User:Oztismneg/sandbox
Georg C. F. Greve | |
---|---|
Born | Helgoland, Germany | 10 March 1973
Nationality | Germany |
Alma mater | University of Hamburg |
Occupation(s) | Co-Founder and President at Vereign, Founding President (until 2009) and Director at FSFE |
Georg C. F. Greve (born 10 March 1973 in Helgoland, Germany) is a Software Developer, Physicist, Author and currently Co-Founder and President at Vereign.[1] He has been working on technology politics since 2001 when he founded the Free Software Foundation Europe.[2]
Greve has been working full-time as president for FSFE since early 2001. In June 2009 he handed over the presidency of the FSFE to Karsten Gerloff.[3] His responsibilities for FSFE included coordination of the General Assembly, supporting local representatives in their work, working on political and legal issues as well as projects and giving speeches or informing journalists to spread knowledge about free software.[4]
In addition, Greve also worked as a consultant, representing Google in the OOXML standardisation process at ISO and as a project reviewer for the European Commission.[5]
In 2010 Greve was awarded the Cross of Merit on ribbon of the Federal Republic of Germany (Verdienstkreuz am Bande).[6][3]
Career
[edit]Greve has a degree of Physics in biophysics, with physical oceanography and astronomy as minor fields of study from the computer science department of the University of Hamburg. His interdisciplinary diploma thesis was written in the field of nanotechnology on scanning probe microscopy. Greve's first software development was when he was 12 years old. His first publication of a program was in a professional journal in 1992. He partly financed his studies when he managed the software development to evaluate SQUID-sensor data in the bio-magnetometric laboratory at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf in Hamburg, Germany.[3]
In 1993 he became interested in free software, the GNU Project and Linux.[7] In 1998, he was the European speaker for the GNU Project and began writing the "Brave GNU World",[8] a monthly column on free computer software featuring interesting GNU projects each month. It was published on the Internet in as many as ten languages, and in international printed magazines including the German Linux-Magazin.[9] The name Brave GNU World is a reference to Aldous Huxley's novel Brave New World.[10]
In early 2001, he initiated the Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE or FSF Europe), the first Free Software Foundation outside the United States of America and, as of 2007[update], the only transnational Free Software Foundation. Greve was invited as an expert to the “Commission on Intellectual Property Rights” of the UK government, and represented the coordination circle of German Civil Society during the first phase of the United Nations (UN) World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) as part of the German governmental delegation.[11] He has also networked with the Civil Society working groups on European level as well as for the thematic working group on patents, copyrights, trademarks (PCT) and free software.[12]
Between 2010 and 2017 he served as CEO as well as president and later member of the board for Kolab Systems AG in Küsnacht, Switzerland, the developers behind the Kolab server.[13][14]
Co-Founder and President at Vereign
[edit]In late 2017 Greve co-founded Vereign with Claus H. Bressmer, Dr. Felix Greve and Gonpo Tsering.[15] Vereign makes Authentic Communication possible through Blockchain Federated Networks. Vereign stands for confidentiality, integrity and actuality. Its main mission is to empower individuals and businesses by adding an extra layer of authenticity and security to their day-to-day communication. By trying to accomplish this mission Vereign gives individuals and businesses a chance to own their own digital identity via a platform where they can choose whom to trust, what they can access and retract it at any time. Greve is a known advocate for Open Source and ensures that the company uses OpenPOWER as a fully open, auditable, inspectable, trustworthy hardware platform.[16][17]
Personal Life
[edit]Greve is married and currently lives in Switzerland.[18]
References
[edit]- ^ "Swiss Commercial Register, Vereign". www.zefix.ch. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
- ^ Pintscher, Lydia (2012). Open Advice. Lulu.com. p. ix. ISBN 9781105514937. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
- ^ a b c Kehrer, Anika. "FSFE Founder Georg Greve Awarded German Cross o... » Linux Magazine". Linux Magazine. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
- ^ Stefan, Krempl. "Software as a cultural asset:Interview mit Georg Greve (FSFE)". www.nexttext.de. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
- ^ Shi, Yun Qing; Kim, Hyoung-Joong; Pérez-González, Fernando (2014). Digital-Forensics and Watermarking: 12th International Workshop, IWDW 2013, Auckland, New Zealand, October 1-4, 2013. Revised Selected Papers (2014 ed.). Springer. p. 506. ISBN 9783662438855. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
- ^ C., L. L. (2010). Members of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany: Beatrix of the Netherlands, Nicolae Ceausescu. General Books LLC. ISBN 9781157713128. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
- ^ Unknown, Unknown. "FOSDEM 2017 - Interview with Georg Greve
Let's talk about hardware: The POWER of open.. How Open POWER is changing the game and why the Free Software Community should care". archive.fosdem.org. Retrieved 18 September 2018. - ^ "Georg's Brave GNU World - GNU Project - Free Software Foundation (FSF)". Gnu.org. 8 February 2000. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
- ^ unknown, Wolfgang. "Interview mit Georg C. F. Greve - Pro-Linux". Pro-Linux (in German). Retrieved 18 September 2018.
- ^ Eller, Marlin (1998). Barbarians Led by Bill Gates: Microsoft from the Inside. p. 212. ISBN 0805057552. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
- ^ Stauffacher, Daniel; Kleinwachter, Wolfgang (2005). "The World Summit on the Information Society: Moving from the Past into the Future" (PDF). ICT Task Force Series 8. 1. The United Nations Information and Communication Technologies Task Force. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
- ^ Mathiason, John (2008). Internet Governance: The New Frontier of Global Institutions (1 ed.). Routledge. p. 91. ISBN 9780415774031. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
- ^ Heath, Nick (1 December 2009). "Open source groupware suite Kolab 3.0 goes live". ZDNet. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
- ^ Feilner, Markus (1 August 2013). "My Kolab: Hosted Groupware nach Schweizer Recht und Gesetz". Linux-Magazin (in German). Retrieved 19 September 2018.
- ^ "Authentic Communication through Blockchain by Vereign". www.vereign.com. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
- ^ Vaughan-Nichols, Steven J. "Open-source licensing war: Commons Clause ZDNet". ZDNet. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
- ^ Hückstädt, Bernd (2013). Gradido - natural economy of life. lulu.com. p. 94. ISBN 9781291004618. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
- ^ Luppicini, Rocci (2012). Ethical Impact of Technological Advancements and Applications in Society (1 ed.). IGI Global. p. 211. ISBN 9781466617735. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
External links
[edit]- Georg Greve's Twitter
- Georg Greve's LinkedIn
- Georg Greve's Blog
- Fellowship interview with Georg Greve about background of FSFE (March 2009)
- Transcript of a video interview during the UN WSIS Contributory Conference on ICT & Creativity
- Video and audio recordings of Greve's introduction to the 3rd international GPLv3 conference, 22 June 2006
- 2007 pre-FOSDEM interview
- Georg Greve's FSFE Team Page
Category:Copyright activists]] Category:Free software programmers]] Category:GNU people]] Category:1973 births]] Category:Living people]] Category:University of Hamburg alumni]] Category:Recipients of the Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany]]
_______________________________________________________
Added inline citations. removed
. I'll get some more done tomorrow, want it to be more encyclopedic so I'll get more sources for his other activities. I love a good polymath!
_______________________________________________________ Warning: An automated filter has identified this edit as containing references to self published sources. Please be aware that self-published sources may be vanity publishing and rarely meet Wikipedia's standards for reliable sources. If you have checked the source and are confident it is appropriate, please click 'Publish changes' again, and report this error.
Metal Fatigue LP Ebony 1982 was the first release from Ebony. All bands were produced by Darryl Johnston
https://books.google.com.au/books?id=Pis9AQAAIAAJ&q=ebony+Darryl+Johnston&dq=ebony+Darryl+Johnston&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjLnMCgoZ_cAhWBSJQKHdzBCywQ6AEIKTAA EBONY STUDIO Tony Draper recounts the growth of a studio from an attic in Hull to a haunted mansion in Selby, ... Darryl and Linzi Johnston have, over the last two years, transformed the massive 13-bedroomed, gothic mansion from a
clrvynt.com/grim-reaper-interview/ When Grim Reaper split up in the late '80s, did you hold out any hope that the band would get back together at some point? No, I didn’t, because of the way it came to a halt. We were being sued by our record company, Ebony Records, and it stopped us from working. So, until that got sorted, nobody seemed to want to help us. It just got really, really messy, and basically we ended up sitting around waiting for something else to happen. And it happened to me first, when an English band called Onslaught got in touch with me and asked me to do an album with them. Of course, I said yes. There was a lot more to it than that, but that was pretty much how it went.
There was a BBC exposé about the Ebony Records guy that basically ended his career overnight, wasn’t there? Oh yeah — that was in the '80s. That happened maybe about a year to 18 months after he served us with this writ. Basically what he’d been doing was getting bands to pay for a slot on a multi-band album. There may have been 10 or 12 bands to an album, and he’d done quite a few. But in the U.K., it’s illegal for you to have to pay to do that. So, he was taken to task over that, and a lot of other stuff, too. The Grim Reaper thing was brought up because he was basically telling these bands, “Look, if you come up with 500 pounds, I’ll put you on this album and get you a deal like I did for Grim Reaper.” Well, that’s bullshit to start out with, because he didn’t get us that deal [with RCA]. That fell into our laps, really. He had nothing to do with that whatsoever, so he was lying to everybody and taking their money. So, they showed him up on this program and exposed him as the villain he was.
Is it true that he ended up homeless not long afterwards? Apparently, yeah. The reason we left him was because he didn’t pay us any of the money he was getting from advances — and he was getting a lot of money. He lived in a small house that he had his studio in, but he took the money he was getting and he bought a mansion in the countryside and built another studio in there. It was a rubbish studio — [the music recorded there] sounded okay in the studio, but outside the studio it sounded awful. That’s why we ended up with RCA: They rejected the third album, and we ended up leaving him. With no income after that, the guy had to go bankrupt.
https://www.discogs.com/label/63337-Ebony-Records
http://vinyl-records.nl/Labels/ebony-records.html
https://dunsyscupboardofmetal.wordpress.com/2011/03/10/savage/ Drummer Mark Brown, the most articulate of the four, relays the story.
“Well after all that’s been said and done, they were the ones who gave us a break and for that we’re thankful. But on reflection I think that Savage were the guinea pigs for that label; we were the first band to have an LP released. The problems came when Darryl (Ebony Manager) wouldn’t grow with our ideas and that was the time we decided to move on to somewhere that would help us establish our individuality. To be fair, it really was a mutual decision even though we instigated legal proceedings to effect it…It wasn’t really a fight as such.”
One thing that stilll leaves a bitter taste according to the lads is the way Ebony kept quiet about RCA Americas interest in the band and the ‘Loose’N’Lethal’ lp in particular.
“Darryl told us after we had been released that RCA might have taken it, but that’s the way things go I suppose.” shrugs Mark.
Neat Records | |
---|---|
Parent company | Sanctuary Records Group |
Founded | 1979 |
Founder | David Wood |
Status | Inactive. Sold to Sanctuary Records in 1995 |
Genre | Heavy metal Speed metal Black metal AOR Punk |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Location | Wallsend, Tyne and Wear, England |
Neat Records was a record label based near Newcastle, England. The label was established in 1979 by David Wood, who was the owner of Impulse Studios in Wallsend, Tyne and Wear, England.[1] A key figure in the establishment of the label was Steve Thompson. Thompson was house producer at Impulse at the time and helped set up Neat, became the A&R manager and produced all the initial recordings, as well as managing the publishing arm, Neat Music. The label was sold in 1995 by its then owner, the former Tygers of Pan Tang vocalist Jess Cox, to Sanctuary Records.[2]
Neat Records was arguably the most instrumental label in the revival of heavy metal in the early 80s in the UK. The movement was known as the new wave of British heavy metal or NWOBHM for short. The label is most notable for the early releases of Newcastle band Venom who are widely credited with the invention of black metal. While none of Neat Records' acts really broke through to the mainstream themselves, Venom, Raven, Blitzkrieg and Jaguar particularly are acknowledged as major influences on a host of major American thrash metal bands such as Metallica, Megadeth and Anthrax. In fact Metallica have even covered Blitzkrieg's self-titled song "Blitzkrieg" and Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich has claimed "Whiplash" to be a deliberate attempt to emulate Jaguar's song "Stormchild" which was written by Jeff Cox.[3] This was disclosed to interviewer Robin Askew from 'Venue' magazine during an interview with Lars Ulrich, and subsequently published in the magazine.[4]
Other notable acts to release music through Neat Records include White Spirit (notable as the then band of current Iron Maiden guitarist Janick Gers)[5] and Persian Risk (notable as the original band of Motörhead guitarist Phil Campbell).[6]
Discography
[edit]Singles
- 01 Motorway - "All I Wanna Be Is Your Romeo" 7" (ST)
- 02 Janie McKenzie - "One and Only Girl" 7" (ST)
- 03 Tygers of Pan Tang - "Don't Touch Me There / Burnin' Up / Bad Times" 7" (ST)
- 04 Fist - "Name, Rank And Serial Number / You'll Never Get Me in One of Those" 7" (ST)
- 05 White Spirit - "Back to The Grind / Cheetah" 7" (KN)
- 06 Raven - "Don't Need Your Money / Wiped Out" 7" (ST)
- 07 Aragorn - "Black Ice" 7" (KN)
- 08 Venom - "In League with Satan / Live Like an Angel, Die Like a Devil" 7" (ST)
- 09 Bitches Sin - "Always Ready for Love / Sign of the Times" 7" (KN)
- 10 Blitzkrieg - "Buried Alive / Blitzkrieg" 7" (KN)
- 11 Raven - "Hard Ride / Crazy World" 7" (ST)
- 12 Raw Deal - "Lonewolf / Take the Sky" 7" (KN)
- 13 Venom - "Bloodlust / In Nomine Satanas" 7" (KN)
- 14 Steel - "Rock Out / All Systems Go" 7" (KN)
- 15 Raven - "Crash, Bang, Wallop / Rock Hard" 7" (KN)
- 15-12 Raven - "Crash, Bang, Wallop" 12" (4 track EP)(KN)
- 16 Jaguar - "Axe Crazy / War Machine" 7" (KN)
- 17 Heavy Pettin' - "Roll the Dice / Love Times Love" 7" (KN)
- 18 Dedringer - "Hot Lady / Hot Licks And Rock 'n' Roll" 7" (KN)
- 19 Crucifixion - "Take It or Leave It / On the Run" 7" (KN)
- 20 Warrior - "Dead When It Comes to Love / Kansas City / Stab in the Back" 7" (KN)
- 21 Fist - "The Wanderer / Too Hot" 7" (KN)
- 22 Valhalla - "Comin' Home" 7" (KN)
- 23 Sabre - "Miracle Man / On the Loose" 7" (KN)
- 24 Persian Risk - "Ridin' High / Hurt You" 7" (KN)
- 25-12 Various - One Take No Dubs 12" (4 track EP, Black Rose, Hellanbach, Alien, Avenger) (KN)
- 26 Jess Cox - "Bridges" 7" (KN)
- 27 Venom - "Die Hard / Acid Queen" 7" (KN)
- 27-12 Venom - "Die Hard / Acid Queen / Bursting Out" 12" (KN)
- 28 Raven - "Break the Chain / Ballad of Marshall Stack" 7" (KN)
- 29 Raven - "Born to Be Wild / Inquisitor" 7" (KN)
- 29P Raven - "Born to Be Wild / Inquisitor" 7" (KN)
- 29-12 Raven - "Born to Be Wild / Inquisitor / Break the Chain" 12" (KN)
- 30 Saracen - "We Have Arrived / Face in the Crowd" 7" (KN)
- 31 Avenger - "Too Wild to Tame / On the Rocks" 7" (KN)
- 32 Tobruk - "Wild on the Run / The Show Must Go On" 7" (KN)
- 33 Tysondog - "Eat the Rich / Dead Meat" 7" (KN)
- 34 Emerson - "Something Special" 7" (KN)
- 35 Jess Cox - "One in a Million" 7" (KN)
- 36 Valhalla - "Still in Love with You" 7" (KN)
- 37 Crucifixion - "Green Eyes / Moon Rising / Jailbait" 7" (KN)
- 37-12 Crucifixion - "Green Eyes / Moon Rising / Jailbait" 12" (KN)
- 38 Venom - "Warhead / Lady Lust" 7" (With 3 different sleeves)(KN)
- 38P Venom - "Warhead / Lady Lust" 7" (Mauve vinyl)(KN)
- 38-12 Venom - "Warhead / Lady Lust / Gates of Hell" 7" (KN)
- 38P-12 Venom - "Warhead / Lady Lust / Gates of Hell" 12" (KN)
- 39 TNT - "Back on the Road / Rockin' the Night" 7" (KN)
- 40 Glasgow - "Stranded / Heat of the Night" 7" (KN)
- 41 Warfare - "Noise, Filth and Fury" 7" (KN)
- 42 Mammath - "Rock Me / Rough 'n' Ready" 7" (KN)[7]
- 43 Venom - "Manitou / Woman" 7" (KN)
- 43P Venom - "Manitou / Woman" 7" (KN)
- 43-12 Venom - "Manitou / Woman / Dead of Night" 12" (KN)
- SHAPE 43 Venom - "Manitou / Woman" 7" (KN)
- 43SC Venom - "Manitou" Cassette Single (KN)
- 44-12* Lone Wolf - "Nobody's Move / Town to Town / Leave Me Behind" 12" (KN)
- 45-12* Warfare - "Two Tribes / Hell / Blown to Bits" 12" (KN)
- 46 Tysondog - "Shoot to Kill / Hammerhead" 7" (KN)
- 46-12 Tysondog - "Shoot to Kill / Hammerhead / Changling / Back to the Bullet! 12" (KN)
- 47 Venom - "Nightmare / Satanarchist" 7" (KN)
- 47S Venom - "Nightmare / Satanarchist" 7" (KN)
- 47-12 Venom - "Nightmare / Satanarchist / FOAD / Warhead (live)" 12" (2 different sleeves)(KN)
- 47-12SP Venom - "Nightmare / Satanarchist / FOAD / Warhead (live)" 12" (KN)
- 47SC Venom - "Nightmare" Cassette Single (6 track cassette)(KN)
- 48-12 Black Rose - "Nightmare / Need a Lot of Lovin' / Rock Me Hard / Breakaway" 12" (KN)
- 49-12 Warfare - Total Death EP 12" (4 track EP)(KN)
- 50 She - "Never Surrender / Breaking Away" 7" (KN)
- 50-12 She - "Never Surrender / Breaking Away / On My Way" 12" (KN)
- 52 State Trooper - "She Got the Look" 7" (KN)
- 52-12 State Trooper - "She Got the Look" 12" (KN)
- 53-12 Venom - Hell At Hammersmith EP 12" (3 track live EP, limited to 10,000)(KN)
- 55-12 Atomkraft - "Queen of Death" 12" (KN)
- 56 Tysondog - "School's Out / Don't Let the Bastards Grind You Down" 7" (KN)
- 56-12 Tysondog - School's Out / Don't Let The Bastards Grind You Down /Back to the Bullet 12" (KN)
- 57 Shotgun Brides - "Restless" 7" (KN)
- 58 Warfare - "Addicted to Love" 7" (KN)
- 60-12 Mantas - "Deceiver" 12" (KN)
- 62 The Big Bugs - "Marry for the Money" 7" (KN)
- ISAX1047 Axis - "Lady" 7" (released on Metal Minded label) (KN)
- MM2 Badge - "Silver Woman" 7" (released on Metal Minded label)
Albums
- 1000 Various - Lead Weight LP (KN)
- 1001 Raven - Rock Until You Drop LP
- 1001P Raven - Rock Until You Drop LP
- 1002 Venom - Welcome To Hell LP (KN)
- 1002P Venom - Welcome To Hell LP (KN)
- 1003 Fist - Back with a Vengeance LP (KN)
- 1004 Raven - Wiped Out LP (KN)
- 1005 Venom - Black Metal LP (KN)
- 1005P Venom - Black Metal LP (KN)
- 1006 Hellanbach - Now Hear This LP (KN)
- 1007 Jaguar - Power Games LP (KN)
- 1008 Geordie - No Sweat LP (KN)
- 1009 Dedringer - Second Rising LP (KN)
- 1010 Jess Cox - Third Step LP (KN)
- 1011 Raven - All for One LP
- 1012 Satan - Court in the Act LP (KN)
- 1013 Cloven Hoof - Cloven Hoof LP (KN)
- 1014 Various - Metal Battle LP (KN)
- 1015 Venom - At War with Satan LP (KN)
- 1015P Venom - At War with Satan LP (KN)
- 1016 Saracen - Change of Heart LP (KN)
- 1017 Tysondog - Beware of the Dog LP (KN)
- 1018 Avenger - Blood Sports LP (KN)
- 1019 Hellanbach - The Big H LP (KN)
- 1020 Raven - Live at the Inferno LP
- 1021 Warfare - Pure Filth LP (KN)
- 1022 Phasslayne - Cut It Up LP (KN)
- 1023 Blitzkrieg - A Time of Changes LP (KN)
- 1024 Venom - Possessed LP (KN)
- 1024P Venom - Possessed LP (KN)
- 1025 Axewitch - Visions of the Past LP (KN)
- 1026 Avenger - Killer Elite LP (KN)
- 1027 Wishbone Ash - Raw to the Bone LP
- 1027P Wishbone Ash - Raw to the Bone LP
- 1028 Atomkraft - Future Warriors LP (KN)
- 1029 Warfare - Metal Anarchy LP (KN)
- 1030 Artillery - Fear of Tomorrow LP
- 1031 Tysondog - Crimes of Insanity LP (KN)
- 1032 Venom - Eine Kleine Nachtmusik LP (KN)
- 1033 Various - Powertrax LP (KN)
- 1034 Black Rose - Walk It How You Talk It LP (KN)
- 1035 Deaf Dealer - Keeper of the Flame LP (KN)
- 1036 War Machine - Unknown Soldier LP (KN)
- 1037 Tygers of Pan Tang - First Kill LP (KN)
- 1038 Artillery - Terror Squad LP
- 1039 Peer Gunt - Back Seat LP
- 1040 Warfare - Mayhem, Fuckin' Mayhem LP (KN)
- 1041 Atomkraft - Conductors of Noise LP (KN)
- 1042 Mantas - Winds of Change LP (KN)
- 1043 Slutt - Model Youth LP
- 1044 Warfare - Conflict of Hatred LP (KN)
- 1045 Shotgun Brides - Nothin' Ventured LP (KN)
- 1046 Artillery - Artillery 3 LP
- 1047 Decimator - Carnage City State Mosh Patrol LP (KN)
- 1048 Cronos - Dancing in the Fire LP (KN)
- 1049 Cockney Rejects - Lethal LP
- D1051 Cronos - Rock 'n' Roll Disease CD (KN)
- D1052 Decimator - Dirty, Hot and Hungry CD (KN)
Compilations
[edit]There have been a number of complications released which feature tracks exclusively from the Neat Records catalogue.
- The Neat Singles Collection Vol. 1[10]
- The Neat Singles Collection Vol. 2[11]
- The Neat Singles Collection Vol. 3[12]
- The Flame Burns On: The Best of Neat Records[13]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Barton, Geoff (16 August 2005). "The New Wave Of British Heavy Metal". Neal Kay's Heavy Metal Soundhouse. Archived from the original on 11 July 2011. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Apicella, Vinnie (June 2002). "Interview with NWOBHM Musician/Label Owner Jess Cox". Vinnie's World. Archived from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Tucker, John (2015). Neat & Tidy: The Story of Neat Records (UK edition ed.). Jeske, Otger, u. Matthias Mader. I.P. Verlag. p. 34. ISBN 9783940822048. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
{{cite book}}
:|edition=
has extra text (help) - ^ Brannigan, Paul; Winwood, Ian (2013). Birth School Metallica Death: The Biography. Da Capo Press. p. 73. ISBN 9780306821875.
- ^ Tucker, John (2015). Neat & Tidy: The Story of Neat Records (UK edition ed.). Jeske, Otger, u. Matthias Mader. I.P. Verlag. p. 65. ISBN 9783940822048. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
{{cite book}}
:|edition=
has extra text (help) - ^ Tucker, John (2015). Neat & Tidy: The Story of Neat Records (UK edition ed.). Jeske, Otger, u. Matthias Mader. I.P. Verlag. p. 363. ISBN 9783940822048. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
{{cite book}}
:|edition=
has extra text (help) - ^ http://www.metal-archives.com/bands/Mammath/24414
- ^ "Neat Records Discography". Vinylnet.co.uk. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
- ^ Sanchez, Raoul; Dan Edman. "Neat Records Discography". The Corroseum.com. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
- ^ "The Neat Singles Collection, Vol. 1". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
- ^ "The Neat Singles Collection, Vol. 2". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
- ^ "The Neat Singles Collection, Vol. 3". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
- ^ "The Flame Burns On: The Best of Neat Records". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 27 March 2011.