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Nighthawk

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Everything posted by Nighthawk

  1. He's not really rapping over it though, it's just part of the soundscape.
  2. You don't do drugs, man. You're not fooling anybody.
  3. Nighthawk

    Dids

    Good riddance indeed!
  4. Nighthawk

    Dids

    Hey subliminal animal, I'm here to ruin your insult thread with put downs.
  5. A censored version of an album will only be released if it carries a parental advisory, which it won't if there's only a few instances of profanity. I don't listen to either of those bands, so I don't know, but maybe that's why. That is good though, I buy cds there all the time (as long as they don't need to be censored) because they have a lot of stuff for under $10. Adding the whole collection would of course be better.
  6. Not religions, just denominations. Lutherans are Protestant, of course, being named after the one doing the protesting, but pretty mainline. They do believe in a corporal presence. Transubstantiation is something you'll find in some protestant denominations and not others.
  7. You know, Ice Ice Baby wasn't really a bad use of Under Pressure, I think you just don't like the song. As a sampling introspection, Ice Cube's "Jackin For Beats" was pretty cool, particularly the part over the Humpty Dance. They're no Paul's Boutique or the first few Public Enemy albums for that matter, but if anybody's listened to the early Esham albums (pre Closed Casket) they're beautiful examples of the art. Shame the laws put a stop to those kinds of albums. He came back to it though, on Mail Dominance, only sampling pubic domain that time.
  8. Nighthawk

    Eminem's New Song

    Wait a minute... 2Pac wasn't the greatest of all time.
  9. Perhaps, but I'm utterly convinced that Christ is not present in the host. The very fact that this is a recognized pagan custom, which predated Christ and existed in the Americas for probably thousands of years without Christian influence, attests to such a fact. Everything said scripturally regarding the communion indicates symbolism. The fact that the idea of transubstantiation didn't exist in Christianity for hundreds of years after Christ's death. The fact that God forbid idolatry even when the idol represented him leads me to believe he would not present himself physically in a wafer. This is black and white to me, but there's grey areas of Catholicism also. Like, the whole church is peppered with the idea of earning God's love. It's one thing to say that if you sin, you lose your salvation, which I would disagree with, but for Catholics to go hardline and give you a laundry list of things to do to gain and keep salvation, and then when you die have to work off more sin, it flies in the face of the entire biblical model of grace. Even if the Catholic church were a true church, the works system would poison it to the point of impotency. For example, the Anglican Church. Truly christian, probably, but absolutely dead and ineffectual. Southern Baptists, probably true Christians, but doing more harm to the work of Jesus than good in my opinion. Pentacostal, true Christians for the most part, but a feeble and even confused church. At best, Catholicism belongs with ones such as these. As for Revelation, I really have no way of knowing. Much of fulfilled Biblical prophecy was quite abstract, and some was ridiculously literal. Until it happens, there's not really a way to know what the balance is. By the way, Sp, I'd take a look at that if you posted it.
  10. Well, I actually meant to say electric guitar, but point taken. RJ and Blind Lemon are of the old school (gods of the old school really), and I generally find all old school blues to be superior to new school. T-Bone was more of a direct influence on BB though, so here's where he gets mentioned. While I'm here, take these names as well: Son House, Blind Willie McTell, Charley Patton, and Son House again.
  11. Those are two really great albums.
  12. Well, for one, having ribs removed wouldn't make it easier to suck your own dick, it would just make it harder to breath. If you wanted to suck your dick, you'd have to have your spine lengthened.
  13. I believe so. I know he used to tour real heavy and he slowed down with age some, but he still gets around. He did that Burger King commercial a while back "BK and BB's got something for you..." I actually thought it was pretty cool. By the way, Ced, if you really haven't been exposed to blues at all, prepare yourself, it will be almost as if you've never listened to music before. You've got that much ground to cover. I love blues, it'd be nice to have some other fans around here to discuss with. Prewar blues I especially enjoy.
  14. You guys are cool, but you'd be cooler if you were black.
  15. Am I to presume you've been engaging in this thread without even having read the book? I don't feel so bad about making you look bad then. Well, Revelation is a book of prophecy regarding the end of the world, sometimes called an Apocalypse. It was written around AD 90 by the Apostle John, at least that's the traditional view, there has been some debate as to it's true authorship. Basically many bad things happen. Most of the population of the Earth is killed, those who remain have to hide in caves and so forth. The seas become blood, the sun turns black, you get the idea. There's a war, Armageddon, with all of the armies converging on Israel, at the valley of Megiddo (a real place, Napoleon said it was the greatest place to fight a battle he'd seen). A third of the population is killed and blood fills the streets. Lots of other stuff which doesn't necesarily relate to your question. Anyway, the wars and destruction as described were largely beyond the means of reality at the time it was written, but with modern nuclear weapons and so forth it becomes all too real. At the height of this terror, it says Jesus will return to Earth and rule for 1000 years, after which he will unleash Satan for one last battle. Satan is defeated and God uncreates the universe. That's the gist of it.
  16. Excuse me, is this the line to get the beer, or the line to get the tickets to get the beer?
  17. Well... God hasn't created anything that can destroy the universe. If you're just talking about destroying humanity, or life on Earth, read the book of Revelation.
  18. I don't know, faggot.
  19. Change my name to IDrinkRatsMilk the Baptist.
  20. I didn't even tell you how long I lived there. I would expect myelf to remember it. Also, break out the mountain oysters, ya hillbilly.
  21. Yes, but could you word it less clumsily?
  22. Incongruity between what might be expected and what actually occurs.
  23. He's got like 100 albums, so don't expect to be a completist unless you've got a lot of time and money. B.B. King has always said one of his main influences as a guitar player was T-Bone Walker, and really I'd say he's a slightly better guitarist, so I'm gonna say try him out. He was the blues first real guitar virtuoso, and all blues electric guitar goes back to him one way or another.
  24. All of them except Alaska. Oregon's my favorite, inronically I was born there, ironic because I don't remember being there the first time, only my second trip years later.
  25. I think you're alright, because I will read some of those books you mentioned, and your other thread gave me some albums to listen to. I'd disagree with 120 Days of Sodom though. He tries way too hard and it comes off funnier than anything else (excpet tedious, some would say, but I don't think so). I still love it, though it's my least favorite of Sade's full lengths. The Blue Yonder, by William Vollman and appearing in The Rainbow Stories is rather... well, it definitely deserves mention here, we'll leave it at that,
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