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Operation doomsday
Operation doomsday








operation doomsday

1824033įlight Engineer Sergeant William “Bill” WrightĢ046171 L/Cpl Robert J. 165358Īir Gunner Sergeant William “Jack” Flynn – RAF No. 172733īomb Aimer William Stanley Long – RAF No. Wireless Operator Flying Officer Harold Ashton – RAF No. Pilot Flying Officer Eric Atkinson – RAF No. The men onboard LJ899 - 190 Squadron, Great Dunmow - May 10th 1945: Lance Corporal Thomas Errington RICHARDSON 25 THE BORDER REGIMENT 1ST AIRBORNE BATTALION: Warrant Officer Raymond Charles IMPETT 32 Navigator Warrant Officer Hugh Joseph KILDAY 31 RAAFįlight Sergeant David WELCH 34 Wireless Operatorįlight Sergeant Lionel James Douglas GILYEAD 21 Shepherds Grove, Suffolk - May 10th 1945:įlying Officer John Leonard BREED 24 RAAF Pilot On three Short Stirling Aricrafts crashed enroute to Gardermoen Airfield on their mission to Liberate Norway.

operation doomsday

The Allied engaged a massive invasion of Norway, that brought 30.000 Allied soldiers to Norway through sea and air. Over 360.000 heavily armed Nazi German forces still occupied Norway, as they had done for the last five years since April 9th 1940. The Allied forces carried out OPERATION DOOMSDAY the same day. While mainstream hip-hop was optimizing itself for an impending pop takeover, here was someone who had opted out, some combination of refusenik and mourner.Are you a relative or do you have any information regarding the 48 men who perished and the 18 men who survived? Please contact: stirlingLK147(at) They, too, were making new music resting on the hits of yesteryear. It’s not that Doom - who first found success at the dawn of the 1990s under the name Zev Love X as part of the Native Tongues-adjacent group KMD - was working from a radically different playbook from those in the mainstream, many of whom were his generational peers. It was seismic in the true sense - a shift in terrain that exposed a fault line that had been developing for a while, and revealed a whole other realm of creative possibility, an opportunity for an alternate history. That made “Operation: Doomsday” one of the most idiosyncratic hip-hop albums of the 1990s, and one of the defining documents of the independent hip-hop explosion of that decade. It suggested that you could not so much reinterpret or borrow from history as become one with it, experience and memory all bleeding together into something that wasn’t quite present or past, but some ineffable other thing. This approach was a conceptual innovation beyond a simple sample or interpolation. The music was intimately, almost quixotically, personal. In an era in which hip-hop was polishing its rough spots for mainstream acceptance, Doom was almost completely interior - he sounded like he was rapping to himself. He could sound like he was rambling, which belied his rather astonishing sense of craft. His vocals were slurred, almost dreamlike. On “Operation: Doomsday,” Doom - whose October death was announced on New Year’s Eve - molded an approach to rapping and producing that was suffused with memory. The album served as a multilayered memorial - an act of grief for a lost loved one, a somber tribute to an approach to music that was becoming extinct, and an unassuming yet towering act of artistic recalcitrance. You felt drenched, drained, gut punched, short of breath. Listening to the album was like standing outside in a summer rainstorm. But, even when he didn’t, the clouds still hung low above him. Sometimes on “Operation: Doomsday,” Doom rapped about death directly, and heavily.










Operation doomsday