Throwing this out. How do we feel about MCR's Black Parade being a modern representation of the Wild Hunt?

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Throwing this out. How do we feel about MCR's Black Parade being a modern representation of the Wild Hunt?
They descend from the west, seeking to snatch the souls of the living before even Death can reach them. Do not dare to speak their name, for should their attention land on you, your only remaining salvation would be to sacrifice another's life in your place.
Autumn Ink 6: Sluagh Cosmonaut
Down from a cloud of ravens it descends,
Not to reap, but to intercept
The dead thus become faeries between incarnations and certain souls in the underworld may, in time, undergo a complete faery metamorphosis and no longer incarnate as human-beings - these are the 'Master Men' of Scottish witch-lore. The identification of the faery-faith as an ancestral cultus clarifies many hitherto obscure problems and allows us an insight into the destiny of the soul and it's post-mortem relationship with the noumenal and natural environments. The Faery Rade or Sluagh Sidhe rides out at Halloween, the liminal and intercalendary time of the hallowed ancestral souls. This Faery Host manifests along the dead straight 'faery passes' which link the sepulchral tumuli which are their forts, changing their hunting-grounds at the four Quarter-Days. These 'faery-roads' are a Celtic analogue to the Dutch 'death-roads' and German 'Geisterweige', the Saxon 'deada waeg', the tracks of the Wild Hunt and the spectral Black Dog and the traditional English 'Corpse-Roads', 'Coffin-Paths' and 'Church-ways' - they are all funereal lines of spirit-movement which link burial places, graveyards and mounds. On the west coast of Ireland much oral folk-lore makes the identity of the faeries as the souls of the departed very clear for they say that if you have many dead friends you will have many good faeries about you. The Sidhe of Irish tradition and the Elves in German folklore, are the chthonic faery-ancestors, divinized souls who have passed below the lands and who exert, a subtle influence upon the living in whom they await rebirth, mysteriously informing their minds and bodies from the depths of the hidden kingdoms. As Jacob Grimm astutely observed: "The dead were known to the Norsemen as elves."
Nigel Aldcroft Jackson, The Call of the Horned Piper, pgs. 51-52
i've spent the past two, almost three hours, researching about the sluagh after finishing my homework
my mind and imagination are running everywhere
ugh, what i wouldn't give to get to act as (one off??) the sluagh on the show, my greatest joy, happiness, and slight jealousy to whoever does