![]() Earthwise 50120 20-Inch 12 Amp Electric Side Discharge/Mulching/Bagging Lawn Mower with Grass Bag $219.99 This lawnmower cuts very good and you don't have to hassel with starting it up. It's nice that you can let the handle go to stop it quick and turn it on again. It works great for my small lawn (25x 35 feet). I keep having to remember that I now have an extension cord to worry about; move it out of the pathway or it gets cut with the lawn. For smaller lawns I would recommend it. ![]() Sylvania 39659 D2S HID - High Intensity Discharge Lamp, Pack of 1 $56.00 Sylvania High Intensity Discharge Lamp is designed to increase the light output to a wide area in front of the vehicle and offers environmentally responsible products. It has a distinctive blue-light of HID lamp which stimulates and reflects paint in road markers and signs. This light helps the vehicle in improving visibility and safety thereby not disturbing the vision of oncoming drivers. It includes long-life lighting system and creates less need for replace and dispose. ![]() Hear Nothing, See Nothing, Say Nothing $11.98 I had this album on vinyl way back when. It's about 25 years old now, and you'd never know by listening to it. It sounds like it coulda been made yesterday. Which maybe is the point. When I first heard Discharge, I knew Rock n' Roll music was finished. It had nowhere left to go. When rock n' Roll started back in the 50s, it was pretty simple, rudimentary music. In the 60s, a lot of bands, especially the Beatles and their many imitators, tried to fancy it up and make it more technically and musically advanced. They might have suceeded in doing so, but, to my personal taste, I don't know if this improved the music any. Rock n' Roll is supposed to be basic and fancying it up, making it more "classical" or more "technical", defeats its very purpose. While the Beatles and a handful of others might have had the talent to pull it off, the "progress" of rock n' roll mostly led to real garbage like the Doors, Styx, ELP, ELO, Chicago, and every other really crummy rock group to come out in the late 60s and early 70s, and also the many other imitators that followed after. Punk Rock was a reaction to this, and the course of Rock history has been the deconstruction of the music ever since. When I heard Discharge, I knew rock n' roll couldn't be deconstructed any further. This album was basically noise with no real music whatsoever. It consisted of just two thing: fantastically loud and raw 3 or 4 note guitar riffs and a vocalist screaming at the top of his voice about world destruction and nuclear annihilation. And that's what made it so great!!!! Everything that has come after, all the thrash and grind and death metal has tried to deconstruct the music further, but it couldn't be done. They tried to make it more shocking by singing about mutilation and sadistic torture and murder and festering corpses, but what are all these supposed horrors when compared to the destruction of the entire planet and the death of all its inhabitants, human, animal and vegetable, by nuclear weapons? In the days of vinyl records and $99 dollar stereos, this record was an absolute blast. And nothing that came after could beat it. As hard as all the thrashers who came after it tried to be so bad, no one has been as bad as Discharge. If you're into all the different hardcore type metals and punks that have come out in the last 25 years, take a listen to this. You will find that all your favorites never came up with anything new or really so bad. Compared to Discharge, they still all sound like wussies. |
|