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Don Wassall

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Sad news about Neal Peart. I always liked Rush a lot. They made amazing music for having just three men in the group and only stopped touring in the past couple of years, mainly because Peart had tired of it and was dealing with various ailments. RIP
 

BeyondFedUp

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Me too, Don. They were always one of my favorites. In a class by themselves and Peart was a big reason why.
 

TomIron361

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Furtwängler - 1942 Meistersinger von Nürnberg - AEG

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upload_2020-1-17_11-53-42.jpeg▶ 9:17
Jan 18, 2016 - Uploaded by JuanRa Rivas
Furtwängler - Wagner, Overture Mastersingers of Nuremberg - 1942 Meistersinger von Nürnberg - AEG ...Many people will see this and get all upset right away. I have various reasons for posting this video. First of course is the music is wonderful (the greatest music of Western civilization). The Conductor, Wilhelm Furtwangler is considered by many to be the best conductor who ever lived. Secondly, the setting is in a factory with just normal people listening to this music. Look at their faces as they listen - they're totally engrossed. Even though they're only factory workers, you can see they "get" the music. How could we have fought these people? They look just like our own people. For those who like beautiful women, look at that girl at 6:48.
 

BeyondFedUp

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Furtwängler - 1942 Meistersinger von Nürnberg - AEG

https://www.youtube.com › watch
  1. Similar
Translate this page
View attachment 2688▶ 9:17
Jan 18, 2016 - Uploaded by JuanRa Rivas
Furtwängler - Wagner, Overture Mastersingers of Nuremberg - 1942 Meistersinger von Nürnberg - AEG ...Many people will see this and get all upset right away. I have various reasons for posting this video. First of course is the music is wonderful (the greatest music of Western civilization). The Conductor, Wilhelm Furtwangler is considered by many to be the best conductor who ever lived. Secondly, the setting is in a factory with just normal people listening to this music. Look at their faces as they listen - they're totally engrossed. Even though they're only factory workers, you can see they "get" the music. How could we have fought these people? They look just like our own people. For those who like beautiful women, look at that girl at 6:48.
Thanks for posting this TomIron361!
I don't know who wouldn't appreciate this. Maybe Leftists on another site but not here sir.
 

Extra Point

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On the lighter side, some of you may not have heard this, They're Coming to Take me Away by Napoleon XIV.

 

Bucky

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I feel like a dumbass for never realizing the meaning of this song. The lead singers dad from Alice in Chains was a Vietnam Vet. Always liked this song as a kid but now understand the meaning. "Rooster" is what was referred to the M60 Machine Gunner if I'm not mistaken which was a constant target for VC Snipers. May have been mentioned before but here's a cover of the original that I think does it justice.

Cover



Original

 

Menelik

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Gordon Lightfoot
 

Extra Point

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Another Offspring song, Gone Away. A bit of trivia: Dexter Holland, the lead singer of The Offspring, has a PhD in Molecular Biology.

 
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Don Wassall

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Another Offspring song, Gone Away. A bit if trivia: Dexter Holland, the lead singer of The Offspring, has a PhD in Molecular Biology.


That's my favorite Offspring song, though the lyrics are quite sad (a true story about Dexter's girlfriend dying).
 

Leonardfan

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Don, didn't expect you to be such a 90s rock guy! Those were the bands of my youth. I was 9 or 10 when the 90s alternative rock movement exploded. The 90s were such an amazing time for rock music of all types. Alice In Chains is my all time favorite band with Soundgarden a close second. Staley and Cornell had two of the most amazing voices in rock music history. I can go on and on though - so many great bands from that time. It's a shame that my generation and the youth of today do not look at 90s rock in the the way the 90s bands looked at and were influenced by the rock music of the 60s and 70s.

Brother Cane was a really good overlooked 90s band.



Collective Soul another damn good guitar driven 90s band - they are really overlooked when people talk about 90s rock. They had so many great songs and Ed Roland was another great vocalist. The riff in "Where the River Flows" is probably a top 5 riff from the 90s.

 

Don Wassall

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Don, didn't expect you to be such a 90s rock guy! Those were the bands of my youth. I was 9 or 10 when the 90s alternative rock movement exploded. The 90s were such an amazing time for rock music of all types. Alice In Chains is my all time favorite band with Soundgarden a close second. Staley and Cornell had two of the most amazing voices in rock music history. I can go on and on though - so many great bands from that time. It's a shame that my generation and the youth of today do not look at 90s rock in the the way the 90s bands looked at and were influenced by the rock music of the 60s and 70s.

If I had to rank music by decades, I would put the '80s at the top of my list, closely followed by the '90s. The '60s and '70s would be well behind. Maybe it's because classic rock stations have played the same 40 or 50 songs from the '60s and '70s over and over and over ad nauseam to the point that it wouldn't bother me if I never hear any of them again, with some exceptions.

The '80s I associate with MTV and the mostly cheesy videos they played in their early years beginning when it came on the scene in 1981. The music from that decade has held up better than earlier rock, at least to my ears.

It's instrumental to trace the history of MTV with that of the Permanent Cultural Communist Revolution that started in the late 1960s. As hard as it is to believe now, MTV was mostly a "white thing" in the '80s. Almost all of the videos were of White bands, with exceptions like Billy Ocean and Sade. But then Michael Jackson became a mega-superstar and MTV (seemingly reluctantly) began airing his videos in heavy rotation and it was all downhill from there. By the 1990s MTV was airing not only lots of black videos but hip hop and rap, and at some point, don't know when exactly, phased out music videos altogether for the utter soul-destroying garbage they show now. But the rock that was there in the '90s, particularly the Seattle grunge scene, was really good, along with groups like Collective Soul, the Offspring, Gin Blossoms and others.

When I think of Alice in Chains I think of Jerry Cantrell, who was the real talent behind the group. Layne Staley was a good singer but was apparently a child mentally and died tragically from drug addiction and his failure to grow up.

 
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Leonardfan

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Big fan of Cantrell's solo stuff - his double album Degradation Trip is criminally underrated. Yea Staley could not shake heroin - I am pretty well versed in everything with that band and their history. As I get older and look back on the 90s rock scene - it seems like it foreshadowed the white misery and increase in deaths of middle aged white males from alcohol, drugs and suicides that we have seen over the past decade or so. It's really good music but very dark.
 

Don Wassall

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Big fan of Cantrell's solo stuff - his double album Degradation Trip is criminally underrated. Yea Staley could not shake heroin - I am pretty well versed in everything with that band and their history. As I get older and look back on the 90s rock scene - it seems like it foreshadowed the white misery and increase in deaths of middle aged white males from alcohol, drugs and suicides that we have seen over the past decade or so. It's really good music but very dark.

So true. Kurt Cobain was a shooting star who had everything but was depressed and self-hating not to mention drug and alcohol addled. And his choice of a (((gf))) finished him off. It's amazing how a lot of people think Courtney Love murdered him.

It was really down music and hasn't gotten any better since, the little amount of rock that is left that is. To digress, there was an outlet that moved a lot of skinhead music in the '90s called Resistance Records. They also had a glossy, professionally produced quarterly magazine, whereas today pro-White rock to the extent it still exists is way underground.

One of their magazines had an interview with someone from the Northwest, who claimed that one of the members of one of the Seattle grunge bands was pro-White. He wasn't named so it was just hearsay at best, but it wouldn't surprise me if there wasn't some racial consciousness/awareness somewhere in that music scene. Nirvana bassist Krist Novoselic is a libertarian who contributed to at least one of Ron Paul's presidential campaigns. But everything about Nirvana was sad and tragic. Dave Groehl overcame it and with Foo Fighters has had about the only prominent rock band left over the past 15 years or so.
 

Leonardfan

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Music today is godawful - pretty much any genre especially pop, rap and country. It's all pretty much the same formulaic, recycled stuff with a real lack of any musicianship or songwriting skills. I was never a big country fan but they really made their way into Nashville and the country music scene over the past 15 years. 90s rock I felt was the rightful successor and evolution of bands like Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, Pink Floyd etc.
 

Don Wassall

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Seems that other than Foo Fighters and U2 (pretentious, hypocritical libtards), all rock bands today are semi-underground at best and have to go alternative routes to have a following. When they're big enough to tour, they play lesser venues rather than arenas and stadiums. Just like everything else that is still predominately White, the "mainstream" media wants as little to do with them as possible.
 

Extra Point

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The Andrews Sisters were a singing trio who were big in the 1940s. They're well worth checking out. Here's one of their big hits: Don't Sit Under the Apple Tree.

We should delve into the past to discover great white artists from the past. We need to preserve white history and culture.

 

white lightning

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Everyone here on this great message board should just check out this channel on youtube.com The name of the band is Fossils & Foxes. It's some old men with some hot young women. They
cover just about every type of song you can think of. They started as a cover band and now have albums and will probably tour. Very nice, relaxing music. I can't stop listening to their
music as it destresses me after a bad day. Have a look and hear guys. Hope you all enjoy them as much as I do.

 

TomIron361

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Everyone here on this great message board should just check out this channel on youtube.com The name of the band is Fossils & Foxes. It's some old men with some hot young women. They
cover just about every type of song you can think of. They started as a cover band and now have albums and will probably tour. Very nice, relaxing music. I can't stop listening to their
music as it destresses me after a bad day. Have a look and hear guys. Hope you all enjoy them as much as I do.

Not bad - I like that.
 

Extra Point

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Before he played Festus on Gunsmoke Ken Curtis was the lead singer of a singing group The Sons of the Pioneers. Here's an excerpt from a movie with the group singing Room Full of Roses. The song starts around :35.

Compare this singing to the synthesized, auto-tuned "singers" of today. They're not even in the same league.

 

Extra Point

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Here's a tremendous song by Patty Andrews called If You Go. Patty was one of the Andrews Sisters, who were famous in the 30s, 40s, and 50s. She also had a solo career. This is one of her songs from her solo career.

It's hard to believe it only has 26 views. Meanwhile atrocious rap songs by singers who have to use synthesized auto tuners because they can't sing get 100s of millions of views.

We need to preserve white culture. I recommend delving into white artists and white art of the past. You will make many pleasant discoveries.

 
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Bucky

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Interesting discussion about Alternative and 90s Rock guys. A fan as well of most of the bands mentioned. Collective Soul is very underated. Where the River Runs is great Along with December and Shine. Never get sick of hearing those.
 
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