Yes, that's you Molly, the holy reunion lover! :)
My reality of you, the stuff I knew I had to suffer under, would they go real. 

 

> Am 07.02.2014 um 01:15 schrieb Molly <[email protected]>:
> 
> Well, I loved that Jack Bruce's last line in the video of this historic Cream 
> reunion was "That's the real stuff," probably because the passion for the 
> music of these three musicians, reunited after going their own way as 
> teenagers to make music history, is obvious in this performance.  But, beauty 
> in the eye of the beholder is hard to argue.
> 
>> On Thursday, February 6, 2014 9:40:41 AM UTC-5, Gabby wrote:
>> Haven't you posted this before? Or was it Francis? I understand that this is 
>> very much the music of the stars of your time. And I understand that this is 
>> good music, like Andrew said. Yet the displayed Born Under A Bad Sign 
>> attitude cannot compete with the "I've been down so goddamn long that it 
>> looks like up to me" time span that the Doors overlooked. Absolutely 
>> timeless in respect of dealing with self-pity is Douglas Adams. Here's a 
>> reminder from his So Long, And Thanks For All The Fish:
>> "And as he drove on, the rain clouds dragged down the sky after him for, 
>> though he did not know it, Rob McKenna was a Rain God. All he knew was that 
>> his working days were miserable and he had a succession of lousy holidays. 
>> All the clouds knew was that they loved him and wanted to be near him, to 
>> cherish him and to water him."
>> 
>> 
>> 2014-02-05 Molly <[email protected]>:
>>> Here's the real stuff http://youtu.be/uEGVtbgYx2I 
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> On Tuesday, February 4, 2014 12:28:02 AM UTC-5, archytas wrote:
>>>> I had the Superbowl on last night.  I was quickly bored (Denver didn't 
>>>> turn up) and muted the broadcast whilst doing some work.  Looking up it 
>>>> was half-time.  Without the 'music' the Black-eyed Peas and others 
>>>> strutting about on stage looked utterly ludicrous, but still better than 
>>>> with sound!  I can get into, say, Beethoven's 9th and a wide range of live 
>>>> performances.  I would pay to have the vast majority of so-called music 
>>>> turned-off.  I cannot remotely understand why anyone would inflict it on 
>>>> me.  Nietzsche, an idiot if ever there was one, was swooned by military 
>>>> processions and bands.  Some people are very easily swooned, so selfish 
>>>> they can't understand annoying other people is wrong and unaware 
>>>> reasonable silence is a social demand.  Germany is very different to the 
>>>> UK in this respect - even if your kids are noisy there you are expected to 
>>>> take them out so as not to annoy your neighbours.  Harder to describe the 
>>>> soul-touching, especially as I doubt some of the annoying prats have one!  
>>>> If you can do pelvic thrusts to it I reckon it ain't music and has no soul.
>>>> 
>>>>> On Monday, 27 January 2014 07:31:18 UTC, andrew vecsey wrote:
>>>>> Why does music captivate our soul as powerfully as it does? Why is it 
>>>>> that the same music which captivates the soul of a some listeners is 
>>>>> found to be nothing more than annoying noise to other listeners? 
>>> 
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