| *gigglefit* |
[Nov. 28th, 2008|09:20 am] |
| [ | mood |
| | giggly | ] |
| [ | music |
| | Guess. | ] | Seeing this reminded me of something.
Back in May, I went to Morpeth with parents and Matt. (It was the Australian Canal Society's n birthday. They gave Matt and me certificates for bringing the average age down from 60-odd.)
While I was there, in some tiny second-hand shoppe, I came across a genuine 1987 vinyl of Rick Astley's Whenever You Need Somebody. The marked price was $4, but they were having a 50% off sale, so I got it for $2.
The spiel on the back cover is hilarious.
Rick Astley has achieved what most people dream of doing. What, to the outside world, looks like overnight stardom has actually taken quite a long time.
Rick was born in a small town in the North West of England called Newton-le-Willows which, before Rick Astley, was famous for making railway locomotives and for being the first place in the world where anyone was killed by one.
Rick grew up in this small town and during his last few years at school formed several bands. On leaving school, he drove a van for his dad, but his burning ambition was to make music his livelihood. Rick joined a band made up of friends called FBI and went onto the government supported Enterprise Allowance Scheme, receiving a grant from the government to become a pop star and he was one of the first to do so. Rick and his band were spotted by Pete Waterman of the production team Stock Aitken Waterman in a working men's club in Warrington. Pete was obviously impressed and within three months Rick had signed to PWL as an artist and then joined the Studio Empire as a tape op to gain experience in the recording world at PWL.
During the next fourteen months Rick made tea and worked with some of the biggest pop stars and people in the record industry, and became friendly with them all.
Rick's career really started to blossom with "Never gonna give you up" recorded in October 1986 and mixed on New Year's Day 1987, but Stock Aitken Waterman did not feel that the market was right for it until the middle of the year.
The record was picked up instantly by radio and ten weeks later it became the biggest selling record so far in 1987 and has since gone on to be No. 1 all over Europe.
There have been many parallels drawn between Rick and other pop stars. Tom Jones had been mentioned as well as Luther Vandross and Frank Sinatra. With company such as this, the red headed kid from Newton-le-Willows seems destined to achieve musical greatness.
Despite all his success Rick is still the quiet unassuming person who joined PWL in 1985. Perhaps that says a lot about his character and how little his future success is likely to affect him.
The album contains three new Stock Aitken Waterman songs written especially for him, four of Rick's own songs and Rick's tribute to one of the greatest singers of all time Nat King Cole. The album illustrates the many facets of Rick's voice. Frank Sinatra? Really? -Mmaster |
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| Fabian bought me "Happy Obama Won Day" cake. |
[Nov. 5th, 2008|10:55 pm] |
| [ | mood |
| | weird | ] |
| [ | music |
| | Run And Tell That, Hairspray | ] | Okay, it's probably bad, but for like the last three days, I've been wondering why no-one's made a fanvid of Obama to (at least the first half of) Run And Tell That from Hairspray. (I mean up to about 1:30 on this video.) ...Especially since Obama seems to have captured the heart of the Internet, at least.
...On second thoughts, it's probably for the better that it doesn't exist. -Mmaster |
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[Jan. 31st, 2008|11:52 pm] |
| [ | mood |
| | amused | ] |
| [ | music |
| | Rickroll in Mario Paint; also, When I Die by New Found Glory | ] | *Mm hands Chris an mX Mm: Merry Christmas. Chris: Is this one of those "I couldn't be bothered saying No" things? Mm: No, just an "I know you like newspapers" thing. Chris: Oh, okay.
We were skimming the top ten songs in music.
I knew about five of the songs that were in the top ten In This Week In 1988. *Mm stabs a finger at Never Gonna Give You Up by Rick Astley, sitting at around number 5 Mm: If you don't know this song, you don't know the Internet. Justin: Why? *Mm Googles "Rickroll", and manages to find a YouTube video of the same Justin: ...O...kay? Yes, I know this song.
On the other hand, while I knew nine of the ten top songs of This Week In 1998 (and had owned several of them on CD, for that matter), I knew absolutely none of the songs in the top ten this week. I'm not sure if that's a good sign or a bad one.
-Mmaster
PS: This is the best Rickroll ever |
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| I don't even know if it's 'net centric or general usage. |
[Sep. 17th, 2007|07:35 pm] |
| [ | mood |
| | dorky | ] |
| [ | music |
| | Invasion, Eisley | ] | Justin didn't know the phrase "Earth Logic".
*Justin says something Mm: But that would require Earth logic... Justin: ...What? Logic is logic! Mm: ...You've never heard the phrase "Earth Logic"?
So, I put it to you guys: Have you heard the term "Earth Logic", and if so, under what context? -Mmaster |
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| ... ... *cries for what the Internet has done to her brain* |
[Aug. 13th, 2007|07:49 pm] |
| [ | mood |
| | psycho | ] |
| [ | music |
| | The dancing letters | ] | i can haz scrollwheel!
...
...
The only response I got to that, for the like four times I used it, was "What?". Am I the only one familiar with the Internet?
(It's Candy Mountain, Charlie! Candy Mountain!) -Mmaster
PS: Mm: So, how about that local sporting team? Chris: You want to print ProgSoc posters of a local sporting team? Mm: ... ... ...What? *collapses, giggling hysterically* Liz: That was a topic changer. Chris: ...Oh. |
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| Yay for the Internet. |
[Jun. 1st, 2007|01:16 pm] |
| [ | mood |
| | busy | ] | These are awesome. Or something. Whatever, I've been meaning to direct you to them for a while.
Automatic cat macro generator. (Direct link here.) It takes any RSS feed and creates a bunch of cat macros from the post subjects, with the images taken from flickr. I'm not quite sure what algorithm it uses to choose the image for each macro, but it seems remarkably appropriate a lot of the time. I think this one is my favourite: ( Cut, for all the good it does. )
Fancy business cards. This guy built working lock picks into his business card; it says "Melvin wanted something he could give to peers and prospective clients that spoke of this nature" - though I can hardly imagine that it would be saying complimentary things...
LiveJournal imploded.
LOLCODE, along with a LOLCODE to python translator.
There's probably more, but I have to run off. Oh, well. -Mmaster
EDIT: Also, The Park Bench is one of my new favourite sites. Particularly for the articles I Read Cosmo... So You Don't Have To, It's an Aphliction, and The Tell-Tale Signs. |
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| If you can interpret this, I salute you. I'm not sure that even I can. And I wrote it. |
[May. 5th, 2006|08:37 pm] |
| [ | mood |
| | amused | ] |
| [ | music |
| | Splish splash I was takin' a bath, all upon a Saturday night | ] |
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