| Proclivities wrote: I used to frequent an auto parts store that had a sign saying that any complaints should be directed to the customer service manager, Helen Waite. If you have a complaint, go to Helen Waite. Anyway, this song seriously sucks. |
| HELL YES! |
| DOUBLE YES! |
| yes |
| I would prefer a squirrel nut massage. Byronape wrote: Everyone should have a squirrel massage. |
| Ricky Ricardo returns! |
| I keep hearing an uptempo Jockey Full of Bourbon by Tom Waits. |
| terrapin52 wrote: Here we go. Three songs in a row about heaven and/or hell. Repent all you paradise radio paradise sinners! Or not. |
| ...or enemas, eh, Oscar? fredriley wrote: This reminds me of a story about Oscar Wilde (I think - do correct me if it's someone else) on his deathbed. The priest was giving last rites and asked yer man "Do you renounce Satan and all his works?", to which Wilde replied "This is no time to be making enemies". |
| this is a pretty cool song, but the drumming is too scattered for me (maybe that's what makes it interesting...) |
| This is a cover of that I Want To Be Like You song from the Jungle Book, right? |
| Great Heaven/Hell set Bill! |
| Here we go. Three songs in a row about heaven and/or hell. Repent all you paradise radio paradise sinners! Or not. |
| WayUpNorth wrote: Everyone should have a squirrel massage. |
| Ha, this is fun ! Great cooking music |
| So retro it sounds eternally new — and tons of fun! Can't sit still, hearing this! |
| Stave wrote: This is great. Who's the artist? Also, not to be a grammar nazi, but shouldn't the word have been " extracted" instead of "extruded"? (I know that's how it is in the song, I'm just saying). They would have been "extruded" if they were "pushed out" or "forced through a die" (e.g., pastry bag, frosting gun) in order to be used with the ground bones "and baked into cakes", which is what I believe the lyrics allude to. After all, they probably have some powerful kitchen accessories in hell. I imagine the teeth would have to be "extracted" first, though. |
| I've just finished reading Iain M Banks' latest doorstopper, "Surface detail", and that's all about Hells, envisaged as virtual worlds in which inmates are treated to tortures more excruciating than even Hieronymous Bosch imagined. If you've a strong stomach, it's well worth a read. |
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