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・ Jean-Paul Racine
・ Jean-Paul Randriamanana
・ Jean-Paul Rappeneau
・ Jean-Paul Ribreau
・ Jean-Paul Riopelle
・ Jean-Paul Rodrigue
・ Jean-Paul Rostagni
・ Jean-Paul Roussillon
・ Jean-Paul Rouve
・ Jean-Paul Roux
・ Jean-Paul Roy
・ Jean-Paul Rössinger
・ Jean-Paul Salomé
・ Jean-Paul Samputu
・ Jean-Paul Sartre
Jean-Paul Sartre Experience
・ Jean-Paul Sartre Experience EP
・ Jean-Paul Savignac
・ Jean-Paul Savoie
・ Jean-Paul Schroeder
・ Jean-Paul Sevilla
・ Jean-Paul St. Laurent
・ Jean-Paul Troadec
・ Jean-Paul Turcaud
・ Jean-Paul Van Belle
・ Jean-Paul van Gastel
・ Jean-Paul van Poppel
・ Jean-Paul Vesco
・ Jean-Paul Viguier
・ Jean-Paul Villain


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Jean-Paul Sartre Experience : ウィキペディア英語版
Jean-Paul Sartre Experience

The Jean-Paul Sartre Experience, later renamed JPS Experience after a lawsuit by the estate of Jean-Paul Sartre, were an indie rock band on New Zealand's Flying Nun Records.
==History==
The band was formed in 1984 by Dave Yetton (vocals, bass guitar), Gary Sullivan (drums), and Dave Mulcahy (guitar).〔Strong, Martin C. (2003) ''The Great Indie Discography'', Canongate, ISBN 1-84195-335-0, p. 382〕 They were later joined by a second guitarist, Jim Laing.〔
Their first crudely recorded demo tape was supplied to campus radio stations around the country in a can. It contained early versions of songs like "Einstein" and "Crap Rap" that would appear on subsequent releases. In 1986 they were asked to record a track for the "Weird Culture, Weird Custom" compilation produced by the student radio network. Their track was "Let That Good Thing Grow" - re-released on their first album. They were subsequently signed by Flying Nun, who issued their eponymous début EP in January 1987, and début album ''Love Songs'' the same year, described by Allmusic as "an exceptional - if short - affair".〔〔Jansen, Skip "(''Love Songs'' Review )", Allmusic, retrieved 2010-10-09〕 After two further albums for the label, they added keyboard player Russell Baillie and abbreviated their name to the JPS experience after being threatened with legal action by Sartre's estate.〔 After three EPs, Baillie departed in 1993, and the band released their fourth album, ''Bleeding Star'', which took a noisier approach than their earlier recordings, drawing comparisons with Pixies and My Bloody Valentine.〔Jansen, Skip "(''Bleeding Star'' Review )", Allmusic, retrieved 2010-10-09〕 Mulcahy had left during the album's recording, forming Monster and later Superette and Eskimo, who released one album before shortening their name to Kimo. He was replaced by Matt Heine, formerly of Solid Gold Hell.〔 The band continued until their split in 1994.〔
After the demise of JPS Experience, David Yetton recorded two albums with The Stereo Bus and one solo album, as well as playing with The Mutton Birds.〔 James Lang released one solo album and Gary Sullivan performed on the first Stereo Bus album and on early Dimmer releases. Sullivan joined Solid Gold Hell.〔

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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