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Tue Feb 21, 2012, 08:25 AM

 

You're all going to hell

32 replies, 1925 views

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Arrow 32 replies Author Time Post
Reply You're all going to hell (Original post)
UnrepentantLiberal Feb 2012 OP
hobbit709 Feb 2012 #1
pipi_k Feb 2012 #2
Taverner Feb 2012 #13
Hama Feb 2012 #3
csziggy Feb 2012 #16
HopeHoops Feb 2012 #4
pipi_k Feb 2012 #6
HopeHoops Feb 2012 #7
Tuesday Afternoon Feb 2012 #5
pacalo Feb 2012 #11
Tuesday Afternoon Feb 2012 #22
UnrepentantLiberal Feb 2012 #23
trof Feb 2012 #18
Tuesday Afternoon Feb 2012 #21
Canis Mala Feb 2012 #29
Tuesday Afternoon Feb 2012 #31
Bake Feb 2012 #8
OriginalGeek Feb 2012 #17
Bake Feb 2012 #9
Arkansas Granny Feb 2012 #10
GoCubsGo Feb 2012 #14
pacalo Feb 2012 #12
nolabear Feb 2012 #15
Tuesday Afternoon Feb 2012 #20
UnrepentantLiberal Feb 2012 #25
Curmudgeoness Feb 2012 #19
Lady Freedom Returns Feb 2012 #24
Canis Mala Feb 2012 #26
Canis Mala Feb 2012 #27
Sanity Claws Feb 2012 #28
deucemagnet Feb 2012 #30
cliffordu Feb 2012 #32

Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 08:30 AM

1. Listening to that is hell.

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Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 08:47 AM

2. Disturbing resemblance

between that Satan on the cover and Mr Spock on "Star Trek"

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Response to pipi_k (Reply #2)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 02:26 PM

13. That's because the western depiction of "the devil" is based on stereotypical Jewish traits

Anti-semitism goes back a long way with Christianity...



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Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 09:16 AM

3. I think

We're All Going To Hell


<iframe width="420" height="315" src="" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

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Response to Hama (Reply #3)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 07:09 PM

16. That was fun! And I love the comments

Especially this one:
Anyone else notice the Christopher Hitchens book he is reading during the interluded?

socokid 11 months ago

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Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 09:19 AM

4. "Hell is other people."

 

- Sartre

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Response to HopeHoops (Reply #4)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 10:37 AM

6. And...

"Maybe this world is another planet's hell."

- Aldous Huxley

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Response to pipi_k (Reply #6)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 11:02 AM

7. I'm familiar with that one also and both quotes fully apply.

 

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Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 10:11 AM

5. 'I FINK U FREEKY'

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Response to Tuesday Afternoon (Reply #5)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 01:52 PM

11. MTV's version of "The Hills Have Eyes"!

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Response to pacalo (Reply #11)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 07:43 PM

22. you should have seen Letterman's reaction

the night they were on his show.

I fink you're freeky was in his top ten the rest of the week

and then he would slowly shake his head.



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Response to Tuesday Afternoon (Reply #22)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 07:57 PM

23. Better than the Beatles on Ed Sullivan.

 

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Response to Tuesday Afternoon (Reply #5)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 07:27 PM

18. That's certainly freeky.

To the max.

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Response to trof (Reply #18)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 07:42 PM

21. lol



indeed, it is.

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Response to Tuesday Afternoon (Reply #5)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 11:06 PM

29. Totally speechless

That's one of the coolest videos I've seen in a long time. I shared with all my friends on fb.

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Response to Canis Mala (Reply #29)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 11:18 PM

31. awesome.

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Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 11:42 AM

8. I love the Louvin Brothers, but I never "got" that album!

Maybe their stuff is better when done by somebody else ...



Bake

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Response to Bake (Reply #8)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 07:19 PM

17. I think they were terrific singers and songwriters

They have a song called "Don't Let Them Take The Bible Out Of Our School Rooms" - it was probably pretty popular back in the day.

Needless to say the subject matter is not what I agree with but I do like their music.

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Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 12:30 PM

9. And I am NOT going to Hell!

Becuase I have been washed in the blood! Yes, sir, I have!



Bake

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Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 01:24 PM

10. Well, if we're all going, at least I'll be in good company.

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Response to Arkansas Granny (Reply #10)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 03:53 PM

14. Indeed.

You know, whenever I hear a fundie tell me I'm going to Hell, I point out that if they're what's going to be in Heaven, I'm more than happy to go to Hell.

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Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 01:56 PM

12. LOVED the sermon part!

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Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 07:01 PM

15. This from the NYT Book Review

Two-Part Harmony

‘Satan Is Real,’ the Story of the Louvin Brothers

By ALEX ABRAMOVICH

Published: February 17, 2012

By Charlie Louvin’s own account, people who saw the Louvin Brothers perform were mystified by the experience. Ira Louvin was a full head taller than his younger brother, played the mandolin like Bill Monroe and sang in an impossibly high, tense, quivering tenor. Charlie strummed a guitar, grinned like a vaudevillian and handled the bottom register. But every so often, in the middle of a song, some hidden signal flashed and the brothers switched places — with Ira swooping down from the heights, and Charlie angling upward — and even the most careful listeners would lose track of which man was carrying the lead. This was more than close-harmony singing; each instance was an act of transubstantiation. “It baffled a lot of people,” Charlie Louvin explains in his crackling new memoir. “We could change in the middle of a word. Part of the reason we could do that was that we’d learned to have a good ear for other people’s voices when we sang Sacred Harp. But the other part is that we were brothers.”

Ira died in a car wreck in 1965. Charlie — who rolled his first cigarette at the age of 5 — died last year at 83, just two months after talking the book out. (The contributions of his co-author, Benjamin Whitmer, are pretty much invisible, which makes them difficult to praise, and all the more praiseworthy.) True to his subtitle, Charlie tells Ira’s story, as well as his own, devoting 47 chapters to their shared lives and careers, and just three more to the years that followed Ira’s death. He is profane, piquant and brutally honest in ways that are sure to offend the country music establishment but might have delighted Ira, who was no less of a demon than the ones the Louvins — who cut their teeth as a gospel duo, and never really left the church behind — so often sang about.

Charlie and Ira came up hard, on a tiny Depression-era cotton farm in southern Appalachia. Their mother taught them songs from the Sacred Harp hymnal, while their father worked and beat them, mercilessly, until they felt they had no choice but to sing their way off the land. “We were two determined little bastards,” Louvin recalls. “We were no good at quitting at all. Whether or not he meant to, I’d say that’s one of the greatest gifts Papa gave us.”

That gift (a great inspiration to the Everly Brothers, the Byrds and many other harmony singers who followed in their footsteps) carried the Louvins through two difficult decades — it took them years to make it, and just as they did, Elvis Presley came along and swept the music world they’d known aside. The ups and downs were bad for Ira, who’d gotten the worst of his father’s beatings and turned into a meanspirited, self-destructive drunk. But they’re good for the book, which is full of fistfights, road stories and behind-the-scenes looks at fellow travelers: Presley, Hank Williams, Roy Acuff, Johnny Cash, Little Jimmy Dickens and not a few others. In one chapter, titled “Duets,” Louvin recalls the Delmore, Monroe, Wilburn, Everly and Bolick brothers (the last performed as the Blue Sky Boys) — “duets that put out the most beautiful music you could imagine, but when they weren’t onstage, they wouldn’t speak to each other. And they wouldn’t speak to you, either, if you happened to like the other one.”

“Somehow,” he says, “Ira and I managed to remain some kind of friends.” If so, it was despite Ira’s own best efforts to ruin every relationship in sight. One night, drunk, he said a crude, racist thing, ensuring that Presley, who’d called the brothers “his favorite duet” and opened for Ira and Charlie on one of his first tours, would never record “The Christian Life,” “Satan Is Real,” or any other Louvin Brothers song. (“If I had to guess, I’d say that one statement by Ira cost the Louvin Brothers music catalog two or three million dollars,” Charlie says.) On other nights, Ira smashed and stomped his mandolin to pieces (he’d later glue it back together), fought with drunks in the audience or simply failed to show up, costing the brothers top-tier bookings and getting them banned from their regular, hard-earned slot on the Grand Ole Opry. “It was an ugly thing when he drank,” Charlie recalls, “and there was no fun in it.”

And then there was the womanizing and spousal abuse. In February 1963, Ira Louvin wrapped a telephone cord around his wife’s neck. She shot him six times with a .22-caliber pistol, and when the police arrived on the scene she was said to have told them, “If the blankety-blank don’t die, I’ll shoot him again.” Ira lived, and Charlie stuck by him (and, amazingly, the wife) and ignored Ira’s threats to quit the duet. But the Louvin Brothers broke up that year.

Ira was traveling with a new wife (his fourth) and another couple on the night of his wreck. Atypically, according to Charlie, Ira — who had a D.U.I. warrant out for his arrest — seems to have been sober that night, while the driver of the car that hit him was “nine times over the legal limit for drunkenness.” Oddly, given his habit of smashing mandolins, Ira’s new mandolin — a four-stringed, electric instrument he’d designed himself — was “the only thing that wasn’t smashed to splinters.”


Alex Abramovich is writing a history of rock ’n’ roll.

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Response to nolabear (Reply #15)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 07:41 PM

20. thank you for that post...

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Response to nolabear (Reply #15)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 08:55 PM

25. Good article.

 

I didn't know anything about them.

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Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 07:30 PM

19. I sure hope I'm going to hell, because

I could never stand eternity with those fundie crazies.

I'll meet ya there.

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Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 08:08 PM

24. Thats old news dude.

I have been told that since I did the protest against the over the top preacher that kept comming to MSSU. He did not like the "Support your local Tarot Reader" sign much. Ah, good times, good times.

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Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)


Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 10:53 PM

27. I love those old gospel tunes...

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Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 11:02 PM

28. Can we all fit in the same handbasket?

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Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Tue Feb 21, 2012, 11:08 PM

30. It's like a gospel cover of death metal.

Before there was death metal.

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Response to UnrepentantLiberal (Original post)

Wed Feb 22, 2012, 06:22 AM

32. Who cares?

I'll be drinking with all my family.

Good Irish whiskey and single malt scotch,

Fat lips and black eyes served in equal measure.

Be sure to duck.

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