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Well-known member
i do not care for threads being derailed by malelesbian and talk of malelesbian
i do not care
All getting a bit Dr. Seuss.
i do not care for threads being derailed by malelesbian and talk of malelesbian
i do not care
LMAO remember when you called me an ableist? Look who's showing their true colors now Mr. Ableist =D
As for your little nursery rhyme...it was cute, both in its content and the fact that you honestly seemed to put some work in it (who knows why). Obviously I could write a better rhyme in my sleep hanging upside down, blindfolded with my hands tied behind my back (using a pen in my mouth), but unlike most people on Dissensus, I'm not a hater. Congratulations for expressing your non-robotic side. It was, as they say, adorbz.
yo third
do u rate leatherface
no lol i havent ever given vdgg a shake
this steaming pile of cow dung has rave reviews on rym lol.
I used to say things like that and then I found out that Johnny Marr was such a fan of Chic that he named his son "Nile".
not sure that is counter evidence at all though. Its totally possible to love something utterly without willingly, or unwillingly, recreating it.The truth is more complicated.
But it is true that indie is electric guitar music severed from the blues. The break actually came with punk - that's when boogie and shuffle rhythms etc dropped out of rock completely.
I am reading a book at the moment called Why Britain Rocks by Elizabeth Sharkey which is really interesting... it attempts to account for the freaky success, globally and for decades and decades, of UK pop and rock.... why has this tiny island, a fourth the population of USA, punched above its weight?
The conventional argument is that UK youth get their minds blown by this alien import from America, this jolt of rhythm that has no relation to their native culture... but when it comes to responding A/ have an advantage compared to other European nations because of being Anglophonic, so are already fluent in the language of rock'n'roll and B/ they add all these extraneous non-sonic elements that sparkle and sophisticate it (literate lyrics, art school ideas, sharp looking style, attitude). Some people add a sort of "nation of pirates and buccaneers" / imperialist type argument - a nation that is good at stealing stuff, taking primary raw materials, and refashioning them.
Sharkey, conversely, argues that the melodic DNA of rock 'n' roll originally comes in large part from the British Isles... ballads and folk forms that are brought over to the American colonies by settlers from Scotland, Ulster (essentially Scottish Protestants), and Northern England.... many of whom bring their culture directly and intact to Appalachia.
Which is one reason maybe why country music has always been popular in Scotland and Ireland.... it's a coming home
There's some kind of uncanny tectonic-plate predestination aspect to this.... due to the movement of the continental plates they were wrenched apart, but primordially the Appalachian range and the mountains of Scotland, Ireland and Wales were one!
Obviously no bearing on the millennia-later migrations of populations and musical traditions, but kind of eerie all the same, as a foretelling.
the revisionist guys won't understand this, but A.R. Kane ( in collaboration with colour box ) was an instrumental part in priming the UK for acid house and breakbeat 'ardkore
M|A|R|R|S - Pump Up The Volume
this was NUMBER ONE in the official charts in in the UK in 1987
I've probably posted about Colour Box somewhere else on this forum due to their Horace Andy do-over