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Post by oscillations. on Jun 14, 2008 0:18:08 GMT -4
This band may become one of my favorites ever because I might never completely figure out their motives. "Oxford Comma", the follow up to the world-changing "A-Punk", is a creative triumph in the purest form imaginable. It is both stunning and widely accessible from the perspective of traditional rock. It inflects necessary youth into a perfectly-paced pile of consistently strong songs of the rock tradition.
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Post by Pipa on Jun 14, 2008 0:18:36 GMT -4
oscie! This forum was made for you.
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Post by oscillations. on Jun 14, 2008 1:35:46 GMT -4
This forum lacked discussion of superior music before I got here, that is for sure!
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Post by crash46 on Jun 14, 2008 3:20:14 GMT -4
This band may become one of my favorites ever because I might never completely figure out their motives. "Oxford Comma", the follow up to the world-changing "A-Punk", is a creative triumph in the purest form imaginable. It is both stunning and widely accessible from the perspective of traditional rock. It inflects necessary youth into a perfectly-paced pile of consistently strong songs of the rock tradition. I wonder what "A-Punk" did to change the world?
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Post by oscillations. on Jun 15, 2008 16:20:49 GMT -4
What didn't "A-Punk" do to change the world?
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Post by Pipa on Jun 15, 2008 18:11:49 GMT -4
I'm with oscie on this one. I had a friend who wanted to become a drug dealer, but then I played him "A-Punk" and he changed his ways. They say about 5 less babies die every time "A-Punk" comes on the radio. Or as the old saying goes, "give me A-Punk or give me death". Remember "Stairway To Heaven"? I sure don't. All I remember is "A-Punk".
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Post by Mega248 on Jun 15, 2008 22:03:23 GMT -4
My favorite song on the album right now, and it's also one of the more radio-friendly ones. I don't think it's going anywhere though.
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Post by a Nick O! on Jun 16, 2008 3:05:04 GMT -4
I don't think it's going anywhere though. You don't say. Well that can't be right. This song "is both stunning and widely accessible from the perspective of traditional rock," after all.
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Post by radical347 on Aug 6, 2008 3:25:33 GMT -4
They play this at Trivia Night along with Herbie Hancock "Rocket." Ehh, it's alright.
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