#Angry Samoans
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ourladyofomega · 1 year ago
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📷: Tapehead City (FB)
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cimmerian-war-shrine · 3 months ago
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possible-streetwear · 6 months ago
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rastronomicals · 9 months ago
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4:57 PM EDT March 22, 2024:
Angry Samoans - "Lights Out" From the album Back From Samoa (1982)
Last song scrobbled from iTunes at Last.fm
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maquina-semiotica · 2 years ago
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Angry Samoans, "Lights Out"
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thoughtswordsaction · 7 months ago
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V/A - Punk Floyd: A Tribute to Pink Floyd CD (Cleopatra Records)
“Punk Floyd: A Tribute to Pink Floyd” is a daring and innovative compilation that bridges the vast chasm between punk rock’s raw, unfiltered energy and Pink Floyd’s sophisticated, progressive soundscapes. The album features a variety of iconic punk bands each bringing their unique style to reinterpret some of Pink Floyd’s most beloved tracks. Eater kicks off the album with a vigorous rendition…
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cocainepope · 7 months ago
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jelly-nine · 10 months ago
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vanityangel · 5 months ago
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when ur crush starts eyeing the new girl in town 😔
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mith-gifs-wrestling · 2 years ago
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El Generico gets driven through tables onto a concrete bar floor by IWS champion The Arsenal, Montreal 2003.
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mrbopst · 1 year ago
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rastronomicals · 1 month ago
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6:51 AM EST November 18, 2024:
Angry Samoans - “Lights Out” From the album Back From Samoa (1982)
Last song scrobbled from iTunes at Last.fm
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maquina-semiotica · 1 year ago
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Angry Samoans, "Steak Knife"
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thoughtswordsaction · 9 months ago
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Veteran Punk Bands Appear On Tribute Album To Pink Floyd; Including UK Subs, FEAR, MDC, Anti-Nowhere League, Peter And The Test Tube Babies, The Vibrators, And More
Punk rock was in some ways inevitable, a direct response to the musical trends of the early-mid ‘70s that saw rock music become bloated with overly composed, exceedingly long and pompously performed progressive rock of bands like Genesis, Emerson Lake & Palmer and, yes, Pink Floyd. Then came the punk rock rebellion of 1977 that would define itself in part in opposition to prog rock, and thus a…
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savage-kult-of-gorthaur · 1 year ago
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IN PRAISE OF B-MOVIE MONSTERMANIA MEETS RETARDO RETRO GARAGE PUNK.
PIC(S) INFO: Spotlight on the "Back From Samoa" debut LP by Los Angeles garage/hardcore punk band ANGRY SAMOANS, released on Bad Trip Records in 1982.
MINI-REVIEW: "The best garage punk album of the year. The SAMOANS have once again produced a brilliant amalgam of 60s punk, 80s punk, and heavy metal. The punchy uptempo sound, buttressed by three guitars and extremely belligerent mid-60s lead vocals is so dense that it’s well-nigh impenetrable, but it’s the SAMOANS’ exceptionally retarded sense of humor that really accounts for their perverse appeal. This brain-damaged approach is vastly better than the commercialized punk and self-conscious Satanic crap which currently dominates the L.A. scene, so don’t miss out."
-- MAXIMUM ROCKNROLL, fall/winter '82
REVIEWER: Jeff Bale
LABEL: Bad Trip
ISSUE: MRR #3 • November/December 1982
Sources: www.maximumrocknroll.com/band/angry-samoans, genius, the Vinyl District, various, etc...
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mariacallous · 2 months ago
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This is a gift article
In the final week of this election season, the Republican Party is running two different campaigns. One of them is an ugly and angry but conventional political enterprise. Donald Trump and other Republicans make speeches; party operatives seek to get out the vote; money is spent in swing states; television and radio advertisements proliferate. The people running that campaign are focused on winning the election.
Last night, in New York City’s Madison Square Garden, we caught a glimpse of the other campaign. This is the campaign that is psychologically preparing Americans for an assault on the electoral system, a second January 6, if Trump doesn’t win—or else an assault on the political system and the rule of law if he does. Listen carefully to the words of Tucker Carlson, the pundit fired from Fox News partly for his role in lying about the 2020 election. Warming up the crowd for Trump, he mocked the very idea that Kamala Harris could win: “It’s going to be pretty hard to look at us and say, ‘You know what? Kamala Harris, she got 85 million votes because she’s so impressive as the first Samoan Malaysian, low-I.Q., former California prosecutor ever to be elected president.”
“Samoan Malaysian” was Carlson’s way of mocking Harris’s mixed-race background, and “low-IQ” is self-explanatory—but “85 million” is a number of votes she could in fact win. And how, Carlson suggested, could there be such a “groundswell of popular support” for a person he demeaned as a mongrel, an incompetent, an idiot? The answer was clear: There can’t be, and if anyone says it happened, then we will contest it.
All of this is part of the game: the Trump campaign’s loud confidence, despite dead-even polls; its decision, in the final days, to take the candidate outside the swing states to New York, New Mexico, and Virginia, because we’ve got this in the bag (and not, say, because filling arenas in Pennsylvania is getting harder); the hyping of Republican-early-voter numbers, even though no evidence indicates that these are new voters, just people who are no longer being discouraged from voting early. Also the multiple attempts, across the country, to remove large numbers of people from the rolls; the many claims, with no justification, that “illegal immigrants” are voting or even, as Trump implied during the September debate, that illegal immigrants are being deliberately imported into the country in order to vote; Vance’s declaration that he will accept the election results as long as “only legal American citizens” vote.
At Madison Square Garden, Trump doubled down on that rhetoric. He repeated past claims about the “invasion” of immigrants; about “Venezuelan gangs” occupying American cities, even Times Square; and he offered an instant solution: “On day one, I will launch the largest deportation program in American history to get these criminals out. I will rescue every city and town that has been invaded and conquered, and we will put these vicious and bloodthirsty criminals in jail.” But he left open the question of who exactly all these “criminals” might be, because he seemed to be talking about not just immigrants but also his political opponents, “the enemy within.” The United States, he said, “is now an occupied country, but it will soon be an occupied country no longer … November 5, 2024, nine days from now, will be Liberation Day in America.”
The insults we heard from many speakers at Madison Square Garden, including the description of Puerto Rico as “garbage” or of Harris as “the anti-Christ” or of Hillary Clinton as a “sick son of a bitch”—insults that can also be heard in a thousand podcast episodes featuring Carlson, Elon Musk, J. D. Vance, and their ilk—are part of the same effort. Trump’s electorate is being primed to equate his political opposition with infection, pollution, and demonic power, and to accept violence and chaos as a legitimate, necessary response to these primal, lethal threats.
As I wrote earlier this month, this kind of language, imported from the 1930s, has never before been part of mainstream American presidential politics, because no other political candidate in modern history has used an election to undermine the legal basis of the American political system. But if we are an occupied country, then Joe Biden is not the legitimately elected president of the United States. If we are an occupied country, then the American government is not a set of institutions established over centuries by Congress, but rather a sinister cabal that must be dismantled at any price. If we are an occupied country, then of course the Trump administration can break the law, commit acts of violence, or even trash the Constitution in order to “liberate” Americans, either after Trump has lost the election or after he has won it.
This kind of language is not being used accidentally or incidentally. It is not a joke, even when used by professional comedians. These insults are central to Trump’s message, which is why they were featured at a venue he reveres. They are also classic authoritarian tactics that have worked before, not only in the 1930s but also in places such as modern Venezuela and modern Russia, countries where the public was also prepared over many years to accept lawlessness and violence from the state. The same tactics are working in the United States right now. Election workers, whose job is to carry out the will of the voters, are already the subject of violent threats and harassment. At least two ballot boxes have been attacked.
The natural human instinct is to dismiss, ignore, or downplay these kinds of threats. But that’s the point: You are meant to accept this language and behavior, to consider this kind of rhetoric “baked in” to any Trump campaign. You are supposed to just get used to the idea that Trump wishes he had “Hitler’s generals” or that he uses the Stalinist phrase “enemies of the people” to describe his opponents. Because once you think that’s normal, then you’ll accept the next step. Even when that next step is an assault on democracy and the rule of law.
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