Join PlayPhone now! Get up to 20 ringtones with a $9.99 monthly membership
Download now
Line In The Sand (Album Version), from WWE - Evolution (Motorhead)
With Playphone Platinum Service Monthly Membership you will have a "ringtone plan" (10 credits), a "games, videos and graphics plan" (10 credits) plus 2 Playphone Backstage Alerts for the first month at $9.99/month. For every month thereafter, you will receive 10 credits and 2 Playphone Backstage Alerts. Games not available on Verizon Wireless, Virgin Mobile and Alltel. Must be 18+. No credit card required. Charges appear on cell phone bill or deducted from prepaid balance. To cancel, text "STOP" to 77888. Questions or Help: text "HELP". See complete Terms and Conditions for details.
More about Evolution
While wandering through the Natural History Museum in London, producers/mixers Jon Sutton and Barry Jamieson were immediately fascinated by a Darwin exhibit. It was 1987 and the dance scene was exploding all over the country. For two childhood friends from Manchester, music was calling. Sutton and Jamieson saw the new wave as a spiritual happening, therefore the formed Evolution. They spent the next two years sequencing keyboard rhythms and structuring an ambient sound; in 1989, Evolution founded their own label, Positive Vinyl. They were the fortunate ones to release the debut single from Sasha, "Came Out of Nowhere" and it pushed them to the forefront of the European dance movement.
The nineties were successful and momentous for Evolution. They had a brief deal with Deconstruction and received airtime on MTV Europe. The Everybody Dance EP appeared in 1993.
Look Up to the Light was issued two years later. Corporate ethics annoyed the pair, so in 1996, Evolution established Fluid Recordings. It would become one of the decade's biggest promoters of dance music, not to mention a stable label home.
Sutton and Jamieson oversaw the direction of artists like Jimmy Van M., Christian West, Ritmo, Mana and Andy Ling while also making room for themselves as world class DJs.
Their remixes for John Digweed, Boy George, BT, Mark Bell and Lost Tribe catapulted Evolution's star power into the mainstream. Their live club shows were fabulous, very animated and energetic. It wasn't until the new millennium that Evolution got serious about releasing their own music again. In 2000, Sutton and Jamieson set the foundation for their experimental, infectious dance collection. Two years later, Evolution emerged with Unnatural Selection on Nettwerk. Aside from the Evolution tag, Sutton and Jamieson also record under the monikers Bluefish, Escape, JB and Arrakis. ~ MacKenzie Wilson, All Music Guide
More Info