DIR Return Create A Forum - Home
---------------------------------------------------------
True Left
HTML https://trueleft.createaforum.com
---------------------------------------------------------
*****************************************************
DIR Return to: Mythical World
*****************************************************
#Post#: 6002--------------------------------------------------
Re: The Birth of Civilisation - Cult of the Skull (8800 BC to 65
00 BC)
By: rp Date: May 1, 2021, 11:43 am
---------------------------------------------------------
"After 55s it is irredeemable."
This one (another from TGSNT) follows the exact same pattern!
Exactly after 55s it goes downhill:
HTML https://youtu.be/14ZkxaV7fQQ
#Post#: 6004--------------------------------------------------
Re: BGM
By: guest5 Date: May 1, 2021, 1:24 pm
---------------------------------------------------------
This has always been one of my favorite Guitar melodies, and I
get a gracile type feeling from it:
Romance. Guitar Solo
HTML https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XZqZMdWzrGk
I can imagine sitting on a river bank with a warm summers breeze
blowing through the valley to this piece....
[quote]
"Romance Anónimo" (Anonymous Romance) is a piece for guitar,
also known as "Estudio en Mi de Rubira" (Study in E by Rubira),
"Spanish Romance", "Romance de España", "Romance de Amor",
"Romance of the Guitar", "Romanza" and "Romance d'Amour" among
other names.
Its origins and authorship are currently in question. It is
suspected of originally being a solo instrumental guitar work,
from the 19th century. It has variously been attributed to
Antonio Rubira, David del Castillo,[1] Francisco Tárrega,
Fernando Sor, Daniel Fortea, Miguel Llobet, Antonio Cano,
Vicente Gómez, and Narciso Yepes. The Anónimo (anonymous) part
of its name has been incorporated over the years due to this
uncertainty. The question of authorship has probably been
propagated by three main reasons: the lack of claim by its true
author, the desire to avoid paying copyright fees, and the
desire of publishing companies to claim the lucrative copyright
of this world-famous piece.[2]
The style of the piece is that of the Parlour music of the late
19th century in Spain or South America, having a closed
three-part form: the first in the minor key and the second being
in the major key, with the third being a restatement of the
first. [/quote]
HTML https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romance_(guitar_piece)
[quote]
Parlour music is a type of popular music which, as the name
suggests, is intended to be performed in the parlours of houses,
usually by amateur singers and pianists. Disseminated as sheet
music, its heyday came in the 19th century, as a result of a
steady increase in the number of households with enough surplus
cash to purchase musical instruments and instruction in music,
and with the leisure time and cultural motivation to engage in
recreational music-making. Its popularity waned in the 20th
century as the phonograph record and radio replaced sheet music
as the most common method of dissemination of popular music.
[/quote]
HTML https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parlour_music
HTML https://www.mosel-inside.de/images/category/Leiwen/leiwen-01.jpg
I was thinking about using this piece of music in a video about
Neolithic settlements, maybe as I show the land and it's
features surrounding such a settlement. What do you guys think
of that idea?
Even if it were created in the 19th century as some claim, it
has always felt like timeless ancient music to myself.
#Post#: 6010--------------------------------------------------
Re: The Birth of Civilisation - Cult of the Skull (8800 BC to 65
00 BC)
By: rp Date: May 1, 2021, 2:44 pm
---------------------------------------------------------
"This one sounds like Musk giving his VIP guests a guided tour
of the finished spaceship and then giving a speech about the
importance of space travel!"
😂 😂
It was also featured in the intro of Pandorastop's "Dawn of
Arya" radio show, so maybe it only works in certain contexts?
When I listened to it there, where it was played in the
background of clips from a Hitler speech, it was simply
chilling.
#Post#: 6115--------------------------------------------------
Re: The Birth of Civilisation - Cult of the Skull (8800 BC to 65
00 BC)
By: rp Date: May 3, 2021, 9:48 pm
---------------------------------------------------------
[quote author=90sRetroFan link=topic=290.msg5993#msg5993
date=1619847705]
I myself don't like the BGM. We are talking about this one,
aren't we?
HTML https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ASj81daun5Q
"There is something about their music that fits Aryan
personality archetypes, wouldn't you agree?"
I don't know about their other works, but this one is far too
grandiose, a better match with Homo Hubris attitudes. I think we
should be promoting much simpler and less texturally dense
arrangements with much more empty space (would you at least
agree this BGM contains very little empty space?).
As a rough guideline, I think we could potentially classify
music as robust or gracile, in which case it is obviously
gracile music that should correspond to us. The above BGM, on
the other hand, surely belongs to the robust category. Would you
agree?
[/quote]
Getting back to this soundtrack, now that I think of it, the
grandiose nature of the BGM fits the documentary clip very well,
as it perfectly illustrates how non-Aryans view the Neolithic
Revolution! The clip features non-Aryan presenters praising the
fact that the revolution enabled population expansion and the
development of complex civilization, the very things that we
have been saying were the negative effects of the Neolithic
Revolution all along!
This is what happens when Homo-Hubris gets its hands on things
that were not meant for it.
#Post#: 6160--------------------------------------------------
Re: BGM
By: Dazhbog Date: May 5, 2021, 7:25 am
---------------------------------------------------------
[quote author=rp link=topic=290.msg5995#msg5995
date=1619849810]The key here is to identify which music fits the
gracile archetype we are trying to promote.[/quote]
Here are two favorites of mine which might fit in with what you
are looking for:
[spoiler]
HTML https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X3UmjDqF0lc[/spoiler]
[spoiler]
HTML https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s4V7JFxe92k[/spoiler]
[quote author=90sRetroFan link=topic=290.msg5997#msg5997
date=1619858380]This one sounds like Musk giving his VIP guests
a guided tour of the finished spaceship and then giving a speech
about the importance of space travel![/quote]
Meanwhile, in an abandoned factory compound outside the city,
True Left guerillas are gearing up to stop Musk's evil plans.
Ammo is clipped into assault rifles, IEDs are being prepared.
Finally, our heroes set off in two outdated military trucks.
[spoiler]
HTML https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HbbZoCClc4o[/spoiler]
At the gates of Musk's lair, his armed guards are quickly taken
out. Not wasting any time, our heroes scramble towards the
production hall.
[spoiler]
HTML https://youtu.be/2sd7MQVofYc?t=272[/spoiler]
In the production hall, a fierce gun battle erupts. While Team A
keeps Musk's body guards busy, Team B goes for the spaceship
itself. Unbeknownst to our heroes, Musk has genetically enhanced
himself. The bullets do him no harm. With his usual smug
expression, he pries a rifle from one of his henchman's cold
dead hands and shoots his way to the spaceship, where Team B is
already planting the explosives.
Realizing that bullets won't stop him, Team leader A [please let
me know if you can think of a good name for her - Dazhbog] grabs
her two knives and charges at him, aiming to lop his ugly head
off. Musk, also possessing superhuman strength and reaction
thanks to his enhancements, easily thwarts her desperate effort
and chucks her across the hall, her vision fading to black as
she hits the wall.
As she wakes up, a deafening hum fills the air. Horrified she
watches as Musk is starting the engines of his spaceship. The
hall is strewn with the bodies of Musk's people and her
comrades. As the spaceship takes off, she climbs a flight of
stairs towards the roof of the hall, where she is joined by some
of her surviving team mates. Defeated, they watch the spaceship
take off into the pitch black night - until a massive explosion
rips through the nocturnal silence. Team B's sacrifices have not
been in vain after all!
Calmly and their morale restored, Team A plants the remaining
IEDs throughout Musk's production facilities. Afterwards, they
head to a safe place from which to watch the ensuing fireworks.
[spoiler]
HTML https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aF10I72tsio[/spoiler]
Back at their village the next day, the local spiritual
authority [I was thinking of an Imam of sorts, though let me
know if you have any other ideas - Dazhbog] performs the last
rites for our heroes' fallen comrades. A cool breeze sweeps the
clear autumn sky as the fire releases the martyrs' souls from
their carnal prisons.
[spoiler]
HTML https://youtu.be/-ZZZ7zX6too?t=1297[/spoiler]
Who needs orchestral scores anyway?
[quote author=90sRetroFan link=topic=290.msg5997#msg5997
date=1619858380]TVB ancient drama incidental music track
51[/quote]
I really dig this. Thank you for posting!
#Post#: 6196--------------------------------------------------
Re: The Birth of Civilisation - Cult of the Skull (8800 BC to 65
00 BC)
By: guest5 Date: May 7, 2021, 12:33 am
---------------------------------------------------------
Thank you for posting, really digging that Rutti track so far!
#Post#: 6200--------------------------------------------------
Re: The Birth of Civilisation - Cult of the Skull (8800 BC to 65
00 BC)
By: 90sRetroFan Date: May 7, 2021, 12:47 am
---------------------------------------------------------
"I really dig this."
There is a lot more in this style from 90s pop culture when
pre-colonial revival was in full swing, not only from TV BGMs
but also (2D) video game BGMs. For example:
HTML https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ezpWOuWJ_c
This one is from the Mohist RPG that I previously mentioned:
HTML http://aryanism.net/blog/other/freemasonry-judaism-republished-on-kindle/comment-page-1/#comment-162015
[img]
HTML https://truth.bahamut.com.tw/s01/201205/d58bd58267ec0e1f7525c902a52e84d4.JPG[/img]
"invoking similar emotions by an artist with a superior
character. If you know one, please tell me and I will replace
it."
Entire album here (timestamp links at YouTube page, take your
pick!):
HTML https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ZZZ7zX6too
How about Track 11?
"Who needs orchestral scores anyway?"
Westerners do. No one else does (and we should be proud of
this).
#Post#: 6206--------------------------------------------------
Re: The Birth of Civilisation - Cult of the Skull (8800 BC to 65
00 BC)
By: Dazhbog Date: May 7, 2021, 5:49 am
---------------------------------------------------------
[quote author=NuminousSun link=topic=290.msg6196#msg6196
date=1620365588]Thank you for posting, really digging that Rutti
track so far![/quote]
Glad that you like it! Here is the entire album playlist:
HTML https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nS1c6P0YB6Zzvm_gf5_-fzjGYPkmFYgGc
Lots of good tracks on there. "Rutti" is my definite favorite
though.
[quote author=90sRetroFan link=topic=290.msg6200#msg6200
date=1620366439]How about Track 11?[/quote]
Exactly what I was looking for, thank you! While I did indeed
settle for Track 11 to accompany that particular passage, the
entire album rules hard.
#Post#: 8921--------------------------------------------------
Neolithic Cannibals | Prehistoric Europe Documentary (5,000 BC)
By: guest55 Date: September 21, 2021, 11:02 am
---------------------------------------------------------
Neolithic Cannibals | Prehistoric Europe Documentary (5,000 BC)
[quote]Cannibalism is seen in many cultures around the world,
including in prehistoric Europe (eg the Upper Paleolithic /
Mesolithic Magdalenian site of Gough's Cave in Cheddar Gorge).
But the Neolithic is a time of settled farmers and herders. Were
these people really cannibals?
In this video we're looking at three sites: Herxheim, Germany;
El Toro Cave in Malaga, Spain; and Fontbrégoua Cave in Provence,
France.
Were these prehistoric Europeans desperate people facing
starvation? Were they honouring their own people in complex
mortuary rites? Or were they feasting on their enemies?
And were they even practicing cannibalism at all?[/quote]
HTML https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NFri78q4b8
#Post#: 9228--------------------------------------------------
Neolithic Iberia - 5000 year old Idols and Megaliths!
By: guest55 Date: October 5, 2021, 8:03 pm
---------------------------------------------------------
Neolithic Iberia - 5000 year old Idols and Megaliths!
[quote]Who built the Neolithic stone circles, cromlechs and
tombs of Portugal and Spain? Why did these people make strange
plaque shaped idols? Where did they come from and who are the
Bell Beaker people who invaded Iberia and replaced the megalith
culture? All such questions are answered in this documentary
about Neolithic Iberia. [/quote]
HTML https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xJLTXmHuEbI
*****************************************************
DIR Next Page