003

…Going to Sealand, I had no idea what to expect from this trip. But I have read quite a lot about the history of microstates on the high seas. At least since the publication of Jules Verne’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea in 1870, people have dreamed of establishing permanent colonies on the surface of the ocean (or in its depths).

Basically, these projects were inspired by the idea that the government is the enemy of entrepreneurship. The creators of these microstates—in the first decade of the 21st century, they were usually Internet moguls—usually were wealthy people who read Ayn Rand and Thomas Hobbes and believed that technology could solve the problems of mankind if the government did not interfere with them. Conceived as self-sufficient, self-governing maritime communities, these settlements—they call them seasteads—were part libertarian utopia and part millionaire plaything. nine0003

Many have tried and failed. In 1968, Werner Stiefel, a wealthy American libertarian, attempted to establish an Operation Atlantis maritime settlement in international waters off the Bahamas. He bought a large ship and sent it to the proposed place of settlement, but soon the ship sank during a hurricane. In the early 1970s, Michael Oliver, a Las Vegas tycoon who made his fortune selling real estate, sent sand-laden barges from Australia to the shallow reefs near the Tonga Islands in the Pacific Ocean, announcing the creation of the Republic of Minerva. Placing a flag and a few guards there, Oliver proclaimed that his microstate was free from “taxation, welfare, subsidies, or any other form of economic interventionism.” A few months later, the authorities of Tonga sent troops there and dispersed Minerva. nine0003

Some of these projects seemed reasonable in theory, but did not take into account the harsh reality of ocean life. For example, wind, waves and the sun can provide energy in the sea, but creating renewable energy sources that will withstand the weather and be resistant to corrosion is a difficult and expensive business. Establishing uninterrupted communication is also difficult: satellite communications would be prohibitively expensive, as well as laying fiber optic cable. Even getting to the seastead and back is always a risk. The “killer waves” that occur when smaller waves combine sometimes reach a height of 35 meters (which is almost twice as high as Sealand). nine0003

“Killer waves” sometimes reach a height of 35 meters – and this is almost twice as high as Sealand.

Finally, the very functioning of a country – even a microscopic one – is not free. Who will subsidize the basic services usually provided by the very government and the very taxes that libertarians are trying to escape from? To survive and protect yourself from pirates, you need a lot of money.

In 2008, all these visionaries united around the non-profit organization Seasteading Institute. The San Francisco-based organization was founded by Patry Friedman, a Google programmer and grandson of Milton Friedman, a Nobel Prize-winning economist known for his ideas about limiting government influence. Billionaire and co-founder of PayPal Peter Thiel has become the main sponsor of the organization: he has donated more than $1.25 million to the organization and related projects. nine0003

Thiel also wanted to invest in Blueseed, a startup that was designed to solve a problem that plagued many Silicon Valley companies: how to attract engineers and entrepreneurs who didn’t have a US visa or work permit. Blueseed planned to build a floating residence in international waters off the coast of Northern California. But the project did not raise enough money, so it was never implemented.

Self-sustaining maritime communities were part libertarian utopia and part millionaire plaything. nine0003

…More than once it happened that the existence of Sealand was threatened not only by the government, but also by people whom Roy’s family considered friends.

In 1977, Bates was approached by a group of German and Dutch lawyers and diamond dealers who said they wanted to build a casino on the platform. Roy flew to Salzburg, leaving Sealand in the care of Michael, then in his early twenties. In Austria, Roy was warmly welcomed by five businessmen; Negotiations were to take place in a few days. When no one showed up at the meeting, Roy began to suspect something. He began to call the captains of fishing boats near Sealand (there was no telephone or radio communication in the principality at that time). One of them told Roy that he saw a large helicopter land on Sealand. Roy rushed back to England to find out: Sealand had been captured. nine0003

It was like this. Hearing the noise, Michael grabbed a World War II pistol, climbed onto the platform and found a helicopter hovering over his head: he could not land because of the 10-meter mast, installed just in case of such uninvited guests. But soon several men descended from the helicopter to the platform on a rope.

Michael recognized the voice of one of them: it was the same businessman who had previously spoken to his father on the phone. The guests showed Michael the fake telegram and explained that their father had allowed them to come to Sealand as part of the negotiations. Michael did not believe it, but he had no choice, and he led the guests inside. When he turned his back on them to pour the whisky, they slipped out the door and locked him in the room. nine0003

Years later, declassified documents shed light on what happened: the takeover was apparently orchestrated by the German diamond dealer Alexander Gottfried Achenbach, who became close to the Bates family in the early 1970s with the idea of ​​greatly expanding the principality. His plan included building in close proximity to the casino platform, a duty free shop, a bank, a post office, a hotel, a restaurant, and apartments. By 1975, Achenbach was already styled “Foreign Minister” of Sealand and moved to the platform to help write its constitution. He even filed a petition to renounce his German citizenship and demanded to be recognized as a citizen of Sealand (the German authorities rejected his request). nine0003

The capture was organized by Sealand’s “foreign minister”.

Seeking official recognition for Sealand, Achenbach submitted its constitution to 150 countries and the UN for ratification. But foreign leaders were skeptical. The Court of Cologne ruled that the platform is not part of the earth’s surface, that it lacks social life, and that its tiny area cannot be considered a space viable in the long term.

Achenbach’s patience was running out, and he blamed the Bates family for not fulfilling their obligations. He wanted to speed things up. As a result, he hired a helicopter and sent his lawyer and several others to take over the platform. They held Michael hostage for several days, after which they put him on a fishing boat bound for the Netherlands. There he was released. nine0003

Roy was furious. He decided to take back the platform by force. In England, he hired John Crewdson, his friend and part-time helicopter pilot who participated in the filming of the first James Bond films, to deliver an armed detachment to the platform, including Roy himself and Michael. The German guard immediately surrendered.

Roy freed everyone except a man named Pütz, who was accused of treason and held for two months in the Sealand guardhouse. “Putz’s imprisonment is in a sense an act of piracy committed on the high seas, but nevertheless it was committed near British territory and by British citizens,” representatives of the German embassy wrote to the British government, demanding that the problem be solved at least by armed means. The British authorities replied that the territory was outside their jurisdiction, so they could not take any action. nine0003

In the end, the German government sent a diplomat directly to Sealand to negotiate the release of Pütz, which, according to Michael, was in fact a recognition of the sovereignty of the principality. Pütz was released after paying the Bates family a fine of 75,000 Deutschmarks (about $37,500).

This story is even more complicated when you consider that when Roy went to the Netherlands in 1980 to indict a citizen of the country, he was represented by the same Pütz, his former prisoner. This gave many people reason to wonder: was the coup just a multi-step machination, invented by Roy and Puetz, to bring Sealand to the attention of the public and recognize its sovereignty? I asked Michael about it, but he denied everything: the seizure, according to him, was real. I waited for him to explain how Pütz had gone from enemy to friend so quickly. But he didn’t wait. nine0003

Was the coup just a multi-way scam?

Michael thought that the coups in Sealand were over. But in 1997, he received a call from the FBI in connection with the murder of fashion designer Gianni Versace. The designer’s killer, Andrew Cunanan, committed suicide on a houseboat he invaded a few days after the crime. But during the investigation, the owner of the houseboat, Torsten Reynek, showed fake Sealand passports to the authorities. According to unconfirmed information, he also drove around Los Angeles in a Mercedes with Sealand “diplomatic numbers”. nine0003

Michael told the FBI that Sealand only issued 300 “official” passports, and only to verified people. The FBI responded by pointing to a website run by what it said was Sealand’s “government in exile” that sold passports and bragged about the principality’s “diaspora” around the world. Further investigation led to Spain, where it turned out that Achenbach was patiently waiting for the moment for another seizure of power – this time not so straightforward. Michael claimed – unconvincingly, I thought – that he himself knew nothing about the numerous fraudulent schemes in which the passports and regalia of the Principality were actively sold both online and offline. nine0003

However, the most amazing thing was yet to come. Later that year, the Guardia Civil, Spain’s paramilitary police force, arrested nightclub owner Francisco Trujillo for selling diluted gasoline at a Madrid gas station he owned. Trujillo identified himself as Sealand’s “consul” in Spain, produced a diplomatic passport, and demanded immunity. The police then searched three Sealand offices in Madrid and a shop selling the Principality’s license plates. It turned out that Trujillo introduced himself as a Colonel of Sealand and even developed military uniforms for himself and other “officers”. nine0003

The Spanish police also discovered that the “government-in-exile” of Sealand had sold thousands of passports from the Principality bearing the Bates stamp. These passports have popped up all over the world, from Eastern Europe to Africa. Only in Hong Kong, about 4 thousand were sold – on the eve of the return of Hong Kong to China in 1997, many of its residents tried to obtain foreign passports. Sealand passport holders included Moroccan hashish smugglers and Russian arms dealers. Some of them were involved in multi-million dollar arms deals; the deals were negotiated by the Sealand Trade Development Authority Limited, which was recently shown to be linked to a massive global network of money laundering and other crimes. nine0003

Here the story goes to the point of complete absurdity: it turns out that the government of Sealand, already rather illusory, had even more illusory fake doubles.

…I asked Michael for a tour. We left the kitchen and descended a steep spiral staircase. Each of the two “legs” of the platform is a concrete tower with round rooms inside – cold, damp, smelling of mold. The diameter of each room is 7 meters. Most floors are below the waterline. Some rooms are lit by a single bulb and look like bunkers. nine0003

The north tower houses guest rooms, a guardhouse and a conference room; this is where Barrington lives. On the way to the south tower, Michael tells me about Sealand’s most recent (and perhaps most audacious) project: to set up a server farm here, where confidential information would be stored outside the reach of governments. Founded in 2000, a company called HavenCo hosted gambling, Ponzi schemes, pornography, and anonymous bank accounts. True, it turned down clients associated with spam, child pornography and cyber sabotage. “We have limits too,” Michael explained (I didn’t elaborate on why pyramid schemes were allowed, since spam wasn’t). Michael added that in 2010 he turned down WikiLeaks when they asked him for a Sealand passport and asylum for Julian Assange. nine0003

The idea of ​​moving servers to the open sea is not new. Fiction writers have dreamed of “safe havens” for information for years. There have been attempts to turn these dreams into reality: for example, Google has been working since 2008 to create data centers on the high seas that would use sea water to cool servers.

HavenCo was the brainchild of two entrepreneurs, Sean Hastings and Ryan Lackey, who had big plans. The servers were supposed to be protected from intruders by at least four armed guards. The rooms where the servers are located were supposed to be filled with pure nitrogen, so it would be impossible to go there without scuba gear. An elite team of programmers and online security specialists had to protect the project from hacker attacks. The data was planned to be stored in encrypted form – so that even HavenCo employees would not know what their customers are doing. nine0003

Most of the plans failed. “It was a disaster,” Michael says, stopping in the room where the HavenCo servers once were. It became almost impossible to cool server rooms; there was a constant shortage of fuel for generators; one of the partner companies went bankrupt; satellite communication had a tiny bandwidth; the nitrogen idea turned out to be a marketing gimmick and was never put into practice. Cyber ​​attacks could not be repelled for several days in a row. HavenCo attracted about a dozen clients (mostly online gambling), but they quickly became frustrated and found better partners. By 2003, one of the founders, Lackey, left the project, and a few years later, HavenCo ceased to exist. nine0003

The secret of Sealand’s vitality lies in its relatively modest claims.

Nevertheless, Michael does not hide his pride in Sealand. Taking advantage of a hole in international law, Sealand has been around for decades, while other attempts at seasteading fell apart at the planning stage. The audacity of the members of the Bates family, of course, cannot be denied, but the secret of Sealand’s vitality lies in relatively modest claims. They had no territorial ambitions; they did not try to create a great caliphate. In the eyes of its powerful neighbors, Sealand was just a rusty kingdom, easier to ignore than to destroy. nine0003

The Bates are virtuoso mythologists, and for years they created and maintained such a myth about Sealand that was beneficial to them. In fact, Sealand was not a libertarian utopia, but, as one observer put it, “a cross between a family business and a puppet show.” By the way, Sealand is funded mainly by an online “shopping mall” run by the Bates family. Goods in it are sold not in Sealand dollars, but in British pounds sterling. Mugs – £9.99 each, titles of nobility – from £29.99 and above.

When it was time to return to the shore, the crane lowered me back into the boat. I looked up and waved goodbye to Barrington. He stood at the top like a lonely Sancho Panza. The wind was raging all around as Michael and James started the engine and turned the boat towards the shore. Sealand moved slowly away as father and son returned to land, to their warm homes in Essex, where they proudly ruled their principality from a safe distance.


Collages used photos from Depositphotos, Richard Lazenby, Ryan Lackey / Fickr

NIGHT SNIPERS – Army 2009 (2009) CD+DVD

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18 September 2009 @ 23:40

NIGHT SNIPERS – “Army 2009” (2009) CD+DVD

For two years the group “Night Snipers” did not release studio albums, and now, finally, on a magical day 09. 09.09. saw the light of day gift, in all directions conceptual edition called “Army2009”. The design (including the cover and booklet) is sustained, let’s not be afraid of such a comparison, in the spirit of the Pre-Raphaelites, while the outer frame is deliberately grunge. This deluxe edition includes an album (14 tracks) and a DVD supplement. The release was also released in the traditional form and, for the first time, in the form of original USB flash drives made in the form of army dog ​​tags.

…Hand grenades flying over your head,
Missiles flying over your head. nine0165 If you want to survive get out of bed –
You’re in the army now,
Oh, oh, you’re in the army now…

1. Peter Nicotine
2. Escape
3. South Pole
4. Fly My Soul
5. Grapes
6. Army
7. Catholic Priest
8. Ooh
9. Sadness
10. Fly
11. Beautiful Days
12. Kafka
900 Knives (original performance)
14. Beautiful days (feat. Mikhail Kozyrev)

+ DVD supplement

Release company: Mystery Records
Total playing time: 71.02. stands apart from the rest, produced earlier. There are not so many potential radio hits that everyone has gotten used to, referring to the songwriting of Diana Arbenina. At “Army2009” everything is grown-up and everything is too serious. At the same time, for the most part, it is heavy and elusive. There is a game of associations – quite in the spirit of the current modernity and the general genre crisis. Diana Sergeevna, it seems, finally took a course towards an existential-confessional style of communication with her listener, introducing some imbalance into the harmonious combination of form and content. In the lyrics, there are much more semitones and ciphers, in music – symphony and grunge. Sex here – loudly, you will not pass by. The album is not given to the hands from the first time, the overall picture does not emerge – too much is mixed here. The atmosphere of the disc is viscous and metaphysical, behind every corner is hidden not Dante, but Verlaine or Kafka. I will note the participation in the recording of the violin quartet and especially highlight such songs as: “Peter Nicotine”, “South Pole”, “Fly My Soul”, “Catholic Priest”, “Oooh”, “Beautiful Days” and “Fly” . As for “Fly”, one of the brightest things on the album, there is a frank reference to the work of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, there are many other, not always obvious allusions on the album, anyone can turn the disc on “Play” and engage in hunting them down.

Pretty mature and smart work, but somehow too busy. Poetry, of very high quality, is extremely plentiful, and music, especially original, alas, is not enough. Arrangements – it is well audible – are deliberately complicated: however, the owner is a gentleman. At some point in the audition, it became interesting who, from the point of view of the releasing company, is the potential listener of this album, the patron of which was Alla Pugacheva? It is a pity that when listening, unlike the previous “sniper” albums, the proper response is not born.

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