
JBB: An Artblog!
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Today's Document
Not today Justin

Kaledo Art
todays bird
Misplaced Lens Cap
Game of Thrones Daily

oozey mess
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
dirt enthusiast
occasionally subtle
🪼

blake kathryn

ellievsbear
i don't do bad sauce passes
RMH

if i look back, i am lost
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
seen from Egypt
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seen from Netherlands
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seen from United States

seen from Switzerland

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@90manifesto
Grimes - Oblivion
Grizzly Bear by Melanie Bonajo
Warpaint - Love Is To Die
I am back.
Bronski Beat - Smalltown Boy
SQÜRL (featuring Madeline Follin) - Funnel of Love
"boys dont like it when-"
We tend to talk too much because it’s rare that we’re listened to.
Tami Egonu, A Rhapsody of Dreams (via perfect)
The Handsome Family, “Far From Any Road”
We live in a world where there is so much music being released at all times than only a tiny percentage of it receives decent exposure. As a result, there are wonderful, compelling songs all over the landscape just begging for a larger audience, needing a little push to get their proper due.
Case in point: “Far From Any Road,” a haunting, unheralded song from the Handsome Family, a haunting unheralded act. Comprised of the husband and wife duo of Brett and Rennie Sparks, The Handsome Family has been releasing albums since 1995, with “Far From Any Road” a highlight from their 2003 record Singing Bones.
In all likelihood, the song would have stayed nothing more than a forgotten favorite to anything but the group’s most diehard fans were it not for some kind of break. Luckily T Bone Burnett, musical supervisor for HBO’s hyped drama True Detective, chose it for the show’s opening credits. Suddenly, fans tuning in to see the dark escapades of Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson were turned onto this moody, mysterious, and mesmerizing song that seemed eerily in tune with the show’s themes.
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Charlie Engman.