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#buffalo musicians
legendarytragedynacho · 5 months
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Buffalo Springfield
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tygerland · 2 years
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Photography from Akiko Yano's 1986 album "Ai Ga Nakucha Ne."
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greenapel · 1 year
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psst.. hey .. *looks around* *slides u this drawing* dont tell anyone i made 2 suitehearts ocs..
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4ll-m0nst3rs-ar3-h4man · 11 months
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I wish I never would have fallen for you
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mannytoodope · 2 years
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Neil Percival Young (born November 12, 1945) is a singer-songwriter, producer, and filmmaker. l was maybe in my late twenties when I started listening to him. Young was originally a member of the band Buffalo Springfield. After he moved to Los Angels from his hometown of Toronto, Canada, he released two solo albums with his backing band Crazy Horse. In 1969, he joined Crosby, Stills, and Nash, and they changed their name to Crosby, Stills, Nash, & Young. Despite being in several bands, Young is mainly known for his solo work. Over his career, Young has received several Juno and Grammys.  He entered the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a solo musician in 1995. And again with Buffalo Springfield in 1997. Young has worked with various artists throughout his career. Outside of music, Young has directed(or co-directed) films under the name Bernard Shakey. Young has done charitable work here in the States and in Canada. He is one of the artists I had to go back to and listen to, appreciate and respect his music. Young continues to make music and inspires musicians. He had his music removed from streaming platforms that had artists who spread false information about COVID-19
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brunettedelulu · 10 months
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Buffalo '66 - Vincent Gallo
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big-boah · 2 years
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I usually avoid selfies OOC but here are some degenerate photos of my dad and i. Also me IRL whoa
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theuptowngroove · 6 months
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Buffalo Springfield
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buffaloretro · 2 years
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HOMEGROWN: City Divide
Catching up with an old friend and one of the best bass players I have ever had the chance to play with on the good ole days and his project, City Divide. When did you form? Oof…. I think it’s been almost 5 years, so 2017 sounds about right. How did you meet? Networking. Between the internet and friendships over the years, we came together. A bit of the old school “word of mouth” and “chance”…
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whencyclopedia · 2 months
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Twelve Famous Native American Women
Native American women are traditionally held in high regard among the diverse nations, whether a given people are matrilineal or patrilineal. Traditionally, women were not only responsible for raising children and caring for the home but also planted and harvested the crops, built the homes, and engaged in trade, as well as having a voice in government.
The history of the women of the Native peoples of North America attests to their full participation in the community whether as elders and "medicine women" or as skilled agriculturalists and merchants and, in some cases, even warriors. Although hunting and warfare were traditionally the provenance of males, some women became famous for their courage and skill in battle. These women, as well as others in the arts and sciences, are often overlooked because they do not fit the paradigm of what has been accepted as American history.
Pocahontas and Sacagawea are usually the only North American Native women that non-Natives have heard of, but even their narratives have been obscured by legend and half-truths. Many other Native American women have simply been ignored, and among them are most of those listed below. These women, and the nations they were citizens of, include:
Jigonhsasee – Iroquois
Pocahontas – Powhattan
Weetamoo – Wampanoag
Glory-of-the-Morning – Ho-Chunk/Winnebago
Sacagawea – Shoshone
Old-Lady-Grieves-the-Enemy – Pawnee
Pine Leaf/Woman Chief – Crow
Lozen – Apache
Buffalo Calf Road Woman – Cheyenne
Thocmentony/Sarah Winnemucca – Paiute
Susan La Flesche Picotte – Omaha
Molly Spotted Elk/Mary Alice Nelson – Penobscot
There are many others who do not appear here because they are more widely known, such as the Yankton Dakota activist, musician, and writer, Zitkala-Sa (l. 1876-1938) or the Cheyenne warrior Mochi ("Buffalo Calf", l. c. 1841-1881). Modern-day figures are also omitted but deserve mention, such as the activist Isabella Aiukli Cornell of the Choctaw nation, who drew national attention in 2018 with her red prom dress designed to call attention to the many missing and murdered indigenous women across North America, and poet/activist Suzan Shown Harjo of the Muscogee/Southern Cheyenne nation. There are many more, like these two, who have devoted themselves to raising awareness of the challenges facing Native Americans and continue the same struggle, in various ways, as the women of the past.
Jigonhsasee (l. c. 1142 or 15th century)
According to Iroquois lore, Jigonhsasee (Jikonhsaseh, Jikonsase) was integral to the origins of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Confederacy dated to either the 12th or 15th century. She was an Iroquoian whose home was along the central path used by warriors going to and from battle and became well-known for the hospitality and wise counsel she offered them. The Great Peacemaker (Deganawida) chose her to help him form the Iroquois Confederacy, based on the model of a family living together in one longhouse, and, along with Hiawatha, this vision became a reality. Jigonhsasee became known as the 'Mother of Nations' and established the policy of women choosing the chiefs of the council in the interests of peace, instead of war. The American women's suffrage movement of the 19th century called attention to the freedom and rights of Native American women, notably those of the Iroquois Confederacy, in arguing for those same rights for themselves.
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cherrypiebabydoll · 2 months
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about me 👼🏼˚。⋆౨ৎ
♡ i’m 14 and my bday is may 28th
♡ i’m an infp and a gemini
♡ i love lana del rey, the colour pink, shopping, runway, models, the 60s, ballet, diet coke, books, candles, brandy melville, music, makeup, poetry, animals, girlblogging, red scare pod, baking, my diary, mini skirts, daydreaming, anything vintage, subliminals, and fashion
♡ my fav musicians are lana del rey (overall fav ♡), taylor swift, ariana grande, marina, nicole dollaganger, the smiths, alex g, phoebe bridgers, nancy sinatra, and ethel cain
♡ my fav movies are the virgin suicides, girl interrupted, black swan, buffalo '66, i believe in unicorns, palo alto, valley of the dolls, candy, coraline, sucker punch, priscilla, jennifer’s body, mean girls, carrie (1976), thirteen, gone girl, old disney movies, and the love witch
♡ my fav tv shows are pretty little liars, the simple life, scream queens, and the dick van dyke show
♡ images aren’t mine unless said otherwise
♡ search cherrypiebabydoll to see all my posts
pinterest 🩰🍦🎠 ↓
xoxo ʚ ୨🐇୧ ɞ
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uwmspeccoll · 8 days
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It's Feral Friday!
Milwaukee Zine Fest Edition
We’re kicking things off with some of our favorite donations from this year’s Milwaukee Zine Fest. Organized and put on by The Bindery in partnership with the Milwaukee Public Library, this year’s fest sprawled throughout two floors of the Central Library and offered hands-on activities, panel discussions, and free workshops. There was so much good stuff, and we received over 100 donations (thank you!!). Here are a few of the standouts. 
Squire Inquire is an outcropping of Milwaukee’s current DIY scene. Produced by Ed Barth, this lo-fi zine features illustrations and writing from local artists and musicians.  
Notes on libraries, lesbians, and pulp was created by Aiden M. Bettine and printed by Bettine’s Minneapolis-based micro press Late Night Copies Press. LNCP is co-run by artist and educator India Johnson, and is dedicated to amplifying queer voices, storytelling, & history.  
Febrauryness is a project of Milwaukee-based printmaker and book artist Ethan Thomas Krause. It features a mix of comics and illustrations and was published through Thomas’s zine-publishing venture Lemon-O Books.  
Erik Satie was a Punk! was written by Georgi Johnston at Cyberpunk Apocalypse, a publication, writers' cooperative, and residency program that was based in Pittsburgh, in 2013.  
And Martin Sostre, Life and Legacy, written by a group of incarcerated young people at a juvenile prison, recounts the history of formerly incarcerated revolutionary anarchist, abolitionist, and Buffalo bookstore owner Martin Sostre. To evade censorship, it was clandestinely drafted in pencil, transferred outside the prison, and traced in pen before being digitized and printed at Burning Books.  
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Squire Inquire Issue 2, October 2023
Squire Inquire, excerpt (foreword by Gnat Bowden)
Squire Inquire, excerpt (illustrations by Walter)
Notes on Libraries, Lesbians, and Pulp (excerpt)
Notes on Libraries, Lesbians, and Pulp
Febrauryness Number 3, Spring 2024
Februaryness (excerpt)
Erik Satie was a Punk! 2013
Martin Sostre: Life and Legacy 2024
Martin Sostre: Life and Legacy (excerpt)
--Ana, Special Collections Graduate Intern
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NEW SONG ALERT!!! Please listen and share!!!
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rockandroar · 4 months
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I adore the Steel Stampede! How did you come up with the appropriate animal designs? What are their characters? How do they act? Are they nice? They look very intimidating, and scary, like Clash!
That’s all! I’m quite excited to see their introduction and Clash’s introduction in the webcomic!
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Thank you! :) Two of my lifelong obsessions are music and animals, so I guess it was inevitable that I'd end up caricaturing music genres as species or groups of animals. It's the premise that gave way to the entire Rock & Roar story, so I went wild with it. So with metal, we've got this loud, fast, heavy genre with chugging guitar riffs and drums doing blast beats, and all of that reminds me of powerful, charging animals and their thundering hoofbeats. Top that with the sign of "the horns" being a hand gesture associated with metal since the heyday of Black Sabbath, and it seemed clear to me that metal musicians and fans would be horned and hooved animals like the ones above.
I first drew Grant Ruffalo more than ten years ago and he was a buffalo/bison from the beginning. It's just the animal that intuitively felt right for this character. To his left is Onyx Slater, and I chose an oryx because their white face with black markings reminded me of the corpse paint some black metal bands wear.
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To Grant's right are Billy Kidd the goat, and Gunnar Ramsey the black sheep. No specific reason for choosing those animals in particular, I just thought it'd be funny.
Steel Stampede became a band in the late 60s. These four guys take their music very seriously and are intimidating, for sure. They command respect and they don't mess around, at least not publicly. They're very much regarded as musicians of a very high caliber, a band that is cited as influential by virtually everyone else in the metal scene.
Grant is known for his short temper, Onyx is more restrained and keeps to himself, Billy is the funny guy of the bunch but also very brave for his small stature, and Gunnar is the most down to earth and easiest to talk to. None of them are actually mean though - that's more of an image they keep up. They're not going to go out of their way to bully anyone around or intentionally hurt someone. They just won't tolerate anyone messing around with them, or their gear, or their live performances. And frankly, I think they've earned that level of respect.
But backstage, if you're on a friendship basis with these guys, they're pretty cool. If Grant is in a good mood, he'll regale you with stories of all that he's experienced throughout his music career, and will enjoy listening to your own stories too. He might even pass on some of his wisdom, in the form of a guitar technique, or advice on stage presence. He wants his beloved music genre to live on and have a strong future beyond him and his band, and even if he won't outwardly show it, it really warms his heart to see young musicians pursuing their craft with passion and discipline the way he did. He wants small bands to succeed, and every once in a while he is known to publicly give a shout out to unknown bands whose future he believes in.
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