perfect.
sordid affair wrote:cud always brings the insight of existential hedonism

Capital wrote:

Lampwick wrote:Let me be first to say that I would have sex that girl
Herzog wrote:Lampwick wrote:Let me be first to say that I would have sex that girl
The mullet she's rocking in Zef Side is pretty spectacular.
Herzog wrote:gold and glass wrote:Capital wrote:



Nobody really understands Die Antwoord. All we really have to go on is that they’re a ‘next level rap-rave krew’ comprised of a skinny white MC with a box cut and Pollsmoor chappies and a potty-mouthed, bottle-blonde bitchette in gold spandex, often joined on stage by Mitchell’s Plain gangster rappers and a DJ with progeria syndrome. Oh, and since debuting earlier this year they’ve wrangled up an aggressively dedicated legion of fans who generally shout along to every single track at live shows, punch random strangers in the face and then pass out in a steaming puddle of Jägermesiter vomit. Do the disgruntled Afrikaans youth of our land have a new pair of anti-heroes to worship? That is the rhetorical question we’ll lead in with.
machinist wrote:check them out performing 'enter the ninja' live at this club
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9_GV50Kqnqc
becomes even more epic, trust me ya'll want to click that link
he raps up a storm
Article: Progeria victim finds life in art: Leon Botha is a portrait of courage.(News) LIFE has handed Leon Botha a rough deal - he was born with progeria, a rare condition that causes accelerated aging and usually results in death in the teenage years.
But the Cape Town artist has beat the odds so far and has successfully put together a second solo exhibition of fine art entitled Liquid Swords; Slices of Le(m)on - a play on his name.
Botha, 23, has a markedly optimistic view of life, best expressed by his reply to the question "Does your show title refer to the well-known adage 'If life gives you lemons, make lemonade?'
"No." says Botha. "Lemons? I slice 'em and serve 'em back!"
machinist wrote:older songs tended to be in Dutch too, well I think it's Dutch


Art became my weapon. It is a way of earning respect & destroying stereotypes, which means that it also became a way of educating/sharing… ultimately, a language.
This grew strong in my heart & I was seeking a way of expressing this, visually in the form of a symbol. HipHop was the one thing that I've always had & I could relate most with/related most to me, to a point where it seemed to reflected me.
Gza/The Genius, released a album in 1995 entitled "Liquid Swords".
The concept was, rappers as lyrical swordsmen. The tongue being symbolic to the sword & wisdom coming in many different streams & flows, like water.
(The concept had no visual interpretation.)
I applied that to me & my art, also in a symbolic form that I now show in my work from time to time: To show you light, I bring forth my elements of darkness. I transmutate to show you the peace within the midst of war.
My life-line, continuing to take form as I give you my all: The pen IS the sword!
machinist wrote:The pen IS the sword!

