#12/23/2024
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MCR5 thought for 12/23/2024!
finishing my novel isn’t enough i need my chemical romance to release a new album
#mcr#mcr5#my chemical romance#mcr5 truther#mcrmy#mcr5 is real#my chem#ray toro#mikey way#mcr tumblr#gerard way#frank iero#manifesting mcr5#mcr5 truthing#mcr5please#Mcr5-thoughts-every-other-day#12/23/2024#Novel#Notbreadman
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Happy Birthday to me!
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the three Musk-e-teers
I had a thought in the gym this morning, listening KPFA radio about how Musk and Trump are vying for who will be President, that Musk, Trump and Vance are the Tree Musk-e-teers from the Dark Side!
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If my recent reblog wasn't an indication, I'm closing up asks for now.
I will reopen it once the new year comes in, hopefully with an ask game!
For now, enjoy the rest of the year and have some good festivities!
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POV u are a millenia old extremely powerful ocean god abt to get ur shit rocked
#or: GIVE ME BACK MY FUCKING EYES#based off that one whale eye pic that gave me brainworms#amber gris the woman u are#ethersea#amber gris#taz ethersea#doodles#23/12/2024#last art for 2024 mayhap?
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When Nathaniel turned 6, he stopped seeing his reflection.
No one bothered to tell him why; everyone assumed he would continue the Wesninski tradition and be born without a soulmate. The son of the Butcher wouldn’t have such niceties within him, he would never be cable of love of course.
But, Nathaniel had woken up, six years old and already covered in scars, to find a different boy in the mirror.
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neil and andrew in a world where your reflection shows your soulmate
#its done !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!#my soulmate au is finished !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!#andreil#neil josten#andrew minyard#aftg#all for the game#andi writes#andi posts into the void#23/12/2024
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The Princess of Wales Winter 2024 Photo Challenge!
Day Two: Favourite photo(s) of Catherine on St Patrick’s Day/St David’s Day/St Andrew’s Day
The last St Andrew's day activity that was St Andrew's day related being in 2012 while she has 47 thousand photos available to show her celebrating St Patrick's day... something something
#mine#POW Winter 2024 Challenge#royaltyedit#kate#st andrews school#vd meeting 23#rvp 23#wales22#welsh guards 23#irish guards 11#irish guards 12#irish guards 13#irish guards 14#irish guards 15#irish guards 17#irish guards 18#irish guards 19#irish guards 22#irish guards 23
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if it’s in line with what you’re writing at the time you get to this, ‘d love to see more seth/kevin innuendo teasing in new kings
but otherwise let’s see those dorks revived
WIP Wednesday 12-27-23 (Closed) | New Kings AU
That is what has Andrew follow them. Kevin sees how Andrew is sweating, "When is the last time you took a dose?" he asks.
"I want to be mostly sober when I see him." Andrew says.
"You're going to puke on his shoes." Kevin rolls his eyes.
"Then I'll get him new shoes. The ones he has right now are terrible anyways." Andrew dismisses, "I need to be in control of myself before I knock him over the head." he says.
#No Sethvin jokes on tap right now but I promise more in 2024#New Kings AU#AFTG#AFTG AU#Andrew Minyard#Kevin Day#David Wymack#New Kings - Arizona - 23#12-27-23 WIP Wednesday#WIP Wednesday Ask Game#16
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Amazing 'Grace': How Australia Gave Jeff Buckley His Biggest Hit
23 August 2024 | 12:00 pm | Jeff Jenkins
“In that moment, Jeff Buckley became a superstar in Australia.”
“I’ve got something I’d like to play you,” the woman from the overseas label announced.
It’s the start of 1994, and I’m at a Sony sales conference on the Gold Coast. We’ve been running through the major priorities for the year – Celine Dion, Mariah Carey, Pearl Jam and C+C Music Factory – when the representative from the company’s New York office mentions a new signing.
“I’ll play it during morning tea,” she says.
As she pressed play on the CD, you could hear a Mojo Pin drop. The Sony staff – music fans, grizzled music veterans and cynical indie types – were all united. No one had to say a word. The look on everyone’s face said it all: “This guy is special.”
In that moment, Jeff Buckley became a superstar in Australia.
Hearing him sing Hallelujah for the first time was a revelation. Nothing needed to be said. It was as if Sony’s Australian staff made a pact: we’re going to make this record a hit.
Jeff Buckley’s debut album, Grace, was released in the US 30 years ago today. The album’s Australian release came the following month, when Inpress editor Andrew Watt put Buckley on the cover and eloquently explained the album’s appeal. “Every now and then a new artist comes along whose sheer quality and artistic vision is so obvious that you just know you’re going to be listening to him for a long, long time.
“Grace is an album that seems so complete and so vivid in its expression that it’s almost an insult to try and deconstruct it and examine it to try and find out what makes it work.
“Probably the highest compliment that can be paid to Grace is that it’s timeless. It’s a brilliant album now, it would have been 10 years ago, and it will be in 10 years’ time.”
The record company bio that accompanied Grace had a section where the label listed what format it fitted. Grace ticked most of the boxes – alternative, AOR, easy listening, heavy metal, jazz, jazz/rock and “all other”. But Buckley responded: “That’s all just useless typing … everything it’s not, it is.
“What is it?” he added. “It’s just American music.”
And yet, Grace didn’t connect with American audiences. It peaked at number 149 in the US. Australia was the only country where it landed in the Top 10.
The American critics were initially unsure of what to make of the album. “Jeff Buckley sounds like a man who doesn’t yet know what he wants to be,” stated the three-star review in Rolling Stone.
John Encarnacao had no such reservations in his four-and-a-half-star review in Juice. “What kind of person wouldn’t like this disc?” he asked. “Maybe someone afraid of involvement. Or someone unprepared for music to penetrate their outer layers. Or anyone who rolls their eyes at the names Joni Mitchell, Neil Young or Sinead O’Connor. Grace is one of those sacred recordings.”
Grace received some play on US college radio but was shunned by the mainstream stations. “The songs were too long, and they didn’t have any hooks,” Buckley explained, relaying the complaints of the American radio programmers.
“It’s all a question of taste. I have no idea. I don’t know how their minds work, and if I ever do find out, I’ll hang myself from the nearest tree. I’m not really bitter about it at all.
“It’s a total crapshoot dealing with radio, so it doesn’t matter. Just so long as people come to the shows and enjoy it and get what they want, I can’t ask for more.”
And that’s exactly what Australians did – they embraced Buckley live. That first Jeff Buckley tour in 1995 is referred to in the same hushed, reverential tones as The Beatles’ 1964 visit and Nirvana’s shows in 1992.
You had to be there.
In Melbourne, Buckley did three shows at small venues – the Lounge, the Prince Patrick Hotel and the Athenaeum Theatre, as well as a set live to air on Triple R’s rooftop.
Lainey Wilson Has Never Been In It For The Awards: ‘I Want To Feel Something & I Want People To Feel Something’
Amazing 'Grace': How Australia Gave Jeff Buckley His Biggest Hit
23 August 2024 | 12:00 pm | Jeff Jenkins
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“In that moment, Jeff Buckley became a superstar in Australia.”
Jeff BuckleyJeff Buckley (Source: Supplied/'You And I' album cover)
More Jeff BuckleyMore Jeff Buckley
“I’ve got something I’d like to play you,” the woman from the overseas label announced.
It’s the start of 1994, and I’m at a Sony sales conference on the Gold Coast. We’ve been running through the major priorities for the year – Celine Dion, Mariah Carey, Pearl Jam and C+C Music Factory – when the representative from the company’s New York office mentions a new signing.
“I’ll play it during morning tea,” she says.
As she pressed play on the CD, you could hear a Mojo Pin drop. The Sony staff – music fans, grizzled music veterans and cynical indie types – were all united. No one had to say a word. The look on everyone’s face said it all: “This guy is special.”
In that moment, Jeff Buckley became a superstar in Australia.
Hearing him sing Hallelujah for the first time was a revelation. Nothing needed to be said. It was as if Sony’s Australian staff made a pact: we’re going to make this record a hit.
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Jeff Buckley’s debut album, Grace, was released in the US 30 years ago today. The album’s Australian release came the following month, when Inpress editor Andrew Watt put Buckley on the cover and eloquently explained the album’s appeal. “Every now and then a new artist comes along whose sheer quality and artistic vision is so obvious that you just know you’re going to be listening to him for a long, long time.
“Grace is an album that seems so complete and so vivid in its expression that it’s almost an insult to try and deconstruct it and examine it to try and find out what makes it work.
“Probably the highest compliment that can be paid to Grace is that it’s timeless. It’s a brilliant album now, it would have been 10 years ago, and it will be in 10 years’ time.”
The record company bio that accompanied Grace had a section where the label listed what format it fitted. Grace ticked most of the boxes – alternative, AOR, easy listening, heavy metal, jazz, jazz/rock and “all other”. But Buckley responded: “That’s all just useless typing … everything it’s not, it is.
“What is it?” he added. “It’s just American music.”
And yet, Grace didn’t connect with American audiences. It peaked at number 149 in the US. Australia was the only country where it landed in the Top 10.
The American critics were initially unsure of what to make of the album. “Jeff Buckley sounds like a man who doesn’t yet know what he wants to be,” stated the three-star review in Rolling Stone.
John Encarnacao had no such reservations in his four-and-a-half-star review in Juice. “What kind of person wouldn’t like this disc?” he asked. “Maybe someone afraid of involvement. Or someone unprepared for music to penetrate their outer layers. Or anyone who rolls their eyes at the names Joni Mitchell, Neil Young or Sinead O’Connor. Grace is one of those sacred recordings.”
Grace received some play on US college radio but was shunned by the mainstream stations. “The songs were too long, and they didn’t have any hooks,” Buckley explained, relaying the complaints of the American radio programmers.
“It’s all a question of taste. I have no idea. I don’t know how their minds work, and if I ever do find out, I’ll hang myself from the nearest tree. I’m not really bitter about it at all.
“It’s a total crapshoot dealing with radio, so it doesn’t matter. Just so long as people come to the shows and enjoy it and get what they want, I can’t ask for more.”
And that’s exactly what Australians did – they embraced Buckley live. That first Jeff Buckley tour in 1995 is referred to in the same hushed, reverential tones as The Beatles’ 1964 visit and Nirvana’s shows in 1992.
You had to be there.
In Melbourne, Buckley did three shows at small venues – the Lounge, the Prince Patrick Hotel and the Athenaeum Theatre, as well as a set live to air on Triple R’s rooftop.
“His shows caused the biggest buzz in town since the Stones were here in March,” I wrote in Inpress.
I took my friend Nova Weetman to the Athenaeum show. She wrote about it in her recent book, Love, Death & Other Scenes. “I was down the front,” she recalled, “weeping as the strains of Hallelujah lifted us up.”
Buckley was a potent mix of Jackson Browne and Jimmy Page. He had the heart of a poet. And he could rock like a god. As one Rolling Stone live review said, “The punchline is, Jeff Buckley can get away with anything.”
Interviewing Buckley was no easy task. He seemed troubled, knowing that the interviewer would inevitably ask about his father.
Jeff’s mother, Mary, had been briefly married to a then-unknown Tim Buckley. When he was eight, Jeff spent a week with his dad; apart from that, he never knew him. Two months after that meeting, Tim Buckley died of a heroin overdose.
The young Buckley loved record stores. “They’re a really emotional place,” he said. “All my life, I tried to work in one, but they never accepted me, and now I’m in them. I go to Tower Records and see all these lives in the bins.”
He noted the sad irony of his record being filed next to his father’s catalogue. “Separated all our lives, and now I’m right there in the bin next to him.”
David Browne, the author of Dream Brother, the biography of Jeff and Tim Buckley, noted that the younger Buckley “was painfully aware of the mistakes Tim had made in his life, and struggled to avoid them”, though “the weight of acclaim helped undo them both”.
That first Australian tour sent Grace into the Top 10. I remember a backstage scene when a Sony rep informed Buckley that the album had gone gold and was headed for platinum. “But do I really want that?” the artist responded.
In Sydney, he visited Bondi Beach at sunrise. “I tried to swim, but the water was too cold,” he smiled. “My nuts totally contracted into my body.”
Thirty years after it was released, Grace has gone eight-times platinum in Australia, and it remains a consistent seller.
Buckley returned in February 1996 for bigger shows, forging a rare connection with Australian audiences.
On the morning show on ABC radio in Melbourne, Raf Epstein has a popular segment called Changing Tracks, where a listener talks about a song that was playing at a pivotal moment in their life.
Recently, Julie recounted her memories of driving down Puckle Street in Moonee Ponds in September 1995. “I was listening to triple j,” she wrote. “I had just given birth to my only daughter … and I was in a loveless marriage. I was feeling extremely emotional and desperate. My husband had not wanted to be a father and was reluctant to involve himself in parenting.”
Like Tim Buckley decades before, Julie’s husband said, “I don’t want this.”
She realised she would be better off on her own.
“Listening to the radio that morning, I heard Jeff Buckley for the first time,” Julie continued. “Singing with a lilting, powerful, emotionally charged voice, he seemed to soothe my pain, and it lifted me out of the hole I had found myself in. I bought the CD that day, and his music supported me through probably the worst 12 months of my life.
“Every time I hear Jeff singing, he reminds me of the strength I found in the most vulnerable time in my life. For that, I am grateful.”
In that first interview with Inpress, Buckley revealed his desire to write a new American national anthem. “I hate the national anthem,” he declared. “The song itself is about having kicked somebody’s arse in war with bombs and stuff. Someday, there will be a [new] song, and hopefully, if I live into old age, I’ll make a stab at it.
“That will be my crowning achievement if I can replace that awful thing called the national anthem.”
He also said he hoped that Grace would be timeless. “If I make it into old age, I’d like to be able to visit it and have it still be true. The things I love the best are very timeless.”
Buckley highlighted Bob Dylan, Patti Smith, Duke Ellington and Allen Ginsberg. His favourite Ginsberg poem was Kaddish, which includes the line:
And how Death is that remedy all singers dream of.
Sadly, Jeff Buckley didn’t make it to old age. On May 29, 1997, while in Memphis working on the follow-up to Grace, he went for a swim in the Wolf River. His body was found on June 4.
Jeff Buckley never got to write that new national anthem. But one of his wishes came true: Grace is timeless.
In that first Australian interview, Buckley mused about his second album. “I’ll make an album that’s so not me,” he predicted. “But it will be me.” He even revealed he had a title for the record: My Sweetheart The Drunk.
The posthumous album Sketches for My Sweetheart The Drunk was released the year after Buckley’s passing.
“The songs that would have been My Sweetheart The Drunk (as well as all the other recorded material he left behind) are the true ‘remains’ of Jeff Buckley, not the speck of dust that was pulled out of the Wolf River,” his mother Mary Guibert said.
The Sketches album entered the Australian charts at number one. It was Buckley’s first number-one anywhere in the world.
Guibert also compiled the 2000 live album Mystery White Boy, which included five songs from the Palais Theatre in St Kilda, as well as Buckley’s cover of Big Star’s��Kanga-Roo, recorded at Sydney’s Phoenician Club.
The great tragedy of Jeff Buckley and the modern music business is that Grace was his only completed album.
In the liner notes for Sketches, Bill Flanagan wrote: “If the music business ran in the ’90s as it did in the ’60s, Jeff would have had five albums out … But Jeff loved searching more than arriving.”
By the time Tim Buckley died, aged 28, he had released nine studio albums. Jeff, who died at 30, released just one.
But then, we were blessed to have experienced Jeff Buckley’s genius. One perfect album and some magical live shows.
Hallelujah.
#jeff buckley#jeffbuckley#Amazing 'Grace': How Australia Gave Jeff Buckley His Biggest Hit#23 August 2024 | 12:00 pm | Jeff Jenkins#Jeff Jenkins
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Oct. 14th
There are no pretty words for grief.
No flowery petals growing from the letters,
Nothing golden about the sound of vowels leaving lips,
No meaning conveyed and honeyed.
We are,
All of us,
Made out of grief,
Forged from it and beaten into shape,
Like clockwork cogs and springs,
Working together in tandem.
I could tell you that grief is an overabundance of love,
An out-pouring of it so profound that it has nowhere to go,
Nothing to flow into.
I could tell you that grief is a beautiful curse,
A stain on the human disposition,
A weight we have the terrible honor of bearing.
I could tell you a bardic hymn of the way that it aches and chokes,
Or I could simply describe the way it slowly takes.
Grief is a beast that hungers,
Snapping jaws and rending claws,
Aiming straight for the heart,
Stealing it even as it beats.
Grief is a black hole cavity,
The darkest pit of a hell of our own making,
Swallowing light and leaving emptiness in its wake.
Grief is choking,
It is choking on tears and words left unsaid,
Questions forever left unanswered,
Context never given.
Grief is an ache that settles in your bones,
Weighing you down,
Exhaustion so heavy that even Atlas could not bear it.
Grief is a starving thing,
Pawing at your door in winter's death,
Seeking shelter in a warm hearth,
A warmth it ultimately snuffs out.
Grief is a tired thing,
A waving white flag that only gets burned,
Bloody footprints forever wearing a circular track to nowhere.
Grief is burning tears on sun-kissed cheeks,
Trails of salt and liquid emotion,
Flowing ever onward towards an uncertain future.
Grief is existing in a world with the knowledge of what has been lost,
And no amount of words written by ink-stained hands could ever hope to impart the agony of Knowing.
There are no pretty words for grief.
10/14/2024
#10/14/2024#RIP pap 12/24/41-10/14/23#dealing with grief#grief#poetry#about my grandfather#original poem
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Le vrai progrès pour l’humanité, ce serait d’avoir l’esprit de Noël toute l’année…
V. H. SCORP
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heyo
hi n welcome to my page :]
I'm Maiki n im 17, she/her ♓️
bluesky: @maikimania.bsky.social
proshippers/comshippers, "maps"(ped*s), 18+ content DNI
lesbian, autistic, atheist, liberal and pro choice
ik ano Kaosk mowi~
i have an ao3 under the same name i havent posted in a while but i bookmark stuff.
this page will prob be really unorganized mb
My main fandom right now is: Stranger things / Byler tumblr
note: if you are a mileven i have respect for you! you can ship whatever u want i dont care. if you use homophobia or any sort of attack to to condemn byler or wtv i will have no respect for you. If i am refering to a mileven(s) as a milkvan/milkshake/etc these are the ppl im talking about. if you are not one of them then i have no problem with you or your ship ❤️❤️ /gen
the world isn't real, we live in a simulation
I love Margot Robbie's Harley Quinn omg she can do anything she wants to me
FREE PALESTINE 🇵🇸
#intro post#LOVE YOURSELF#free palestine#updated: 4-23-24#updated: 5-30-24#updated: 9-19-24#updated: 10-20-24#updated: 12-4-2024#updated: 12-11-2024#updated: 12-18-2024#updated: 12-22-2024
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angourie rice is NOT a nepo baby u guys r so determined to hate her it’s actually pathetic
#her parents descriptors when u google them r literally ‘angourie rice’s dad/mom’#she’s been in the industry since she was 12 and she’s 23 now. she’s established in hollywood her parents didn’t buy her role in mean girls#like stop kidding urself just bc ur jealous she’s pretty and famous and good at acting#and her singing sounds lovely u r just annoying as hell#angourie rice#mean girls#mean girls 2024
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