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  1. #111
    Professional Poster Jackal's Avatar
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    Default Re: Classical Music, Poetry and stuff

    Quote Originally Posted by Prospero View Post
    The key thing about the surrealist movement was their potential to cause disquiet - and for the most part familiarity has made that impossible.
    Who is this?


    Reminds me of Magritte





  2. #112
    Platinum Poster robertlouis's Avatar
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    Default Re: Classical Music, Poetry and stuff

    Quote Originally Posted by Jackal View Post
    Who is this?


    Reminds me of Magritte


    Almost certainly Lady Gaga LOL.


    But pleasures are like poppies spread
    You seize the flow'r, the bloom is shed

  3. #113
    Professional Poster Jackal's Avatar
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    Default Re: Classical Music, Poetry and stuff

    Quote Originally Posted by robertlouis View Post
    Almost certainly Lady Gaga LOL.
    Lady Gaga is to Rene Magritte as Ed Wood is to Orson Welles.



  4. #114
    Platinum Poster robertlouis's Avatar
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    Default Re: Classical Music, Poetry and stuff

    Quote Originally Posted by Jackal View Post
    Lady Gaga is to Rene Magritte as Ed Wood is to Orson Welles.
    Agreed but I couldn't resist.

    Ah Ed Wood, Plan Nine from Outer Space.

    They don't make 'em like that any more.

    Thank God.
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    But pleasures are like poppies spread
    You seize the flow'r, the bloom is shed

  5. #115
    Square peg, round hole Professional Poster iamdrgonzo's Avatar
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    Default Re: Classical Music, Poetry and stuff

    Gaston Vinas:

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    The Edge... there is no honest way to explain it because the only people who really know where it is are the ones who have gone over.
    Hunter S. Thompson

  6. #116
    Square peg, round hole Professional Poster iamdrgonzo's Avatar
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    Default Re: Classical Music, Poetry and stuff

    More Gaston:






    The Edge... there is no honest way to explain it because the only people who really know where it is are the ones who have gone over.
    Hunter S. Thompson

  7. #117
    Square peg, round hole Professional Poster iamdrgonzo's Avatar
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    Default Re: Classical Music, Poetry and stuff

    "You've got to be taught
    To hate and fear,
    You've got to be taught
    From year to year,
    It's got to be drummed
    In your dear little ear
    You've got to be carefully taught. You've got to be taught to be afraid
    Of people whose eyes are oddly made,
    And people whose skin is a diff'rent shade,
    You've got to be carefully taught.
    You've got to be taught before it's too late,
    Before you are six or seven or eight,
    To hate all the people your relatives hate,
    You've got to be carefully taught!"

    -- South Pacific, Rogers & Hammerstien


    The Edge... there is no honest way to explain it because the only people who really know where it is are the ones who have gone over.
    Hunter S. Thompson

  8. #118
    Veteran Poster joeninety's Avatar
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    Default Re: Classical Music, Poetry and stuff

    Check me out Evie i'm flying as high as a bird


    Evie this bad boys just for you, and good luck with everything xxx

  9. #119
    Junior Poster StlyeMeCunty's Avatar
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    Default Re: Classical Music, Poetry and stuff

    HMMMMMM WELLL! I am a BIG ASS ARTSY FARTSY TYPE! I know I'll be posting a lot here!
    Here is a clip of the amazing Linda Eder's rendition to a popular song from "Man of LaMancha.


    Last edited by StlyeMeCunty; 07-01-2011 at 12:32 AM.

  10. #120
    Professional Poster maaarc's Avatar
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    Default Re: Classical Music, Poetry and stuff

    always enjoyed Charles Baudelaire

    Les Phares

    Rubens, fleuve d'oubli, jardin de la paresse,
    Oreiller de chair fraîche où l'on ne peut aimer,
    Mais où la vie afflue et s'agite sans cesse,
    Comme l'air dans le ciel et la mer dans la mer;

    Léonard de Vinci, miroir profond et sombre,
    Où des anges charmants, avec un doux souris
    Tout chargé de mystère, apparaissent à l'ombre
    Des glaciers et des pins qui ferment leur pays;

    Rembrandt, triste hôpital tout rempli de murmures,
    Et d'un grand crucifix décoré seulement,
    Où la prière en pleurs s'exhale des ordures,
    Et d'un rayon d'hiver traversé brusquement;

    Michel-Ange, lieu vague où l'on voit des Hercules
    Se mêler à des Christs, et se lever tout droits
    Des fantômes puissants qui dans les crépuscules
    Déchirent leur suaire en étirant leurs doigts;

    Colères de boxeur, impudences de faune,
    Toi qui sus ramasser la beauté des goujats,
    Grand coeur gonflé d'orgueil, homme débile et jaune,
    Puget, mélancolique empereur des forçats;

    Watteau, ce carnaval où bien des coeurs illustres,
    Comme des papillons, errent en flamboyant,
    Décors frais et légers éclairés par des lustres
    Qui versent la folie à ce bal tournoyant;

    Goya, cauchemar plein de choses inconnues,
    De foetus qu'on fait cuire au milieu des sabbats,
    De vieilles au miroir et d'enfants toutes nues,
    Pour tenter les démons ajustant bien leurs bas;

    Delacroix, lac de sang hanté des mauvais anges,
    Ombragé par un bois de sapins toujours vert,
    Où, sous un ciel chagrin, des fanfares étranges
    Passent, comme un soupir étouffé de Weber;

    Ces malédictions, ces blasphèmes, ces plaintes,
    Ces extases, ces cris, ces pleurs, ces Te Deum,
    Sont un écho redit par mille labyrinthes;
    C'est pour les coeurs mortels un divin opium!

    C'est un cri répété par mille sentinelles,
    Un ordre renvoyé par mille porte-voix;
    C'est un phare allumé sur mille citadelles,
    Un appel de chasseurs perdus dans les grands bois!

    Car c'est vraiment, Seigneur, le meilleur témoignage
    Que nous puissions donner de notre dignité
    Que cet ardent sanglot qui roule d'âge en âge
    Et vient mourir au bord de votre éternité!

    — Charles Baudelaire

    The Beacons

    Rubens, river of oblivion, garden of indolence,
    Pillow of cool flesh where one cannot love,
    But where life moves and whirls incessantly
    Like the air in the sky and the tide in the sea;

    Leonardo, dark, unfathomable mirror,
    In which charming angels, with sweet smiles
    Full of mystery, appear in the shadow
    Of the glaciers and pines that enclose their country;

    Rembrandt, gloomy hospital filled with murmuring,
    Ornamented only with a large crucifix,
    Lit for a moment by a wintry sun,
    Where from rot and ordure rise tearful prayers;

    Angelo, shadowy place where Hercules' are seen
    Mingling with Christs, and rising straight up,
    Powerful phantoms, which in the twilights
    Rend their winding-sheets with outstretched fingers;

    Boxer's wrath, shamelessness of Fauns, you whose genius
    Showed to us the beauty in a villain,
    Great heart filled with pride, sickly, yellow man,
    Puget, melancholy emperor of galley slaves;

    Watteau, carnival where the loves of many famous hearts
    Flutter capriciously like butterflies with gaudy wings;
    Cool, airy settings where the candelabras' light
    Touches with madness the couples whirling in the dance

    Goya, nightmare full of unknown things,
    Of fetuses roasted in the midst of witches' sabbaths,
    Of old women at the mirror and of nude children,
    Tightening their hose to tempt the demons;

    Delacroix, lake of blood haunted by bad angels,
    Shaded by a wood of fir-trees, ever green,
    Where, under a gloomy sky, strange fanfares
    Pass, like a stifled sigh from Weber;

    These curses, these blasphemies, these lamentations,
    These Te Deums, these ecstasies, these cries, these tears,
    Are an echo repeated by a thousand labyrinths;
    They are for mortal hearts a divine opium.

    They are a cry passed on by a thousand sentinels,
    An order re-echoed through a thousand megaphones;
    They are a beacon lighted on a thousand citadels,
    A call from hunters lost deep in the woods!

    For truly, Lord, the clearest proofs
    That we can give of our nobility,
    Are these impassioned sobs that through the ages roll,
    And die away upon the shore of your Eternity.

    — William Aggeler, The Flowers of Evil (Fresno, CA: Academy Library Guild, 1954)



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