search results matching tag: 1975
» channel: weather
go advanced with your query
Search took 0.000 seconds
Videos (265) | Sift Talk (4) | Blogs (3) | Comments (161) |
Videos (265) | Sift Talk (4) | Blogs (3) | Comments (161) |
Not yet a member? No problem!
Sign-up just takes a second.
Forgot your password?
Recover it now.
Already signed up?
Log in now.
Forgot your password?
Recover it now.
Not yet a member? No problem!
Sign-up just takes a second.
Remember your password?
Log in now.
What Mormons Really Believe
This video has been seconded as a duplicate; transferring votes to the original video and killing this dupe - dupeof seconded with isdupe by RFlagg.
What Mormons Really Believe
*dupeof=http://videosift.com/video/What-Mormon-Theology-Is-Really-All-About-1975
What Mormons Really Believe
This video has been nominated as a duplicate of this video by Hive13. If this nomination is seconded with *isdupe, the video will be killed and its votes transferred to the original.
alien_concept (Member Profile)
lol thank you : )
In reply to this comment by alien_concept:
*british and fuck it why not... *promote
Al Green: Take Me To The River
Tags for this video have been changed from 'kickass, soul, gospel, powerful' to 'kickass, soul, gospel, powerful, al green, soul train, Don Cornelius, 1975' - edited by oritteropo
U.F.O. - Rock Bottom (1975)
>> ^Boise_Lib:
>> ^siftbot:
This post has been removed from the Skillful channel by channel owner Deano. Please review the FAQ to learn about appropriate channel assignments.
I knew you'd take this off of the skillful channel, @Deano, but you should realize that there are skillful people that you don't appreciate.
This is extremely skillful guitar work.
It is very good but not sure I want lots of dazzling guitar solos getting tagged as skillful. I was wondering whether this could be deemed exceptional, as I always do, and decided it wasn't. I might be wrong but for the time being that's the call.
deathcow (Member Profile)
Thanks, man. This is the first song I learned note for note.
In reply to this comment by deathcow:
*promote
U.F.O. - Rock Bottom (1975)
>> ^siftbot:
This post has been removed from the Skillful channel by channel owner Deano. Please review the FAQ to learn about appropriate channel assignments.
I knew you'd take this off of the skillful channel, @Deano, but you should realize that there are skillful people that you don't appreciate.
This is extremely skillful guitar work.
Led Zeppelin - The Ocean
Tags for this video have been changed from 'classic, rock, jimmy, page' to 'classic, rock, jimmy, page, earls court, 70s, 1975' - edited by rasch187
Black Power Mixtape
And here is the film: http://videosift.com/video/The-Black-Power-Mixtape-1967-1975-2011
Judas Priest - Rocka Rolla - Live 1975
>> ^deathcow:
This is pretty awesome.
I got into Judas Priest when I bought a JVC RC-M90 boombox in 1983 (p.s. I sold it this year for 3x the original cost : ) and the first tape I listened to was from my brother, who gave me "Screaming For Vengeance" on cassette.
I had a 4x4 foot "tapestry" of Screaming For Vengeance on my wall soon after and over the next few years filled out my cassette box with stuff going all the way back to this.
My favorite of all time (back then anyway) was the live version of Green Manalishi from Unleashed in the East. (I learned yesterday it was a cover, and Fleetwood Mac has a funky version of it.)
This old stuff has a character all its own.
I really liked the album "Point of Entry" which nobody else seemed to.
I made a killer Judas Priest logo on my Commodore 64.
Point of Entry is one of my faves. Desert Planes is such a great song. Same with Turning Circles.
Welcome to the Machine - Animated Film
That was from 1975, so if it wasn't Welcome To The Machine, it woulda been Physical Graffiti by Zeppelin... or A Night At The Opera by Queen... or Rush Fly By Night...
a message to all neocons who booed ron paul
@enoch
Whoa there partner, you might want to re-read what I posted above. Let me restate myself in more specific terms to avoid confusion.
My exact criticism is that if you're going to criticize anyone for being dishonest about history, you should do it in a very earnest way so as not to create a self defeating argument.
@quantumushroom makes a valid point. Saying that, specifically, the American military killed 4 million Southeast Asians IS an over-generalization. According to The National Archives, roughly 58,000 American military personnel died in the Vietnam War. It wouldn't be fair to say "Look through the eyes of truth. 1960-1975, South Vietnamese military kills 58,000 Americans."
On another note, here's another source that confirms the 58,000~ I quoted above. I've spent 20 minutes now trying to find any credible record of the 4 million dead (the closest I came was 3.9 million total dead but that also included the deaths of French, Australian, New Zealand, South Vietnam, Korean, and American Forces which account for roughly 410,000 of the original figure).
So the problem is tri-fold here. The American military is not solely responsible for the 3.9 million deaths that happened during the occupation of Vietnam from 1960-1975. Furthermore, 3.9 can be assumed to be an inflated figure since it's likely safe to say that American forces were not assassinating allies and their own squad members en mass. Finally, again, if you're going to attack someone (or some group) for being dishonest, you yourself had better get your facts straight and not just gloss over the unpleasant details.
p.s. Learn how to use a fucking paragraph enoch.
quantumushroom (Member Profile)
Thank you. I shall check them out later.
In reply to this comment by quantumushroom:
After viewing the 29 things/Creativity video, I remembered these and thought you might like them.
'Oblique Strategies' cards explained
http://www.kk.org/cooltools/archives/000008.php
"How to get unstuck. Pick a card at random and either 1) do what it says or 2) let it lead you to another idea. It's amazingly effective. This handsomely boxed stack of cards was created by the lateral genius Brian Eno and good friend Pete Schmidt in 1975 to get themselves and other musicians unstuck in the studio. It's been through four updated editions since."
A link to some cards online:
http://music.hyperreal.org/artists/brian_eno/oblique/obli
que.html?message=&obnumber=2
dystopianfuturetoday (Member Profile)
After viewing the 29 things/Creativity video, I remembered these and thought you might like them.
'Oblique Strategies' cards explained
http://www.kk.org/cooltools/archives/000008.php
"How to get unstuck. Pick a card at random and either 1) do what it says or 2) let it lead you to another idea. It's amazingly effective. This handsomely boxed stack of cards was created by the lateral genius Brian Eno and good friend Pete Schmidt in 1975 to get themselves and other musicians unstuck in the studio. It's been through four updated editions since."
A link to some cards online:
http://music.hyperreal.org/artists/brian_eno/oblique/oblique.html?message=&obnumber=2