V/A
"Florida Punk from the Sixties"
(LP. Eva. 1983 / rec. 1966-69) [US]
seen from Kyrgyzstan
seen from China
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seen from United States

seen from Germany
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seen from United States

seen from Germany

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seen from Australia
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seen from Philippines
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seen from United States
V/A
"Florida Punk from the Sixties"
(LP. Eva. 1983 / rec. 1966-69) [US]
Tasmanians - Baby (1967)
Exceptional use of the word “baby” on this garage rock stomper from West Palm Beach, Florida
Baby
1:35 AM EDT May 29, 2024:
Tasmanians - "Baby" From the Compilation album Teenage Shutdown Vol. 14: Howlin' For My Darlin'! (February 11, 2000)
Last song scrobbled from iTunes at Last.fm
From the semi-notorious series of compilations chronicling 60's garage.
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“Primitive” people
About the Andamanese people but also the indigenous Tasmanians, one thing I’ve read is that they didn’t know how to make fire, counting instead on naturally occurring fires that they nurtured.
Now it’s possible that this was true for both, but I think it’s likely that it was not true for either of them, at least not for most of their existence.
In Structural Anthropology, Claude Levi-Strauss mentions a specific tribe (I can’t be bothered to look up the name now) in south America whose lifestyle seemed very “primitive”. He then goes on to explain that these people had actually been sophisticated agriculturalist only a few generations ago, and that their current hunter-gatherer style was a consequence of their being utterly destroyed as a people by outside (colonizers) forces. The “primitive” people live a “primitive life” because their lives have been disrupted.
I think a similar thing might have happened with regards to fire.
Here’s an article disputing the notion and looking at the evidence for the Tasmanians : https://www.jstor.org/stable/24046786?seq=1
(It also points out that fire might have been surrounded by various taboos and the possibility that only some specific people within the tribes were permitted to make it).
I fear it would not be possible to write a similar article for the Andamanese, due to the scarcity of information about their cultures.
Tasmanians: Baby (1967)
@trespasser_27 and I are going Pokemon Hunting tomorrow for Beldum community day Come Join Us #Tasmanians! #tassie #pogohobart #pokemongo https://www.instagram.com/p/BpJhmrAHPuc/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=8rki2ai2t45x
tasmanians -- baby
Cool blast hits Tasmanians in summer season
By James Dunlevie, Edith Bevin and Amy Corridor
As a lot as this level January thirteen, 2018 18:fifty two:16
Record: Hail on the bottom at Orford, Tasmania, January thirteen, 2018. (Instagram: Rose Nicholl)
It is some distance summer season in Australia but anyone forgot to repeat Tasmania, the set apart folks bear rugged up all over again as hail and…
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