YubNub Social YubNub Social
    #virginia #biology #loonylibs #plantbiology #gardening #autumn #animalbiology #fallcolors #fall #lakeburke #lake #burkelakepark #autumnleaves #fall2025 #mallard
    Advanced Search
  • Login
  • Register

  • Night mode
  • © 2025 YubNub Social
    About • Directory • Contact Us • Developers • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • shareasale • FB Webview Detected • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

    Select Language

  • English
Install our *FREE* WEB APP! (PWA)
Night mode toggle
Community
New Posts (Home) ChatBox Popular Posts Reels Game Zone Top PodCasts
Explore
Explore
© 2025 YubNub Social
  • English
About • Directory • Contact Us • Developers • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • shareasale • FB Webview Detected • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App
Advertisement
Stop Seeing These Ads

Discover posts

Posts

Users

Pages

Blog

Market

Events

Games

Forum

Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
5 w

Punk tribute album to Motörhead is announced
Favicon 
rockandrollgarage.com

Punk tribute album to Motörhead is announced

Formed by bassist, vocalist, and lyricist Lemmy Kilmister, Motörhead was active from 1975 until his death in 2015 and became one of the most influential Rock and Roll bands of all time. Although they were not as commercially successful as many of their peers, the band inspired countless famous artists, including Metallica, and were one of the few groups admired by both Punks and Metalheads. The band announced the tribute album "Killed by Deaf - A tribute to Motörhead", name which is a reference to the famous song "Killed by Death", reunites a long list of important Punk Rock bands and artists to cover Motörhead songs. Are part of the record bands like Rancid, The Damned, Fear, GBH and Pennywise. Motörhead and The Damned's version for "Neat Neat Neat" (The Damned song) is already available. "Killed By Deaf - A Punk Tribute To Motörhead" tracklist Pennywise – Ace of Spades Rancid – Sex & Death The Bronx – Over The Top Lagwagon – Rock ‘N' Roll Fear – The Chase Is Better Than The Catch GBH – Bomber Murphy's Law – Stay Clean Slaughterhouse – Love Me Like A Reptile The Casualties – The Hammer Anti-Nowhere League – Born To Raise Hell Love Canal – Voices In The Sky Soldiers of Destruction – Overkill Wisdom in Chains – Iron Fist Motörhead & The Damned – Neat Neat Neat https://youtu.be/YG8UQVY5WNk Lemmy, who died back in December, 2015 at the age of 70, was a huge fan of Punk Rock music and The Ramones was one of his favorite bands. He even wrote the song "R.A.M.O.N.E.S." as a tribute to them. He was also a good friend of the guys in The Damned and even played with the band on multiple occasions. Motörhead also covered during their career the Sex Pistols classic "God Save the Queen".The post Punk tribute album to Motörhead is announced appeared first on Rock and Roll Garage.
Like
Comment
Share
Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
5 w

Alice In Chains’ Jerry Cantrell reveals the guitarists who influenced him
Favicon 
rockandrollgarage.com

Alice In Chains’ Jerry Cantrell reveals the guitarists who influenced him

Alice in Chains co-founder and guitarist Jerry Cantrell is one of the most influential guitar players from the past decades and to come up with his own style, he first was inspired by many other musicians. Cantrell mentioned in an interview with Full Metal Jackie names like Lindsey Buckingham, Tony Iommi, Angus and Malcolm Young, Eddie Van Halen, Jimmy Page, Billy Gibbons and more as some of the guitarists who influenced him. Alice In Chains' Jerry Cantrell reveals the guitarists who influenced him "Oh, God. There's just too many to too many to single out. Tonally — tone's a really unusual thing, because you can line up 50 guys with the same guitar on the same amp and plug them in, and they're all gonna sound a little bit different. It's the relationship between the flesh and the wood and the metal, with the electricity running through it, and soul of the individual flowing through it. So it's so unique, and it's like a fingerprint — it really is." "It's unique to them. And I grew up listening to Davey Johnstone and Lindsey Buckingham and the Young brothers and Tony Iommi and Eddie Van Halen and Jimmy Page. Billy Gibbons. I can go down the list. Ted Nugent. Tom Scholz, for that matter. I've taken a little piece from anything that inspires me or makes me feel good, or songs that I keep coming back to, or albums that I still love listening to. And so the dream then is the same as it is today." He continued: "I wanna make something that makes somebody else feel — makes me and somebody else feel like that record made me feel when I was a kid, made me want to become a musician and make music myself. So it's hard to really boil it down to who maybe influenced me the most. There's standouts that are just like aliens to me. [Jimi] Hendrix was one. Eddie Van Halen is another. I think Randy Rhoads might qualify as an otherworldly being," Jerry Cantrell said (Transcribed by Blabbermouth). Besides the six albums released with Alice in Chains, Jerry Cantrell released five solo albums, the most recent one "I Want Blood", released in 2024. During his career he already collaborated with many other artists like Ozzy Osbourne, Metallica, Damageplan, Duff McKagan, Richie Kotzen, Heart and Metal Church. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5TBnK44PJXw&list=RD5TBnK44PJXw&start_radio=1&pp=ygUOamVycnkgY2FudHJlbGygBwE%3DThe post Alice In Chains’ Jerry Cantrell reveals the guitarists who influenced him appeared first on Rock and Roll Garage.
Like
Comment
Share
Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
5 w

Neil Young’s opinion on The Rolling Stones
Favicon 
rockandrollgarage.com

Neil Young’s opinion on The Rolling Stones

Neil Young first achieved fame as a member of Buffalo Springfield alongside guitarist and singer Stephen Stills, but he truly reached another level of recognition as one of the greatest songwriters of all time through his solo career and his work with Crosby, Stills & Nash. Part of the music business since the early ’60s, Young has witnessed the evolution of Rock and Roll up close and has spoken about many bands from that era, including The Rolling Stones. What is Neil Young's opinion on The Rolling Stones "The Rolling Stones, now there was something, because they kept going. They didn’t just last for five years. It took them longer to make a great contribution. The Beatles made their contribution in about five years, bang, gone—right? The Rolling Stones came out with “Miss You” way after, years after the Beatles broke up—and when you think of the Rolling Stones, that’s one of their best things, that Some Girls album— and that’s with Ron Wood, y’know. They d gone through a lot of changes." "I liked the fact that the Stones lasted so long and kept making vital music. What I really really liked about the Stones was Brian Jones and Keith Richards playin’ together. Even though Brian Jones was just kind of a bratty, sub-blues kind of guy, he still had the exuberance. Brian Jones was a very funky part of that band in the beginning, man—all the slide shit and everything? He was really wild, Jones. Too bad he was so crazy. A druggie." "They were all young, goin’ through a lotta changes real fast. Brian didn’t make it. 'Satisfaction' was a great record. 'Get Off My Cloud,' even better record. Looser, less of a hit. More of a reckless abandon. 'Get Off My Cloud’—I know it’s not as good of a song, and I know that the performance is probably not as good as the 'Satisfaction' performance, maybe it is—but the thing about it is it’s obviously just such a fuckin’ throw-together song that they came up with on the way to the studio or the night before, y'know?" Neil Young continued: "That's what I liked about it. It really sounded like the Rolling Stones. I remember hearing one of the real early ones— 'I’m a Man.' It was really rough and crude.... It was when yer learning how to play, checkin’ out songs, learnin’ songs. You kinda look at things different, not so much what the song’s saying as, is it hard or easy?" "If it is easy, does that mean they can't play? Are they good or bad? You’re still working those things out. And then you can get so hung up playin’ a bunch of chords and changes that you lose the thing. . . . You don't realize that the easy stuff is the hardest. To make the easy stuff be great," Neil Young said about The Stones when he inducted Woody Guthrie into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1988. The Neil Young songs inspired by The Rolling Stones https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jyc0JSd5q7U&list=RDjyc0JSd5q7U&start_radio=1&pp=ygUHbXIgc291bKAHAQ%3D%3D Neil Young had the chance to see and meet The Rolling Stones in the beginning of their careers, in 1966, when Bufallo Springfield was their opening act in the United States. Curiously, the track "Mr. Soul", from the album "Buffalo Springfield Again" (1967) has a guitar riff clearly inspired by The Stones hit "Satisfaction". A couple years later on his solo career, Young was inspired by a little more than the riff, he actually used the melody of The Stones' "Lady Jane" in the song "Borrowed Tune" from his 1975 album "Tonight's The Night". He also mentions the band in the lyrics, saying: “I’m singin’ this borrowed tune. I took from the Rolling Stones. Alone in this empty room. Too wasted to write my own.” In the liner notes of the 1977 compilation record "Decade", Young said: "A song I had written at the beginning of the Time Fades Away tour reflecting on whether a big stadium tour was right for me. I played 'Lady Jane' and forgot the chords. I started playing my own chords, it started sounding better to me, so I kept playing that. It just turned into another song," he said. The influence of The Stones can also be heard on "Computer Age" The British band led by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards has always been an influence to Neil, even in terms of how his live concerts would be. He went to see them many times and was impressed by the logistics and size of their shows as it's said in Young's biography "Shakey" (2003). The Stones' inspiration can also be heard on "Computer Age", track from his 1983 album "Trans", which has a riff similar to "Jumpin' Jack Flash". Over the years, the Folk Rock artist became good friends with The Rolling Stones, especially Mick Jagger, whom he grew closer to while living in Malibu. Young had the chance to share the stage with Keith Richards in 1992 when he inducted Jimi Hendrix into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Stones guitarist joined him and other artists on stage to play "All Along the Watchtower". Neil Young said Rock can be divided between The Beatles and The Rolling Stones Neil Young once reflected about how Rock and Roll music can be divided in two categories, The Beatles type bands and The Rolling Stones type band. According to him The Beatles were more tight, something The Rolling Stones were not. As shown in his biography "Shakey" he said: "I realized, 'Hey, these Crazy Horse guys are a lot closer to the Rolling Stones. More than Buffalo Springfield was the Beatles.'So Id taken rock and roll and divided it into two categories, Rolling Stones and Beatles, okay?" "And I realized that if you divided into those two categories, color made no difference, what part of the world made no difference. Beatles are on one side, Rolling Stones on the other side, everybody else line up, okay? Crazy Horse and the Mynah Birds, they were on the Rolling Stones side". He was the questioned about in which category some bands would fit: "Buffalo Springfield were the Beatles? "Yup". CSNY? "Beatles." Pearl Jam? "Rolling Stones". The Harvest band, the Stray Gators0? "Beatles, heh heh. ... See, it’s just like that—pretty simple". Where did Dylan fit in this equation? "Where did he fit in? Rolling Stones. Dylan was never as tight as the Beatles," Neil Young saidThe post Neil Young’s opinion on The Rolling Stones appeared first on Rock and Roll Garage.
Like
Comment
Share
Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
5 w ·Youtube Prepping & Survival

YouTube
RED ALERT!! FIND COVER!! KIRK ATTACKED❗POLITICAL ATTACK❗REMOVE ALL TRUMP INFO❗IT'S STARTING! GO GREY
Like
Comment
Share
Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
5 w News & Oppinion

rumbleBitchute
Open Source Phones :The Only Safe Smartphones, Very Little Sacrifices to Convenience Today
Like
Comment
Share
Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
5 w News & Oppinion

rumbleBitchute
CHARLIE KIRK SHOT & KILLED!!
Like
Comment
Share
Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
5 w News & Oppinion

rumbleBitchute
“My CHRISTIANITY is one that FIGHTS! It’s not for WHIMPS”!!!
Like
Comment
Share
The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
5 w

Man critiques hairstyles from his 1988 high school yearbook and they are beyond epic
Favicon 
www.upworthy.com

Man critiques hairstyles from his 1988 high school yearbook and they are beyond epic

In many ways, the 1980s were the best of times and the worst of times for those of us who lived through it. The freedom in having a free-range childhood and the sense of living in a slower, simpler time makes some Gen Xers nostalgic for that decade. The hideous fashion choices and ridonkulous hairstyles? Not so much. A man who goes by Weird Paul on TikTok shared photos from his 1988 senior yearbook, highlighting the sky-high hairstyles that were "in" at the time, and you can practically smell the Aqua Net coming through the screen. The feathered sides. The bangs curled both up and under and the rest teased to the heavens. The Flock of Seagulls inspiration. The oh-so-mighty mullet. If youngsters want to know what the 80s looked like, this is it, in all its unrivaled glory: @weirdpaulp look at this 80s hair in my 1988 high school yearbook! #80shair #80shairstyle #1980shair #genx #80smemories #hairtok #creatorsearchinsights As a woman who came of age in this era, allow me to share how much time and effort these young ladies' hairstyles took to create. No joke about the Aqua Net—the amount of hairspray it took to make these styles stay in place is probably what created the hole in the ozone layer. If you were unlucky enough to have straight hair that wouldn't stay curled no matter what you tried, there was simply no hope for you. You either had to get a perm (which I did), spend most of your precious free time curling and teasing and spraying your hair, or wait out the era looking like a total dweeb (straight hair was soooo 70s, and everything from the 70s was totally unhip in the 80s; might as well have been wearing orange and brown bell bottoms—the horror!).What we don't see in these headshots are the clothing trends of the 80s—the pegged jeans, the legwarmers, the neon colors, the shoulder pads (OMG why???), the jelly shoes, the acid wash, and more. It's been hilarious to see what elements of 80s fashion have come back around and what has stayed relegated to the past. 80S Dancing GIF Giphy The revival of the fanny pack has been a delightfully practical surprise (we wouldn't have been caught dead with one in the late 90s). The high-waisted "mom jeans" coming into style felt super weird, but a lot of women seem to have appreciated it. Unfortunately, it appears the shoulder-padded "power suit" is trying to worm its way back into our lives (no, thank you), but we'll see if it sticks. Thankfully, the 80s hairdos seem to have remained in the vault so far (with the exception of the mullet in some circles, which is frankly a bit baffling). It's hard to imagine ever wanting to put that much effort and product into our hair ever again, but who knows? @fayequeenan Replying to @Shaolynne1 sorry I don’t have aqua net or a perm? my previous video was just my interpretation and not me saying this is how people actually styled their hair in the 80s #80shair #bangs #fringe But just in case anyone gets any hair-brained ideas, let's walk through the process of creating a big 80s hairdo for someone with straight hair (yes, I'm bound and determined to keep 80s hair back in the 80s—there may or may not be some hair trauma involved here).A young woman was trying to recreate an 80s 'do and struggling with it, so an elder who rocked that hair in her younger years, despite having long, straight hair, stepped in with a tutorial. If this doesn't put you off of wanting an 80s hair comeback, I don't know what will. The dirty hair. The teasing/backcombing/ratting/whatever you want to call it. The aerosol hairspray being shellacked with a hair dryer. It wasn't pleasant, it wasn't worth it, and it never will be. @shamanisis Hi @Rachel OCool I just had to share my secrets to big 80s hair for people with shiny, straight hair! Enjou! #stitch #80s #80shair #80shairtutorial #incomingstitch #humor #funny For Halloween? Knock yourself out. But on behalf of myself and countless other Gen X youths who struggled through the big hair era, I'm begging y'all, do not bring it back. Some things belong in the past, and the glory of 80s hair is one of them.
Like
Comment
Share
Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
5 w

The artists who connect Lou Reed and Kiss with uncredited features
Favicon 
faroutmagazine.co.uk

The artists who connect Lou Reed and Kiss with uncredited features

Excellent work. The post The artists who connect Lou Reed and Kiss with uncredited features first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
Like
Comment
Share
Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
5 w

They Murdered Charlie Kirk And They Must Pay
Favicon 
townhall.com

They Murdered Charlie Kirk And They Must Pay

They Murdered Charlie Kirk And They Must Pay
Like
Comment
Share
Showing 5084 out of 95227
  • 5080
  • 5081
  • 5082
  • 5083
  • 5084
  • 5085
  • 5086
  • 5087
  • 5088
  • 5089
  • 5090
  • 5091
  • 5092
  • 5093
  • 5094
  • 5095
  • 5096
  • 5097
  • 5098
  • 5099
Advertisement
Stop Seeing These Ads

Edit Offer

Add tier








Select an image
Delete your tier
Are you sure you want to delete this tier?

Reviews

In order to sell your content and posts, start by creating a few packages. Monetization

Pay By Wallet

Payment Alert

You are about to purchase the items, do you want to proceed?

Request a Refund