bulletproof
8.4K posts

bulletproof
@bulletproof2432
#Dadx2 #America #ProfessionalObserver #Raconteur #ProfessionalSkeptic #Coffee #BeerSnob #NoDMs #NoBots #FollowedBy @GuntherEagleman and @HunterEagleman
Missouri, USA Katılım Nisan 2021
6.2K Takip Edilen5.9K Takipçiler

Who is your all-time favorite comedian?
Even if they are not in this lineup, Pryor, Carlin, Robin Williams, Eddie Murphy, Chappelle, Chris Rock, Rodney Dangerfield, Joan Rivers, or someone else entirely.
Drop the name you think belongs on the Mount Rushmore of comedy.
Who made or makes you laugh the hardest, and why?

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Spotify says these were 10 of the top songs from the 1970s… and this list feels like a perfect snapshot of how all over the map the 70s really were.
You’ve got Motown, folk, swamp rock, pop, and The Beatles all sitting next to each other on the same list.
Do you have any of these on your playlist?

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@Hot_Pepper76 Monsters of Rock tour, 1988 at Arrowhead Stadium. Kingdom Come, Dokken, Metallica, The Scorpions, and Van Halen. Nine hours of in your face rock and roll.
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"Closer to the Heart" by Rush sounds like it could be a love song at first, but the message goes a little deeper.
Neil Peart wrote it around ideas of responsibility, wisdom, and people working together to make the world better.
Released in 1977, it became one of Rush’s first songs to really break through on FM radio.
One thing many fans may not know:
The song includes a co-writing credit from Peter Talbot, a friend of Peart’s, making it one of the few Rush songs ever co-written by someone outside the band.
That is a pretty strong message packed into a short song.
Is this one on your playlist?
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One of the most uplifting rock songs of the early 70s came from a band formed after The Zombies broke up.
But did you know "Hold Your Head Up" was built around themes of confidence, perseverance, and resilience?
"Hold Your Head Up" was recorded by Argent, led by Rod Argent, the same musician behind "She’s Not There," "Tell Her No," and "Time of the Season."
Released in 1971, it became Argent’s biggest hit and turned into an anthem about standing tall and refusing to let the world drag you down.
Skip or listen to this one?
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@warthanwarthan @RadioGenoa Charge that filth as an adult and put it away for years. Attempted murder along with other charges.
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"Kashmir" was never about Kashmir.
Robert Plant wrote the lyrics after a long drive through the endless deserts of southern Morocco in 1973. No mountains, no Himalayas, just barren roads and vast emptiness that stretched forever.
That feeling of isolation and scale inspired the song’s mood.
The band chose the title "Kashmir" simply because it sounded mystical and distant enough.
Plant called it "Perfect Zeppelin," the moment the band reached its full power and maturity.
Even after growing tired of "Stairway," he never lost respect for this one.
The song everyone assumes is about a place was really about a feeling.
Listen, skip, or are you burned out on it? ⬇️
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Who's the GOAT in your book?
I did not know who Neil Peart or John Bonham were until last year.
I did not know what bands they played for or why rock fans still argue about them, so go easy on me here.
Better late than never, right?
What I learned pretty fast is that this debate is not just about drumming.
Peart was precision, complexity, and technical brilliance.
Bonham was power, groove, and pure rock energy.
One played like a master engineer.
The other sounded like thunder rolling through an arena.
Did I get them right, or am I about to get schooled by the real drummer fans?

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