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Encyclopedia > Cooper Temple Clause

The Cooper Temple Clause is a six piece rock band originating from Reading, UK. Their debut album See this through and leave was released to great critical acclaim in 2002 and their follow up Kick up the fire and let the flames break loose was released in 2003.


The name is thought to derive from the Cowper-Temple clause, a provision introduced by William Cowper-Temple, 1st Baron Mount Temple into the second reading of the Education Bill of 1870, which provided that no catechism nor denominational teaching of any kind should be included in the religious instruction given in rate-aided schools.


External link

  • Official site (http://www.coopertempleclause.co.uk/)

  Results from FactBites:
 
The Cooper Temple Clause (1930 words)
The Cooper Temple Clause was formed in Reading in the late 1990s by a group of six perverts, outsiders, and drunks.
Their song "Promises, Promises" was a sign that the Clause was expanding their chaotic sound for a new continent.
The main facet of The Cooper Temple Clause is that we are primarily a live band.
The Cooper Temple Clause - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (526 words)
The Cooper Temple Clause are a five-piece Post-Hardcore band originating from Wokingham, England.
Dear fans and friends of The Cooper Temple Clause, it is with much regret that we must inform you all of Didz Hammond's departure from The Cooper Temple Clause.
The Cooper Temple Clause have been associated by some with the revival of prog-rock, although their influences also include the post-hardcore style of At the Drive-In and Biffy Clyro, as well as the typical 90s-era Britpop sound of bands such as Blur and Oasis.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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