JFK Assassination Forum
JFK Assassination Plus General Discussion & Debate => JFK Assassination Plus General Discussion And Debate => Topic started by: Jim Brunsman on May 30, 2020, 02:50:39 PM
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Wondering if anyone has suggestions for ominous background music. Back in 1975, when I was doing JFK research, I found that Robin Trower's "Bridge of Sighs," and "For Earth Below" provided an interesting and dark musical backdrop. Now I prefer instrumental music when reading. Some spooky albums include "Body Complex" by Heathered Pearls, "Yiajali" by Syntaks, "Departure Songs" by Hammock, "Tomorrow's Harvest" by Boards of Canada, and all of the Kiasmos records...
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Wondering if anyone has suggestions for ominous background music. Back in 1975, when I was doing JFK research, I found that Robin Trower's "Bridge of Sighs," and "For Earth Below" provided an interesting and dark musical backdrop. Now I prefer instrumental music when reading. Some spooky albums include "Body Complex" by Heathered Pearls, "Yiajali" by Syntaks, "Departure Songs" by Hammock, "Tomorrow's Harvest" by Boards of Canada, and all of the Kiasmos records...
Anything by Rimsky-Korsakov or Pussy Riot.
-- MWT ;)
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Wow, that was an incredibly irrelevant and disturbing reaction to a really benign post. Do you have a mental health issue? Please seek treatment...
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Wow, that was an incredibly irrelevant and disturbing reaction to a really benign post. Do you have a mental health issue? Please seek treatment...
Wow.
Not familiar with Pussy Riot, James?
They've been protesting against the "KGB"- dominated regime cherished by so many of you anti-CIA CTers for a long time now.
What better music to listen to when reading Jumbo Duh's or Morley's or Peter Dale Scott's anti-American tracts?
Or, speaking of Jumbo Duh, how about "Loser" by The Grateful Dead!
"Crossroads" by Robert Johnson?
After all, it's Faustian in outlook.
-- MWT ;)
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I was referring to Jerry Organ's reply...
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I was referring to Jerry Organ's reply...
Dang, that reminds me of when I stood on the same balcony he stood on in Slavkov u Brna while giving his "The Sun of Austerlitz" speech to his troops, and on the 4th century Heruli burial mound at Zuran where he'd made his most critical command decisions the morning before.
-- MWT ;)
PS I say! -- That gives me a great idea!
Why not listen to the 1812 Overture, over and over and over again?