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Back 2 the Lotus...reminds me of..My Brothers Wife the 8th track ( My Brothers Wife) on the Electriclarryland Cd from The Butthole Surfers
http://www.youtube.com/wa...nSHp1Nmr1c [Edited 7/31/09 2:55am] Bounce party y'all
Like the wall of Berlin It's going down people -(5.7.2010) | |
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I hear the similarities. I've been a huge Butthole Surfers* fan from their first record. Paul Leary is an underrated guitarist as far as I'm concerned. Leary has been known to, on occasion, lift riffs from others, though. Maybe he tapped the Miles Davis cut before Prince did.
*Originally typed "I've been a huge Butthole fan", but thought it through a little more. If prince.org were to be made idiot proof, someone would just invent a better idiot. | |
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CNNBREAKINGNEWS said: the 8th track ( My Brothers Wife) on the Electriclarryland Cd from The Butthole Surfers
http://www.youtube.com/wa...nSHp1Nmr1c [Edited 7/31/09 2:55am] LOL with that heading i thought u was going down a totally different path Cultural significance See also: Padma (attribute) Vishnu holding the lotus, also sitting on it and wearing a lotus-bud crown Hindu goddess Lakshmi holding & standing on a lotus From ancient times the lotus has been a divine symbol in Asian traditions representing sexual purity, a virtue. Hindus revere it with the divinities Vishnu and Lakshmi often portrayed on a pink lotus in iconography. In the representation of Vishnu as Padmanabha (Lotus navel), a lotus issues from his navel with Brahma on it. Goddess Sarasvati is portrayed on a white-colored lotus. Often used as an example of divine beauty, Vishnu is often described as the 'Lotus-Eyed One'. Its unfolding petals suggest the expansion of the soul. The growth of its pure beauty from the mud of its origin holds a benign spiritual promise. In Hindu iconography, other deities, like Ganga and Ganesha are often are depicted with lotus flowers as their seats. The lotus plant is cited extensively within Puranic and Vedic literature, for example: One who performs his duty without attachment, surrendering the results unto the Supreme Lord, is unaffected by sinful action, as the lotus is untouched by water. —Bhagavad Gita 5.10: This has also taken root in Chinese cultures with a famous statement made by the Confucian scholar Zhou Dunyi: I love the lotus because while growing from mud, it is unstained. In Buddhist iconography, Buddha is often represented on a pink lotus. In Buddhist symbolism, the lotus represents purity of the body, speech, and mind as if floating above the muddy waters of attachment and desire. It is also to be noted that most Buddhist, Chinese, Hindu, Japanese, amongst other Asian deities are often are depicted as seated on a lotus flower. According to legend, Gautama Buddha was born with the ability to walk and everywhere he stepped, lotus flowers bloomed. In the classical written and oral literature of many Asian cultures the lotus is present in figurative form, representing elegance, beauty, perfection and grace, being often used in poems and songs as an allegory for ideal feminine attributes. In Sanskrit the word lotus (padma पद्म) has many synonyms, like ambuja, niraj, pankaj, pankaja, kamal, kamala, kunala, aravind, arvind, nalini and saroja[4] and names derived from the lotus, like padmavati (possessing lotuses) or padmini (full of lotuses).[5] These names and derived versions are often used to name girls, and to a lesser extent boys, in India, Nepal and Sri Lanka, as well as in many other countries influenced by Indic culture, like Thailand, Cambodia, Indonesia and Laos. Drawing in turn on these beliefs, the international Bahá'í community adopted this symbolism in the design of the Lotus Temple in New Delhi, India. [Edited 8/3/09 4:05am] | |
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As much as I love Butthole Surfers, I really can't picture Prince listening to them... | |
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