Davide82
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mcjules wrote:Davide82 wrote:AzzaMarch wrote:I think what gets lost in the mists of time is how different Nirvana was from any other band out there (at least within popular music).
They were to hair metal what punk was to classic rock in the 1970s - rock music completely stripped down to its core basic elements.
We live in an era now where music genres are so fragmented, and all genres are equally accessible. It is easy to forget how much less variety of easily accessible commercial music there was out there back in the 1990s.
Nirvana was important not specifically for all the music in and of itself, but for how they just totally re-defined the rock music scene (along with other bands of course). So they are important for what they represent, rather than just the music they made. I like you. No need for me to write my thoughts now. Are they still on regular circulation though on your listening device of choice? I certainly don't hate their music (and was obsessed with them in the early 90s) and if I hear them playing somewhere I'll still dig it but I find that I have to be in a certain mood to actively seek their music these days. Yep. They are still on a semi-regular rotation but I do agree it usually coincides with a certain mood or at the very least I do go months without listening but when I put some on I remember why I loved it and tend to thrash it for a week or so
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mcjules
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Davide82 wrote:mcjules wrote:Davide82 wrote:AzzaMarch wrote:I think what gets lost in the mists of time is how different Nirvana was from any other band out there (at least within popular music).
They were to hair metal what punk was to classic rock in the 1970s - rock music completely stripped down to its core basic elements.
We live in an era now where music genres are so fragmented, and all genres are equally accessible. It is easy to forget how much less variety of easily accessible commercial music there was out there back in the 1990s.
Nirvana was important not specifically for all the music in and of itself, but for how they just totally re-defined the rock music scene (along with other bands of course). So they are important for what they represent, rather than just the music they made. I like you. No need for me to write my thoughts now. Are they still on regular circulation though on your listening device of choice? I certainly don't hate their music (and was obsessed with them in the early 90s) and if I hear them playing somewhere I'll still dig it but I find that I have to be in a certain mood to actively seek their music these days. Yep. They are still on a semi-regular rotation but I do agree it usually coincides with a certain mood or at the very least I do go months without listening but when I put some on I remember why I loved it and tend to thrash it for a week or so I have to admit that all this Nirvana talk has put me in the mood :lol:
Insert Gertjan Verbeek gifs here
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Jong Gabe
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Heineken wrote:Pokemon is shit.
Grown men who play Pokemon are sad. Kys
E
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Davide82
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mcjules wrote:Davide82 wrote:mcjules wrote:Davide82 wrote:AzzaMarch wrote:I think what gets lost in the mists of time is how different Nirvana was from any other band out there (at least within popular music).
They were to hair metal what punk was to classic rock in the 1970s - rock music completely stripped down to its core basic elements.
We live in an era now where music genres are so fragmented, and all genres are equally accessible. It is easy to forget how much less variety of easily accessible commercial music there was out there back in the 1990s.
Nirvana was important not specifically for all the music in and of itself, but for how they just totally re-defined the rock music scene (along with other bands of course). So they are important for what they represent, rather than just the music they made. I like you. No need for me to write my thoughts now. Are they still on regular circulation though on your listening device of choice? I certainly don't hate their music (and was obsessed with them in the early 90s) and if I hear them playing somewhere I'll still dig it but I find that I have to be in a certain mood to actively seek their music these days. Yep. They are still on a semi-regular rotation but I do agree it usually coincides with a certain mood or at the very least I do go months without listening but when I put some on I remember why I loved it and tend to thrash it for a week or so I have to admit that all this Nirvana talk has put me in the mood :lol: :lol: Get the feeling it will be on in my car at around 5:10pm tonight
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Heineken
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"9GABmeme420" wrote:Heineken wrote:Pokemon is shit.
Grown men who play Pokemon are sad. Kys
WOLLONGONG WOLVES FOR A-LEAGUE EXPANSION!

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Jong Gabe
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Heineken wrote:"9GABmeme420" wrote:Heineken wrote:Pokemon is shit.
Grown men who play Pokemon are sad. Kys 
E
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Milhouse_Gumble
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The Srebrenica massacre was a Black Op carried out by the Croatians with assistance from the Israeli Mossad to further their goal of a Greater Croatian Empire.
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BETHFC
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Milhouse_Gumble wrote:The Srebrenica massacre was a Black Op carried out by the Croatians with assistance from the Israeli Mossad to further their goal of a Greater Croatian Empire. Nice to see you Ricey :lol:
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Milhouse_Gumble
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Heineken wrote:Pokemon is shit.
Grown men who play Pokemon are sad. Said no one ever \:d/
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AzzaMarch
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mcjules wrote:Davide82 wrote:mcjules wrote:Davide82 wrote:AzzaMarch wrote:I think what gets lost in the mists of time is how different Nirvana was from any other band out there (at least within popular music).
They were to hair metal what punk was to classic rock in the 1970s - rock music completely stripped down to its core basic elements.
We live in an era now where music genres are so fragmented, and all genres are equally accessible. It is easy to forget how much less variety of easily accessible commercial music there was out there back in the 1990s.
Nirvana was important not specifically for all the music in and of itself, but for how they just totally re-defined the rock music scene (along with other bands of course). So they are important for what they represent, rather than just the music they made. I like you. No need for me to write my thoughts now. Are they still on regular circulation though on your listening device of choice? I certainly don't hate their music (and was obsessed with them in the early 90s) and if I hear them playing somewhere I'll still dig it but I find that I have to be in a certain mood to actively seek their music these days. Yep. They are still on a semi-regular rotation but I do agree it usually coincides with a certain mood or at the very least I do go months without listening but when I put some on I remember why I loved it and tend to thrash it for a week or so I have to admit that all this Nirvana talk has put me in the mood :lol: Definitely need to be in the mood. But that is what is so good about the existence of services like Spotify or Apple Music - when the mood strikes.... But I do consciously try to listen to newer music as much as I can - nothing worse than being that old dude who hates everything made in the last 20 years!
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AzzaMarch
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Unpopular Opinion:
A hung parliament is actually a great thing.
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Davide82
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AzzaMarch wrote:mcjules wrote:Davide82 wrote:mcjules wrote:Davide82 wrote:AzzaMarch wrote:I think what gets lost in the mists of time is how different Nirvana was from any other band out there (at least within popular music).
They were to hair metal what punk was to classic rock in the 1970s - rock music completely stripped down to its core basic elements.
We live in an era now where music genres are so fragmented, and all genres are equally accessible. It is easy to forget how much less variety of easily accessible commercial music there was out there back in the 1990s.
Nirvana was important not specifically for all the music in and of itself, but for how they just totally re-defined the rock music scene (along with other bands of course). So they are important for what they represent, rather than just the music they made. I like you. No need for me to write my thoughts now. Are they still on regular circulation though on your listening device of choice? I certainly don't hate their music (and was obsessed with them in the early 90s) and if I hear them playing somewhere I'll still dig it but I find that I have to be in a certain mood to actively seek their music these days. Yep. They are still on a semi-regular rotation but I do agree it usually coincides with a certain mood or at the very least I do go months without listening but when I put some on I remember why I loved it and tend to thrash it for a week or so I have to admit that all this Nirvana talk has put me in the mood :lol: Definitely need to be in the mood. But that is what is so good about the existence of services like Spotify or Apple Music - when the mood strikes.... But I do consciously try to listen to newer music as much as I can - nothing worse than being that old dude who hates everything made in the last 20 years! Confession - I was like that by 20 years old aha I have a friend who fills me in on bands I need to hear so I'm not completely out of the loop I'm one of those where nearly everything I listened to growing up and to this day was made before I was even born. Probably more to do with laziness really now I think about it. Keeping up with new bands and trends takes a bit of effort whereas music that has been made a long time ago is just sitting there waiting for you to find at your own leisure Hmmm that doesn't make a great deal of sense. I'll work on that theory. Edited by davide82: 7/7/2016 05:01:15 PM
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mcjules
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Davide82 wrote:AzzaMarch wrote:mcjules wrote:Davide82 wrote:mcjules wrote:Davide82 wrote:AzzaMarch wrote:I think what gets lost in the mists of time is how different Nirvana was from any other band out there (at least within popular music).
They were to hair metal what punk was to classic rock in the 1970s - rock music completely stripped down to its core basic elements.
We live in an era now where music genres are so fragmented, and all genres are equally accessible. It is easy to forget how much less variety of easily accessible commercial music there was out there back in the 1990s.
Nirvana was important not specifically for all the music in and of itself, but for how they just totally re-defined the rock music scene (along with other bands of course). So they are important for what they represent, rather than just the music they made. I like you. No need for me to write my thoughts now. Are they still on regular circulation though on your listening device of choice? I certainly don't hate their music (and was obsessed with them in the early 90s) and if I hear them playing somewhere I'll still dig it but I find that I have to be in a certain mood to actively seek their music these days. Yep. They are still on a semi-regular rotation but I do agree it usually coincides with a certain mood or at the very least I do go months without listening but when I put some on I remember why I loved it and tend to thrash it for a week or so I have to admit that all this Nirvana talk has put me in the mood :lol: Definitely need to be in the mood. But that is what is so good about the existence of services like Spotify or Apple Music - when the mood strikes.... But I do consciously try to listen to newer music as much as I can - nothing worse than being that old dude who hates everything made in the last 20 years! Confession - I was like that by 20 years old aha I have a friend who fills me in on bands I need to hear so I'm not completely out of the loop I'm one of those where nearly everything I listened to growing up and to this day was made before I was even born. Probably more to do with laziness really now I think about it. Keeping up with new bands and trends takes a bit of effort whereas music that has been made a long time ago is just sitting there waiting for you to find at your own leisure Hmmm that doesn't make a great deal of sense. I'll work on that theory. Edited by davide82: 7/7/2016 05:01:15 PM I'll listen to new music of bands that I already like otherwise I've almost completely lapsed into "dad mode" :lol:
Insert Gertjan Verbeek gifs here
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paulbagzFC
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BETHFC wrote:Milhouse_Gumble wrote:The Srebrenica massacre was a Black Op carried out by the Croatians with assistance from the Israeli Mossad to further their goal of a Greater Croatian Empire. Nice to see you Ricey :lol: Aikhme hasn't posted since Monday... -PB
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Milhouse_Gumble
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paulbagzFC wrote:BETHFC wrote:Milhouse_Gumble wrote:The Srebrenica massacre was a Black Op carried out by the Croatians with assistance from the Israeli Mossad to further their goal of a Greater Croatian Empire. Nice to see you Ricey :lol: Aikhme hasn't posted since Monday... -PB Interesting fact: The Yugoslavian War was an expansionist campaign by the Croatians to establish the Greater Croatian Empire. Many of the "atrocities" were Black Ops carried out by the Israeli Mossad while the Pakistani ISI helped in the funding and money laundering for these activites.
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paulbagzFC
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Milhouse_Gumble wrote:paulbagzFC wrote:BETHFC wrote:Milhouse_Gumble wrote:The Srebrenica massacre was a Black Op carried out by the Croatians with assistance from the Israeli Mossad to further their goal of a Greater Croatian Empire. Nice to see you Ricey :lol: Aikhme hasn't posted since Monday... -PB Interesting fact: The Yugoslavian War was an expansionist campaign by the Croatians to establish the Greater Croatian Empire. Many of the "atrocities" were Black Ops carried out by the Israeli Mossad while the Pakistani ISI helped in the funding and money laundering for these activites. Yeah so why make this account? -PB
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AzzaMarch
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Milhouse_Gumble wrote:paulbagzFC wrote:BETHFC wrote:Milhouse_Gumble wrote:The Srebrenica massacre was a Black Op carried out by the Croatians with assistance from the Israeli Mossad to further their goal of a Greater Croatian Empire. Nice to see you Ricey :lol: Aikhme hasn't posted since Monday... -PB Interesting fact: The Yugoslavian War was an expansionist campaign by the Croatians to establish the Greater Croatian Empire. Many of the "atrocities" were Black Ops carried out by the Israeli Mossad while the Pakistani ISI helped in the funding and money laundering for these activites. Still trying to get people to take the bait? You need to be a bit more subtle if you want to be a successful troll.
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Milhouse_Gumble
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AzzaMarch wrote:Milhouse_Gumble wrote:paulbagzFC wrote:BETHFC wrote:Milhouse_Gumble wrote:The Srebrenica massacre was a Black Op carried out by the Croatians with assistance from the Israeli Mossad to further their goal of a Greater Croatian Empire. Nice to see you Ricey :lol: Aikhme hasn't posted since Monday... -PB Interesting fact: The Yugoslavian War was an expansionist campaign by the Croatians to establish the Greater Croatian Empire. Many of the "atrocities" were Black Ops carried out by the Israeli Mossad while the Pakistani ISI helped in the funding and money laundering for these activites. Still trying to get people to take the bait? You need to be a bit more subtle if you want to be a successful troll. I'm not trolling. I'm just a simple guy trying to get the truth out to the masses.
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aussie scott21
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The Sydney people (not all NSW/QLD) people who give so much shit to AUstralian football should be reminded nobody knows the sport of RL (except colonies etc). People know of Australian football and Rugby.., but no one has ever heard of RL.
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paladisious
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Milhouse_Gumble wrote:AzzaMarch wrote:Milhouse_Gumble wrote:paulbagzFC wrote:BETHFC wrote:Milhouse_Gumble wrote:The Srebrenica massacre was a Black Op carried out by the Croatians with assistance from the Israeli Mossad to further their goal of a Greater Croatian Empire. Nice to see you Ricey :lol: Aikhme hasn't posted since Monday... -PB Interesting fact: The Yugoslavian War was an expansionist campaign by the Croatians to establish the Greater Croatian Empire. Many of the "atrocities" were Black Ops carried out by the Israeli Mossad while the Pakistani ISI helped in the funding and money laundering for these activites. Still trying to get people to take the bait? You need to be a bit more subtle if you want to be a successful troll. I'm not trolling. I'm just a simple guy trying to get the truth out to the masses. Shit multi.
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paulbagzFC
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Milhouse_Gumble wrote:AzzaMarch wrote:Milhouse_Gumble wrote:paulbagzFC wrote:BETHFC wrote:Milhouse_Gumble wrote:The Srebrenica massacre was a Black Op carried out by the Croatians with assistance from the Israeli Mossad to further their goal of a Greater Croatian Empire. Nice to see you Ricey :lol: Aikhme hasn't posted since Monday... -PB Interesting fact: The Yugoslavian War was an expansionist campaign by the Croatians to establish the Greater Croatian Empire. Many of the "atrocities" were Black Ops carried out by the Israeli Mossad while the Pakistani ISI helped in the funding and money laundering for these activites. Still trying to get people to take the bait? You need to be a bit more subtle if you want to be a successful troll. I'm not trolling. I'm just a simple guy trying to get the truth out to the masses. That is literally the same thing you said on every other multi lol. -PB
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Condemned666
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paulbagzFC wrote: WGMG: The generic "we must stand together and unify with the power of love against this hate, against these actions" etc etc after XYZ tragedy.
Has popped up with Orlando and now with Jo Cox.
I'm sorry, but they're just words. Getting your mug on telly and going on about shit like that and changing your facebook picture to a rainbow flag isn't going to stop some wackjob from shooting up a place.
They're just words.
-PB
≠ #Black Lives Matter ≠ #All Lives Matter = #No Lives Matter Edited by condemned666: 10/7/2016 10:17:30 AM
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AzzaMarch
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Whilst most of the people who do those things mean well, it is more about broadcasting to the world how they feel, and making themselves feel good, rather than doing anything practical.
That is the problem with the takeover of politics by the culture wars and identity politics.
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Condemned666
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UO
All this pokemon talk is the youth seeking escapism from the reality of the return of a conservative government
There is no "new horizon" or utopia or hope from the election result
Pokemon!
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Carlito
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Wow just wow. And i thought that the creators of the game made it to get americans to stop thinking about the government. :lol: deluded much
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Aljay
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The distance derby is not a friggin derby
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pv4
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Condemned666 wrote:UO
All this pokemon talk is the youth seeking escapism from the reality of the return of a conservative government
There is no "new horizon" or utopia or hope from the election result
Pokemon! :lol: That's probably the exact reason we were all glued to our gameboy screens when we were 7 years old aswell.
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Condemned666
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Unpopular Opinion
Places like China saying 'Its a Western perspective' whenever it comes to an argument with regards to something/ anything, eg the control of those waters and the fake islands made by China
Its not just that either
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Toughlove
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Condemned666 wrote:Unpopular Opinion
Places like China saying 'Its a Western perspective' whenever it comes to an argument with regards to something/ anything, eg the control of those waters and the fake islands made by China
Its not just that either In the same vein. Unpopular (and no doubt controversial) opinion. Asians, in general, don't give a rat's arse for the environment. (Japan and Singapore excluded. Maybe South Korea but I haven't visited there yet.)
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Roar #1
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Toughlove wrote:Condemned666 wrote:Unpopular Opinion
Places like China saying 'Its a Western perspective' whenever it comes to an argument with regards to something/ anything, eg the control of those waters and the fake islands made by China
Its not just that either In the same vein. Unpopular (and no doubt controversial) opinion. Asians, in general, don't give a rat's arse for the environment. (Japan and Singapore excluded. Maybe South Korea but I haven't visited there yet.) I feel like caring about the environment is a 1st world thing to do.
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