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♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸ ♥ Music ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪

ncsistjaboy
Imagine being kiled for singing this song (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7KBo30CwctE&ab_channel=Je%C4%8Dm%C3%ADnek) real story
verucassault
Kryl – Bratříčku, zavírej vrátka Kryl wrote passionate folk songs that became popular in Czechoslovakia and throughout central Europe, despite the fact that the communist authorities had banned them. The Czech lyrics are posted below the video, courtesy of the poster of the video on YouTube and English languages lyrics are below that. The song talks about the Warsaw Pact invasion of 1968. ^^Had to look it up for reference.
verucassault
Classic strings and electronic bass. https://youtu.be/m6F28K1b3Cc
bruschettebites
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vS7X5nuvjHo This one is hard to explain...
verucassault
https://youtu.be/NgfBSTdUyKY Gleipnir and Devil Man Crybaby dredged up some serious techno fantasies in their OSTs that were vibrant in the late 90s-early 00s era.
verucassault
Sublime "made it" after the death of their lead singer. Bradley Nowell, lead singer, died on May 25, 1996. The band was most prominent in the West Coast and especially in California. Not many had access to the internet in their households so news didn't spread around quite as fast. MTV? Sure, but not every household had easy access to cable television. Just thinking back on it there was an entire generation of teenagers that were eagerly awaiting the band's next album only to find out EVENTUALLY the lead singer had died before their last few singles came out. "What I Got" Released July 23, 1996 "Santeria" Released January 7, 1997. "Wrong Way" Released May 25, 1997 on the 1 year anniversary of Bradley's death. "Doin' Time" Released November 25, 1997 I swear it took about 2 years for the news to get around the rest of the US that he died.
mrkingofspades
@verucassault Sublime was a big part of my childhood (other than the drug influences). It's weird here, though. Being from a city in Cali and listening to Sublime all the time, then moving to the mountains and having no one know who the hell Sublime was, was definitely weird. I swear to god, after my entrance into a mountain middle school, I turned half those kids onto Sublime. After me introducing their music to those damn kids in school, I started seeing too many Sublime shirts/sweatshirts the next year. Still think Right Back, Don't Push, and 5446/Ball and Chain are my favs of their songs.
verucassault
@mrkingofspades I knew that last album took a lot of time because of the drugs and rehab. But I swear no one in the Midwest knew who they were until he had already died.
mrkingofspades
@verucassault Definitely. They weren't a very big band outside of California cities even, at least not until well after Bradley died. I think it wasn't until the mid-late 2000's that I noticed their popularity growth.
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