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Post by Fisk on Aug 30, 2017 22:08:32 GMT
sIMPLE 2 AND A HALF MINUTE SONG. Jesus Christ. That's about the saddest thing I ever heard.
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Post by larryS on Aug 30, 2017 23:42:19 GMT
Willie Nelson once was asked what makes a successful song..and he said "3 chords and the truth"
that song has both "
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Post by Hitlers-SS on Sept 1, 2017 5:36:59 GMT
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Post by larryS on Sept 1, 2017 15:25:27 GMT
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Post by Hitlers-SS on Sept 2, 2017 0:22:45 GMT
The flaw with your link is that Great Britain is NOT a third world country. However the acts the Nazi party perpetrated can not be deemed fictitious, but carry on with your fantasy.
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Post by Hitlers-SS on Sept 2, 2017 0:25:46 GMT
They certainly are, maybe you should have paused and considered it before deciding to start ranting and give me grief, old man.
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Post by larryS on Sept 2, 2017 0:50:19 GMT
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Post by appistappis on Sept 5, 2017 7:13:43 GMT
song they'll play at my funeral.
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Post by Fisk on Sept 5, 2017 22:42:16 GMT
song they'll play at my funeral. I dig it. I have a soft spot for this as it reminds me of my forays to the BVI. It's sort of neat how a musical style can be of just one place. When you hear calypso, you never think of Nordic retreats, or Aztec ruins, or African jungles, or Pacific beaches. Rock might make you think of Seattle, or London, or Perth, but calypso can only take you to the Antilles.
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Post by larryS on Sept 5, 2017 22:56:32 GMT
I dont agree....the band at my Bar Mitzvah played this song alot, along with Sunrise/Sunset and Tradition. Whenever I hear this song, I think about a catered affair, a powder blue Tux, and alot of people who eat and talk with food in their mouths.
Please dont speak for me or every attendee
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Post by larryS on Sept 5, 2017 23:43:13 GMT
and why was she afraid to come outof the water??
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Post by Fisk on Sept 6, 2017 0:11:00 GMT
and why was she afraid to come outof the water?? Because she was wearing that terrible fucking song, dude says it plain as day. Rap...rap is a strange thing. "Rhythm and Poetry". I usually am the guy that can't fucking stand anytime I hear it being played, but... in my top lists, rap probably holds an disproportionate amount of prioritization. When rap songs DO "click", man, they fucking click good. This one had potential, but I don't think I can get into a rap song unless I got into during that rap phase. Teens I'm talking, of course. When you needed rap and metal because they were the only things that were saying what your heart was feeling. And yes, even us country dumb, poor, anti-urban don't never go to the city folk have us some of that in us. We done told y'all niggas, piss me off I go .44 on y'all niggas. Some different way that people can understand that they don't want you to go lil' larry on 'em. That you have a limit that they don't want to cross, and they've begun the path to do just that. I can dig it. This, Eminem, Snoop Dogg, i can see it as art, and I do. I get what it's like to have a feeling, a strong one, and not being able to express it because it's socially unacceptable / illegal / really evil, but still needing to get it out somehow. This shit's good for that. Eminem was GREAT for that. Yeah, you got some fuckwit rejects that take this shit literal - thems the minority. Most of us just wanna yell from the soul in front of a dope bass beat. X was hot in my teens. This was our daily routine, to car pool to weight room / practice / game, blasting X as loud as it would go. It's just so harsh and deliberate, it's hard not to just lean into it. I played this song on the way to my first serious game of ball some... TWENTY years ago (fuck me =/), and I still play it on my way to the race track and the hockey rink to this day. It just pumps you up, it's motivational. To quote the YT comments, "I played this song to my pet rock; it's now Mt Everest." "I played this song to my little sister; she's now my older brother."
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Post by larryS on Sept 6, 2017 3:47:27 GMT
This is going off topic but WTF
Yes Rap and metal for a long time was a social speaker or amplifier.
which makes me laugh at the Kapernick and his fellow athletes who all of a sudden discovered with a couple of recent videos that there is police brutality in the streets.
there are people growing up on rap
there are people that have tv commercials supporting their fave brand of headphones. What are they listening to on the headphones?
They went to college and lived under the reverse of police discrimination. They were allowed to rape and assault with it being covered up The total opposite. Then they go to the NFL and live the good life, year after year in their gated communities.
So now all of a sudden there are videos and community riots and they are in an uproar....how can this be, you mean there is police brutality..u mean when I raped the coed, and the police protected me, this isnt going on all over the country.....god damn it...i am going to sit to the national anthem.
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Post by Fisk on Sept 6, 2017 21:57:51 GMT
Here's a fun one to get us back on track.
Axis of Awesome. Just a lil three piece from the Land Down Under, featuring mostly "comic-rock" (think Tenacious D). They did this song called "4 Chords" whereby they jam up a plethora of hits into one ditty, and they all sound the same...because... they're all kinda exactly the same. About the only changes musically are an increase of tempo, it's just the same 4 chords played in the exact same manner over and over again, yet the song changes probably 30+ times. I've not yet been able to count all the different ones, and it doesn't help that about every time they play it they add more and different songs to it.
In any case, here's some platinum hits worth about $500,000,000,000 in sales, every one of which consists of just the same 4 repeating chords...
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Post by larryS on Sept 6, 2017 23:50:23 GMT
that was funny
lets go to new zealand
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