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03-18-2017, 10:04 PM | #2511 (permalink) |
Toasted Poster
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: SoCal by way of Boston
Posts: 11,332
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Rip.
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“The fact that we live at the bottom of a deep gravity well, on the surface of a gas covered planet going around a nuclear fireball 90 million miles away and think this to be normal is obviously some indication of how skewed our perspective tends to be.” |
03-19-2017, 12:55 AM | #2513 (permalink) |
Music Addict
Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 1,265
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Swing low chariot, come down easy,
Taxi to the terminal zone, Cut your engines and cool your wings And let me make it to the telephone. Los Angeles give me Norfolk Virginia, Tidewater four ten O nine, Tell the folks back home this is the Promised Land callin' And the po’ boy's on the line. |
03-19-2017, 08:36 AM | #2514 (permalink) |
...here to hear...
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: He lives on Love Street
Posts: 4,444
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^ Nice, appropriate selection, Ribbons! I didn't know that song.
I was about eleven when I picked up this single in a second-hand shop, and as children do with a song they like, just played it over and over and over again. I loved the guitar and the mysterious-sounding place name: Memphis Tennessee. Decades later, I use the song in my English language classes: two bars in, students start nodding their heads and tapping their feet. The rhythm is still infectious, and I've come to realize just how good the lyrics are. In just 16 lines CB tells a complete story, squeezing in some extra, but evocative details on the way (the phone boy, the Mississippi Bridge) and giving us a surprise twist as well. It's such a short song but there's no repetitive chorus; in terms of lyrics, CB has used his 2:19 minutes to the max. That's genius! R.I.P. Chuck Berry
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"Am I enjoying this moment? I know of it and perhaps that is enough." - Sybille Bedford, 1953 |
03-21-2017, 09:16 AM | #2515 (permalink) |
Born to be mild
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: 404 Not Found
Posts: 26,992
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Martin McGuinness: Sinn Féin politician dies aged 66 - BBC News
I must admit, I'm not sure how to react to this. I mean, yes, in later life he was part of the peace process in Northern Ireland, but for a long time before that he was a killer, a major figure in the IRA, and responsible for I don't know how many deaths. As a politician, he refused to acknowledge his ties to the IRA and in so doing left, and leaves, many families without closure as he refused to share what he knew about the remaining "disappeared", those people executed by the IRA and whose bodies have never been found. He worked for peace, yes, but did he do this for its own sake or to try to reinvent himself and change his image? I see a lot of tributes to him now that he's passed, and I have to think of those who sit at home looking at pictures of loved ones murdered by the IRA and wonder how they feel? Are they glad he's dead, or do they now mourn that they will never be able to bury their loved ones? Does he deserve the accolades, and is it right to forget and/or forgive his past? They say the good men do is soon forgotten but the evil lives on, but in this case is not the opposite true, and is it right that it should be that way? Comments welcome.
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Trollheart: Signature-free since April 2018 |
03-23-2017, 03:17 PM | #2518 (permalink) |
Toasted Poster
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: SoCal by way of Boston
Posts: 11,332
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Boston drummer John "Sib" Hashian dead at 67. RIP and thanks for the winter of 1976.
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“The fact that we live at the bottom of a deep gravity well, on the surface of a gas covered planet going around a nuclear fireball 90 million miles away and think this to be normal is obviously some indication of how skewed our perspective tends to be.” |
03-30-2017, 12:44 AM | #2519 (permalink) |
SOPHIE FOREVER
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: East of the Southern North American West
Posts: 35,541
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Just discovering this guy through a tribute on the radio. He's great.
Arthur Blythe, Jazz Saxophonist, Dead at 76 | Pitchfork
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Studies show that when a given norm is changed in the face of the unchanging, the remaining contradictions will parallel the truth. |
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