Wreckers Coast of Northumberland, 1834, William Turner
Size: 90.47x125.89 cm
Medium: oil, canvas
Over the past twenty years I’ve grown to like Turner’s paintings more and more and more
(via pagewoman)
Wreckers Coast of Northumberland, 1834, William Turner
Size: 90.47x125.89 cm
Medium: oil, canvas
Over the past twenty years I’ve grown to like Turner’s paintings more and more and more
(via pagewoman)
Fantastic Four #240 (1982)
Writer and Artist: John Byrne
I’m stoked for everybody else who loves or loved comics if they’re excited to see stuff like this made into movies. Genuinely for real, if it makes people happy I’m for it
for me a page like this is so sufficient and so total in itself that no rendering of it by actors & set designers & cgi teams could possibly reach this state of perfection, like to even imagine a movie capturing a tenth of what’s goin on here is a zero-confidence proposition for me
there is just no way
(via inhumansforever)
hemiparetic asked: Hey, I saw you in a show at the Cats Cradle a few years back and I vividly remember you asking the audience to turn off all their recording devices so you could sing a song that was purely for the crowd that night. Which was SUPER cool, honestly it made me feel special being there. I can’t remember a good deal of the words, but I was hoping you could respond with the lyrics? The only thing that really stuck in my mind was the line, “sometimes we mosh”
Sometimes we mosh, sometimes we stretch, sometimes we dance
sometimes we need some help getting dressed
sometimes we put on our own pants
sometimes we’re at 100%
sometimes we need to rest a little while in the tent,
but sometimes we mosh
my name is Daddy, I mosh with Roman when the day is new
if you come to say hi, we could mosh with you
but maybe it’s naptime, and we’re sound asleep
neither moshing nor dancing, just dreaming of sheep
but when we wake up, it’s on once again
fire up the boombox
turn it all the way up to 10
‘cause sometimes we mosh
sometimes we mosh
sometimes we inside skate, sometimes we outside skate
and sometimes…we mosh
Nancy by Ernie Bushmiller
♪ ♫ ♩ ♬ ♩ ♫ ♪ ♩all ye who en-ter here / abandon hope
(via donnerpartyofone)
austinnormancore asked: Is it weird if people name their artistic endeavors after something in your music, like if a band named themselves after a lyric or song title? I'm curious to know what your reaction is when you see something like that.
There’s a storied tradition of bands naming themselves after lyrics from other bands/songwriters so that’s obviously an honor. The more obscure the better imo, like in the ideal situation it’s something nobody gets and so then when somebody says “Why is your band called the Mayers and do you mean Mayors?” you could say “no It’s a Sex Gang Children song called Mauritia Mayer, go listen to it it rips” only if the Mayers got really successful I guarantee the singer ends up wishing he’d picked a more boring name because he gets tired of giving this answer especially in an age where there’s Google.
General rule “the more obvious and literal, the worse it is” applies here. If a band has a song that says “I knew the singer from Nebula Clubs,” then naming your band the Nebula Clubs is not so good, let fiction be fiction I think I’ve done this shtick here before but anyway.
(Source: profgrewbeard)
original url http://de.geocities.com/gehirntraining/
last modified 2001-12-08 16:36:19
all memes are old memes and most of them can be traced to Geocities
moogbastard asked: Do you have a favorite Shakespeare play?
I don’t have a ready answer for this, even though I’m sure I do have one - I think Lear has some of the most stunning poetry he wrote, and like all past-and-future goths I love Titus even though it’s hardly top-shelf Shakespeare next to the heavier hitters. Of the historical plays, we dug deep on I King Henry IV in college so I have fond memories of that but Richard II, which I read on my own but didn’t make a formal study of, is one I remember fondly.
Lots good to say about all the ones I’ve read, how can anybody not fiend for Hamlet, but Lear, you know…if you’re a Shakespeare person, I guarantee that if you make a practice of returning to “Blow, winds, and crack your cheeks!” every five or ten years, it’ll hit you a little harder every time. Like,
I tax not you, you elements, with unkindness.
I never gave you kingdom, call’d you children,
You owe me no subscription. Then let fall
Your horrible pleasure. Here I stand your slave,
A poor, infirm, weak, and despis’d old man.
But yet I call you servile ministers,
That will with two pernicious daughters join
Your high-engender’d battles ‘gainst a head
So old and white as this!
…the answer is King Lear.
crawltilldawn asked: that single piano note at the beginning of Lakeside View has given me so, so much peace and comfort in the times I need it most, I cannot even. please pass on my regards to whoever proposed that, I thank them profusely
Well thank you so much! The way we usually work in the studio means that that wasn’t necessarily going to happen - I lost the ability to write musical notation (I could re-learn it I’m sure but it’d be a slog) when I stopped studying piano formally when I was young, so when I play in the studio, I’m playing from my own charts, which are chord names written in sequence on the cards they use in comic-book bags. Every take’s a little different, especially as a session progress - I’ll throw in different beginnings or whatever to keep myself anchored in the moment. (I envy the steely discipline and spiritual presence of session musicians who don’t need any of this romantic hoo-hah and who just keep playing until the producers get what they want.) I think that was a third or fourth take - or possibly a revisiting of one we hadn’t been able to nail the day before - and since the song starts with unaccompanied piano & voice waiting for the band to drop in, I had leisure to start it however I wanted. So I hit that note and it just sorta went I AM HERE, LISTEN TO ME and held it & I think the vibe of it translated to Peter & Jon too (the instrumental is live, I’m pretty sure the vocal is too on that one) and we got a take we liked.
So nobody proposed it – it was spontaneous – so according to me God gets the credit but if that’s not yr deal you can credit the band for delivering such a great take that the one with the opening note got the nod!