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MattLoveModels

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Everything posted by MattLoveModels

  1. MattLoveModels replied to a post in a topic in Music
    Prince - Planet Earth
  2. Looks like it was moved And I just noticed its a small spoiler so it can only be a few names <_<
  3. Damn you beat me to making this thread Should this maybe go in the TV section? I'm so tempted in highlighting please, everyone use the spoiler function when talking about the winner
  4. MattLoveModels replied to a post in a topic in Funny Stuff
    Naomi Campbell commercial for Dunkin Donuts
  5. MattLoveModels replied to a post in a topic in Music
    i will Stevie Wonder - Looking For Another Pure Love
  6. Don' Stop 'till You Get Enough
  7. I stopped watching the vid after 30 secs
  8. yes
  9. Golimar
  10. I forgot all about those. I cried to them when I was little
  11. It was at the end of the first epi.
  12. no, you heard right jewels
  13. The Beatles - In My Life
  14. MattLoveModels replied to a post in a topic in Music
    good song
  15. MattLoveModels replied to a post in a topic in Music
    Air - Once Upon a Time
  16. you ruined it for yourself you wanker
  17. I've listened to all of my radiohead music today :|
  18. That one Lip Gloss song :|
  19. Biography Radiohead emerged from the fading '90s Brit-pop invasion with a sound that was moody, melodic, and explosive, with roots planted firmly in both alternative culture and the art-rock legacy of such classic rockers as Pink Floyd. With the release of 1997's OK Computer, Radiohead was among the most closely watched bands of the decade, drawing on influences as varied as Queen, R.E.M., and Miles Davis. The Oxford musicians were embraced as saviors of modern guitar rock, only to resurface in 2000 with a new sound heavy with electronics, minimal vocals, and few guitars. Singer/guitarist Thom Yorke first turned to music while growing up in Scotland and Oxford, England. Born with his left eye closed and paralyzed, Yorke endured five corrective surgeries before age six. He learned guitar while unhappy at boarding school, where he met bassist Colin Greenwood. The two formed a punk band called TNT. In 1987 they joined friends Ed O’Brien (guitar) and Phil Selway (drums) in a new band called On a Friday. Colin’s younger brother, Jonny, was soon recruited on guitar. The band dissolved as members scattered to different universities. The quintet regrouped in 1991 as Radiohead, a name taken from a Talking Heads song. Radiohead quickly built a following on the Oxford club scene, and soon drew record-company interest from London. The band signed to U.K. label Parlophone within a year, and in 1992 toured England and began recording a debut album, Pablo Honey (#32, 1993), released on Capitol in the U.S. That collection included “Creep” (#34), an intense anthem of self-loathing that blended Yorke’s alternately anguished and gentle vocals (“I wish I was special... but I’m a creep”) with Jonny Greenwood’s raw spasms of guitar. It was a hit in both the U.S. and England, but Radiohead was labeled a one-hit wonder by critics. The band responded two years later with The Bends (#88), which demonstrated a growing musical scope and explored deeper levels of alienation on the songs “Fake Plastic Trees” and “High and Dry” (#78). Sales were significantly less than for the debut, but critics began to reassess the band. With OK Computer (#21, 1997), coproduced by the band and Nigel Godrich (an engineer on The Bends), the band enjoyed wide acclaim. Though Yorke and the band denied any coherent theme to the album, various tracks - including “Karma Police” and “Paranoid Android” - examined encroaching technology and millennial anxiety. OK Computer topped many of that year’s critics polls and won the Best Alternative Music Grammy. Though the album enjoyed no Top 40 singles, Radiohead built a committed following through incessant touring. (The ’97–’98 tour was later depicted as a dehumanizing exercise in boredom and fatigue in Meeting People Is Easy, director Grant Gee’s downbeat 1999 documentary.) The members of Radiohead continued to work and reside in Oxford. While fans waited three years for a followup to OK Computer, a wave of Radiohead-influenced guitar bands (Travis, Coldplay) began to enjoy chart success in England and the U.S. - which made the long-awaited release of Kid A (#1, 2000) and the band’s new electronic and ambient leanings more surprising. Recorded during sessions with Godrich, Kid A sent guitars deep into the background while exploring long instrumental passages and sometimes incoherent vocals. The album won mostly positive, if sometimes puzzled critical notices and a second Best Alternative Music Album Grammy. The band released no singles from the album and played few shows. A second album featuring some tracks from the same sessions, Amnesiac, debuted at #2 in June 2001. Radiohead have been recently working on their newest project, scheduled for release sometime in late 2007, after their sixth album Hail To the Thief came out in 2003. and here's a cool ani of Thom
  20. Before Sunset - I really want to know what happens to them but I guess thats how its supposed to be.
  21. MattLoveModels replied to a post in a topic in Music
    Radiohead - Subterranean Homesick Alien
  22. MattLoveModels replied to a post in a topic in Music
    Radiohead - A Wolf at the Door. (It Girl. Rag Doll.)
  23. she looks gorgeous in the last one and I think I see her ex in the background
  24. ^ Paul Walls verse on that song is pretty good though - Rap is the best :blueeyedbaby: Anyway, you have the right to dislike, so don't take my words as a diss(just sharing views), but I think that Hip-Hop stands beyond all the other genres. And Hip-Hop is a subgenre of rap. There are some rap stuff that I hate also, but real Hip-Hop that is based on lyrics is just for me. First you need to write some nice lyrics, than make them rhyme, then flow on em. - Lyrics are important in nearly every genre, and there are good ones and bad ones in all of them. - Rhymes are what make me luv this music. Rap is based on rhyme, and by rhyme I mean so much more than they do on other genres. i.e.: when I hear something like "Walk this way, talk this way" over and over again, I don't feel the need to listen to it once again, when it ends( :evil: and yeah I chose that song honestly, lol). - And another important thing is flow. I mean, in hiphop, all the rappers write their own songs. There is no such thing as buying a song that someone else produced, someone else wrote, and you're just gonna sing. I think it's the way it should be. So you need to have flow, to make those rhymes sound good, no matter do you rap fast or slow . And if someone's going to say that they are talking about murder and stuff, to me there is no diferrence between listening to em, or watching some murder in some movie. As long as they sound good, it's all OK with me. Well, now it's time to share a song, that I want yall to listen, and give me your views. It's from my all-time fav. MC. Not that classic Hip-Hop that you may expected, but just too show that this music has some deepness. 2pac - Dear Mama ^ one of the best Hip Hop tracks ever
  25. I common misconception o yea, and after saying the work rock or rawk, you need to place this smiley