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Length: 4:25
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And seven evening stars
Dance through the window
Of her universal house
Of her universal house
Her voice a crystal echo
Lies humming in your soul
So patiently awaiting
For your ears to behold
For your ears to behold
She ripples on the water
Leaves diamonds on the shore
And fish from every distance
Watch her ocean cellar door
Her breath a warm fire
In every lovers heart
A mistress to magicians
And a dancer to the gods
And a dancer to the gods
Her clothes are made of rainbows
And twenty thousand tears
Shine through the spaces
Of her golden ochre hair
Ooh my babe I want you
and on my life I swear
My conscience will I follow you forever
If you meet me everywhere
Yes if you if you meet me everywhere
The synth always had a great groove in this song
I Agree. GREAT TUNE! Thanx RP!
Thank you to Kingart for stepping up in my absence. As Kingart said, the Crusades started late in the 11th century when Pope Urban decided to support Alexios the First (the emperor of the Byzantine Empire) in his efforts to stave off the Turks who were migrating to the west. Historians are suspicious of Pope Urban's motives. Perhaps Urban simply wanted to support Alexios. But there was a bad east-west schism in the Catholic Church at that time and by supporting Alexios, Urban saw an opportunity to unite the branches and therefore solidify his own power.
The result was three centuries of warfare in Europe and western Asia. Not only did the Christian warriors kill Muslims, mobs of Christians killed thousands of Jews in the well-documented Rheinland Massacres of 1096, and Christians killed each other for reasons that we would view today as unjustifiable.
The result of the Crusades: Muslims see themselves as persecuted by Christians and the West, lasting anti-Semitism, a schism in the Christian church (Roman Catholic vs. Orthodox), the Dark Ages, feudalism, and hundreds of thousands of dead.
It wasn't Christianity's proudest period.
Best wishes.
Thank you
A legitimate question and one I've thought a lot about. In my own experience, of the many artists who've misbehaved in their private or professional capacities, a few have managed to ruin my ability to enjoy their work. Whether or not I liked their work to begin with did factor into it if I'm honest.
In this case I am still able to enjoy Yusuf Islam's songs despite the fact that I don't agree with the tenor and tone of some of his public statements in the past few decades. It helps that he's attempted to provide a more moderate stance after the fact. It's a personal decision though, I get that.
It's a strange world we live in, maybe it always was, in which some folks seem to get away with "murder" while others are "burned at the stake" by an angry mob sometimes for in my view far less than capital offenses. In my understanding of history, and personal experience, mobs very rarely provide just decisions or actions.
This, like so many others of his, is a beautiful song.
Sorry. He peaked at Tea for the Tillerman.
We all have to peak sometime.
Thank you to Kingart for stepping up in my absence. As Kingart said, the Crusades started late in the 11th century when Pope Urban decided to support Alexios the First (the emperor of the Byzantine Empire) in his efforts to stave off the Turks who were migrating to the west. Historians are suspicious of Pope Urban's motives. Perhaps Urban simply wanted to support Alexios. But there was a bad east-west schism in the Catholic Church at that time and by supporting Alexios, Urban saw an opportunity to unite the branches and therefore solidify his own power.
The result was three centuries of warfare in Europe and western Asia. Not only did the Christian warriors kill Muslims, mobs of Christians killed thousands of Jews in the well-documented Rheinland Massacres of 1096, and Christians killed each other for reasons that we would view today as unjustifiable.
The result of the Crusades: Muslims see themselves as persecuted by Christians and the West, lasting anti-Semitism, a schism in the Christian church (Roman Catholic vs. Orthodox), the Dark Ages, feudalism, and hundreds of thousands of dead.
It wasn't Christianity's proudest period.
Best wishes.
The Turks are still migrating to the west and I don't blame them. They favor the german speaking countries and many have settled in Germany where Turks and Kurds get along, sort of.
The Christians invaded the Middle East on several occasions and slaughtered many Arabs, so the Muslims returned the favor. Get off our lawn.
The Reconquista of the Iberian peninsula started long before the official First Crusade. Moors invaded in 711AD and were not expelled until 1492. The conflict between Christendom and the Islamic world was far more complex than a mere war between cultures. As anyone who has been to Spain or Sicily can attest, an incredible fusion of cultures occurred that affected European literature, music, philosophy, warfare. Lost classics from Greek antiquity were rediscovered (from Arabic translations). A sense of "Europe" as a political and cultural entity began to appear (especially under the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II). One can argue that the European Age of Exploration and Scientific Revolution were direct descendents of this cutural exchange.
Can't believe that this is the first time I've heard this. Wow, this really holds up! Starting at 8.
Nothing that a little cow bell would not help
There's no need to be cruel. ; )
"Golden ochre hair".
Listen to that massively cool squeaky toy synth over a chord pattern that's so fundamental, like Sweet Jane.
This is a 10 by all means!
The Crusades, hmmm ? Wasn't that the time when the Christians pushed out the Moors, invaders of Europe ?
That said, I still love Cat.
Thank you to Kingart for stepping up in my absence. As Kingart said, the Crusades started late in the 11th century when Pope Urban decided to support Alexios the First (the emperor of the Byzantine Empire) in his efforts to stave off the Turks who were migrating to the west. Historians are suspicious of Pope Urban's motives. Perhaps Urban simply wanted to support Alexios. But there was a bad east-west schism in the Catholic Church at that time and by supporting Alexios, Urban saw an opportunity to unite the branches and therefore solidify his own power.
The result was three centuries of warfare in Europe and western Asia. Not only did the Christian warriors kill Muslims, mobs of Christians killed thousands of Jews in the well-documented Rheinland Massacres of 1096, and Christians killed each other for reasons that we would view today as unjustifiable.
The result of the Crusades: Muslims see themselves as persecuted by Christians and the West, lasting anti-Semitism, a schism in the Christian church (Roman Catholic vs. Orthodox), the Dark Ages, feudalism, and hundreds of thousands of dead.
It wasn't Christianity's proudest period.
Best wishes.
The Christians invaded the Middle East on several occasions and slaughtered many Arabs, so the Muslims returned the favor. Get off our lawn.
It's probably not a good idea for Christians to enter any discussion on religion with an air of moral superiority. Remember the Crusades?
The Crusades, hmmm ? Wasn't that the time when the Christians pushed out the Moors, invaders of Europe ?
That said, I still love Cat.
It's probably not a good idea for Christians to enter any discussion on religion with an air of moral superiority. Remember the Crusades?
If anyone was asking, which I know no one is, and this would probably upset most, but I find his music mostly preachy and dreary. All but this one. In my opinion, this song is a true Gem. An 11+