💾 Archived View for thurk.org › blog › 174.gmi captured on 2024-07-08 at 23:25:32. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2022-03-01)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
I say a problem because there are dizzying memories from mostly High School which these songs bring back. They are vague and ultimately unreachable in a form which is tangible.
I do recall *Todd Templeton* (see Facebook) and his friend whose name I do not recall blasting *Godzilla* from their **TRUCK** outside of Fort Stockton High School after school one day. See, I'd loaned Todd *Spectres*. The funny thing (to me, anyway) is the fact that the **cassette** I had given him was damaged. *Damaged?* you ask? Well, my old stereo system had deleted the first 20 or so seconds of the first song (*Godzilla*), so, it came crashing in after Buck Dharma was already wreaking havoc with the gueetar.
Most probably, this song should remind me of the endless hours I spent in my room in Fort Stockton (105 S. Everts, if you need know) listening to music. I had most of these albums on LP. The happiness this song exudes is rather disconcerting considering most of the band's output. The lyrical content, about banishing tradition in the light of immediate needs, I can relate to. It was the antithesis of what I was taught as I was growing up in the hellish atmosphere which **was** (and probably still **is**) Fort Stockton. On the other hand, it is a lascivious tale of a man manipulating a woman into sex by some other-worldly spiritual means. Albert Bouchard was a fuckup. Possibly he still is. My kind of fuckup, though.
Enough for now, veverko.
@flavigula@sonomu.club
CC BY-NC-SA 4.0