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Now we're talking....
Exactly!
Now we're talking....
When I first joined in may i thought you were a hydro guy and dirtbag was a soil guy and it was ironic that you were in dirt and db was doing something closer to hydro.This is where I chose my name from as I think I have explained the super hero confusion.
Haha yeah that was an ironic time and a few jokes were made.... now we got it sorted lol.When I first joined in may i thought you were a hydro guy and dirtbag was a soil guy and it was ironic that you were in dirt and db was doing something closer to hydro.
Idk my high brain lol.
He always has that dumb grin on his face that to me says: "Yea, I have no business calling myself an actor, but y'all keep watching my shit, so I'll keep cashing the checks."Exactly!
A swirl of references vs interrogating and pulling apart said references for something new. Joyce vs Beckett in lit. With music idk how that would work but it sounds interesting.He always has that dumb grin on his face that to me says: "Yea, I have no business calling myself an actor, but y'all keep watching my shit, so I'll keep cashing the checks."
And by "he" I mean Aquaman, not Aquaman - just to avoid any confusion.
I teach world music to music majors in a university school of music, and have actually used footage of Momoa performing the Haka as a way of showing how easily non-western musical traditions can be insinuated in some fashion with our "everyday" pop culture. It's really useful in discussing the difference between "cultural appropriation" and "homage"...but that is a topic for a different kind of forum altogether...
Now back to your regularly scheduled programming.
you put the lime in the coconut AND mix them both together you put the lime in the coconut and then you'll feel betterA swirl of references vs interrogating and pulling apart said references for something new. Joyce vs Beckett in lit. With music idk how that would work but it sounds interesting.
Daaamn! Just gave me flashbaks of chick friends of mine stripping to this song back in the day! Ahh good memories! lolyou put the lime in the coconut AND mix them both together you put the lime in the coconut and then you'll feel better
Refashioning old material into new, one way or another, that's at least as typical for most of Western music as for literature. The postmoderns you mention (or whatever we're supposed to call them) have some general corollaries in composers like Charles Ives, George Antheil, and later Cage, Stockhausen, Glass, etc. Not exact parallels, but musical responses to the same general trends driving all art.A swirl of references vs interrogating and pulling apart said references for something new. Joyce vs Beckett in lit. With music idk how that would work but it sounds interesting.
Respect to the teacher, great that you are shaping young hearts and minds through music.He always has that dumb grin on his face that to me says: "Yea, I have no business calling myself an actor, but y'all keep watching my shit, so I'll keep cashing the checks."
And by "he" I mean Aquaman, not Aquaman - just to avoid any confusion.
I teach world music to music majors in a university school of music, and have actually used footage of Momoa performing the Haka as a way of showing how easily non-western musical traditions can be insinuated in some fashion with our "everyday" pop culture. It's really useful in discussing the difference between "cultural appropriation" and "homage"...but that is a topic for a different kind of forum altogether...
Now back to your regularly scheduled programming.
Refashioning old material into new, one way or another, that's at least as typical for most of Western music as for literature. The postmoderns you mention (or whatever we're supposed to call them) have some general corollaries in composers like Charles Ives, George Antheil, and later Cage, Stockhausen, Glass, etc. Not exact parallels, but musical responses to the same general trends driving all art.
To use a weed analogy - in kind of a weird way (or maybe not that weird at all) we could think of practically anything we hear as a kind of "polyhybrid" strain of music.
Yea, that's some really fascinating stuff. Once Western culture got over itself a little bit and stopped thinking in strictly "highbrow/classical" vs "lowbrow/everything else" terms a lot of room opened up for some really interesting work.But on a serious note, since you mention Glass and I assume you mean Philip.
Ravi Shankar and he made that album by (if I'm not mistaken) taking each other's compositions and making their own arrangements.
It's fucking phenomenal.
The bridge between raga and electronic contemporary classical music is excellent.
Bela Fleck also comes to mind... those bluegrass boys know how to blend the world of music together.
Haha if you call what describes an alley cat fight musical chops... then yes. I can belt out a few notes that would sound like that.Yea, that's some really fascinating stuff. Once Western culture got over itself a little bit and stopped thinking in strictly "highbrow/classical" vs "lowbrow/everything else" terms a lot of room opened up for some really interesting work.
Also, never really thought about this, but we give so much attention to environmental factors like temps, RH, air quality, light spectrum, etc - I wonder if the gals get any acoustic or sound/music related benefits.
Do I recall correctly that AquaMan has some musical chops?
Beckett would be post modern and joyce modern imo.Refashioning old material into new, one way or another, that's at least as typical for most of Western music as for literature. The postmoderns you mention (or whatever we're supposed to call them) have some general corollaries in composers like Charles Ives, George Antheil, and later Cage, Stockhausen, Glass, etc. Not exact parallels, but musical responses to the same general trends driving all art.
To use a weed analogy - in kind of a weird way (or maybe not that weird at all) we could think of practically anything we hear as a kind of "polyhybrid" strain of music.
An old roommate of mine from many years ago described Axl Rose's voice as sounding like a cat in heat (she was not a fan), but yea, if that's what you mean I'd call that pretty good skills!Haha if you call what describes an alley cat fight musical chops... then yes. I can belt out a few notes that would sound like that.
I think my neighbors did not mean it as a compliment lol. But they are pretty good about laughing off drunken early morning karaoke in the neighborhood and just seeing it as humorous. Probably because most have participated at some point since we have lived here.An old roommate of mine from many years ago described Axl Rose's voice as sounding like a cat in heat (she was not a fan), but yea, if that's what you mean I'd call that pretty good skills!
I know @One drop plays music for his ladies.Yea, that's some really fascinating stuff. Once Western culture got over itself a little bit and stopped thinking in strictly "highbrow/classical" vs "lowbrow/everything else" terms a lot of room opened up for some really interesting work.
Also, never really thought about this, but we give so much attention to environmental factors like temps, RH, air quality, light spectrum, etc - I wonder if the gals get any acoustic or sound/music related benefits.
Do I recall correctly that AquaMan has some musical chops?
Mine have classic fm on 24/7I know @One drop plays music for his ladies.
Yea, that's some really fascinating stuff. Once Western culture got over itself a little bit and stopped thinking in strictly "highbrow/classical" vs "lowbrow/everything else" terms a lot of room opened up for some really interesting work.
Also, never really thought about this, but we give so much attention to environmental factors like temps, RH, air quality, light spectrum, etc - I wonder if the gals get any acoustic or sound/music related benefits.
Do I recall correctly that AquaMan has some musical chops?