The Throes photograph

The Throes

Use attributes for filter !
GenresIndependent Music
OriginNorthern Virginia
MembersBill Campbell; Harry Evans; Jeff Booth; Dean Nitz; Harv Evans
AlbumsAll the Flowers Growing in Your Mother's Eyes
Record labels R. E. X. Records
Bertelsmann Music Group
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2141558
Send edit request

About The Throes


The Throes is an indie band formed in 1988 in Northern Virginia. The original lineup consisted of singer/guitarist Bill Campbell, percussionist Harry Evans and bassist Joy Gewalt.

Hunter Biden pleads not guilty to federal gun charges at Delaware courthouse

Hunter Biden pleads not guilty to federal gun charges at Delaware courthouse
Oct 3,2023 11:11 am

... By Mr Biden s own admission - published in a 2021 memoir - he was in The Throes of a " full-blown addiction" at the time...

Yevgeny Prigozhin: Was the Wagner chief a dead man walking?

Yevgeny Prigozhin: Was the Wagner chief a dead man walking?
Aug 23,2023 8:11 pm

... Many will have witnessed his warm reception by the public in Rostov-on-Don when he turned up there exactly two months ago in The Throes of his aborted one-day rebellion...

Central African Republic President Touadéra wins referendum with Wagner help

Central African Republic President Touadéra wins referendum with Wagner help
Aug 7,2023 10:20 am

... CAR is still in The Throes of a civil war that has uprooted a third of all people from their homes...

Families in Turkey's quake cities battle dust and rubble six months on

Families in Turkey's quake cities battle dust and rubble six months on
Aug 6,2023 9:31 pm

... But in Antakya, reconstruction isn t even a thought yet, since it s still in The Throes of clearing away the rubble...

Ukraine war: BBC on the front line as Ukraine attacks Russian trenches

Ukraine war: BBC on the front line as Ukraine attacks Russian trenches
Jun 19,2023 1:30 am

... His father is still in The Throes of grief...

India population: The job crisis driving millions to big cities

India population: The job crisis driving millions to big cities
Apr 20,2023 6:30 am

...By Barbara Plett UsherBBC News, MumbaiIndia is in The Throes of a massive move to its cities - the in human history...

Olney: The town where a pancake race is a global event

Olney: The town where a pancake race is a global event
Feb 21,2023 3:01 am

... Even in The Throes of coronavirus lockdown, a solitary pan-bearer dressed up and ran the 415-yard course in 2021 so the tradition wouldn t be broken...

Death of Queen Elizabeth II: The moment history stops

Death of Queen Elizabeth II: The moment history stops
Sep 8,2022 2:51 pm

... And she understood that not everything in national life had to have an explicit purpose, that for a conservative nation in The Throes of near-ceaseless change, the continuity she represented in person and in office had a value beyond measure...

Families in Turkey's quake cities battle dust and rubble six months on

Jun 14,2022 12:45 pm

By Victoria CraigIn Antakya, southern Turkey

Hulya Yesiloglu gazes just beyond her temporary tent city towards a cemetery and says she often wonders if she would have been better off Ending Up there rather than surviving Turkey's twin earthquakes.

She stands at The Mouth of a wood-burning oven baking flatbread on a sweltering summer day in the southern city of Antakya.

Her Old Stone oven, where she has turned dough to bread for as long as she can remember, is the only part of her home that survived the earthquakes.

The Ancient City in Hatay province, 20km (12 miles) from the Syrian border, is still in a dangerous state of disrepair six months after it was ravaged by the February quakes.

Even now thousands of people are living here in makeshift tents and container camps. Like ghosts, buildings stripped of their facades still lean over now-vacant lots where houses and businesses once stood.

Dust covers every surface as the soundtrack of steel claws digging into piles of crumbled concrete and tangled metal plays unendingly in the background of Everyday Life .

The Turkish government now estimates the cost to rebuild in the 11 provinces affected by the earthquakes will total $105bn (£82bn).

But in Antakya, reconstruction isn't even a thought yet, since it's still in The Throes of clearing away the rubble.

Time has moved on, But progress with rebuilding has been slow, and people who remain, like Hulya, say they feel forgotten.

" Thank God nothing happened To My children, my husband, my loved ones, or My Family , But being forgotten, not cared for, and being abandoned are very difficult things, " she says.

A few metres from where Hulya is baking her bread, her family's five-storey apartment building is Still Standing - But only barely. It was heavily damaged and is due for demolition.

She and her husband, Metin, Still Live in The Neighbourhood , But it is now reduced to rubble and buildings that have been shaken open by the earthquake, revealing endless rows of Empty Rooms inside.

The couple's plastic tents are pitched just outside their old front door, But it's too hot to do anything But sleep in them at night and no-one is able to move beyond the disaster.

" Bodies are still being found. It's not over, " says Hulya. " If things continue like this, it will only get better after 20 years. "

Her assessment of The Time needed to reconstruct this city is a Far Cry from the one-year deadline set for the region by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan days after the disaster.

That's largely because the destruction across Hatay province was immense.

More Than 50,000 people died in Turkey in the 6 February disaster. In Hatay alone, some 23,000 people died and More Than 30,000 were injured, according to Turkey's disaster management agency, Afad.

The Following month, the Turkish government assessed that no-one should remain in short-term shelters for More Than six months. By July, 164,000 people were still living in tents and containers, according to Afad, in an assessment by the UN.

" We have solved some issues, however, there are still challenges, " says Huseyin Yayman , a member of President Erdogan's Justice and Development Party (AKP), and a representative of Hatay in parliament. " Water is not available in The City and We Are working to fix that, " he adds.

Mr Yayman believes that the rehabilitation process will take much longer than initially anticipated, too, and that financial help is Vital - both national and international.

" It takes time to return to normal. I say two plus two: in two years, we can meet the basic needs of people. In two more years, we can start getting back to the new normal, " he says.

" We want people from other regions of the country and around The World to help us in these areas because we need serious help. We have problems and we would be happy for them to assist. "

Mr Yayman admits that the distribution of aid has been somewhat uneven.

In some tent cities further north in the province, the biggest concern is access to air conditioning, which helps to make the Summer Heat and humidity more bearable. But in the City Centre where Hulya Yesiloglu's family lives, the priority is on safe Drinking Water .

Hulya says she and her husband have run out of purified Drinking Water and are now relying on well water to cook and consume.

" Turkey has faced a huge test in this regard, " Mr Yayman says.

Permanent housing is at The Top of The List for many in the region. About 80km (50 miles) north of the centre of Antakya, in the mountainous city of Hassa, new apartment blocks are Rising Up .

The Turkish government has allocated about $370m (£290m) to The Project , which is being built by an organisation within The Environment ministry called Toki.

Unlike so many of The Buildings in Hatay province, Toki insists none of its structures collapsed in February's quake.

This development will have 4,000 flats for 30,000 people and feature a school, health centre and a playground.

Nurtac Yılmaz, whose construction company Yılkanur Insaat is building part of it, says the development won't be fully finished until next summer.

" Just because these constructions are done quickly doesn't mean they are unsafe or not earthquake-resistant, " he says.

When it is ready, this complex will be welcome news for The People of Hassa. Priority, Mr Yilmaz says, is being given to those whose homes were classified as heavily damaged.

For others, like the Yesiloglu family, whose homes have been assessed as slightly damaged, it will be a longer road back to normality.

" If the government helps, we don't necessarily have to make [the new house] perfect. You can start slowly, just lay The Foundation , " says Metin Yesiloglu.

" Then, we can slowly finish it. We won't be in such distress. But now, they say they will conduct an analysis. They will tear down this building and analyse The Soil here. If it's suitable, they'll allow construction. If it's not, then no, it won't happen. "

Related Topics

Source of news: bbc.com

The Throes Photos

Related Persons

Next Profile ❯