Looking for new music?
My name is Grungy Bill. I'm a post-punk solo artist from the UK. I've been making DIY Music since 2019. I play bass, guitar, and keyboard. My influences include Nick Cave, The Cramps, Devo, Joy Division, and The Pixies.
Check out my new cover of "Jack the Ripper" by Screaming Lord Sutch!:
Or click here to find my latest music.
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punk spot and goth sarah stuff 馃
i also made playlists of the kind of music i think they'd listen to :') you can listen to spot's here. most tracks fall under the hardcore subgenre, but there's also a good amount of ska and pop. generally has a chaotic, garage, and/or dated kind of sound, really wanted the kind of stuff that scratches my brain in a specific, rough way
there's also sarah's playlist, which i'm less confident about because i'm wayyy more immersed in punk subculture and music. but. i tried! some gothic rock, mostly punkabilly and gothabilly. i feel like she'd be into music that has that campy slasher feel, so that's the overall mood i was gunning for
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I recently had the honor of participating in a student craft fair to benefit the Palestinian children鈥檚 relief fund. Despite being a very small college, we were able to raise over 2,000 dollars, and I got to meet many talented artists at my school. I encourage all artists and crafters to look for similar ways to build community and work towards causes you care about. It鈥檚 easy to feel hopeless, but movements are made up of many small actions.
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So for tattooing if you don't have an entire light set-up you need a head torch, in case your own shadow gets in the way and the like, and mine broke so I'm looking for a new one at a sporting goods website.
Problem is, they have too many options, and they're catagorised by sport, which requires some... abstract thinking
What do you guys think would tattooing be more akin to carp fishing or BMX freestyle
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Almanac for the Anthropocene collects original voices from across the solarpunk movement, which positions ingenuity, generativity, and community as beacons of resistance to the hopelessness often inspired by the climate crisis. To point toward practical implementation of the movement鈥檚 ideas, it gathers usable blueprints that bring together theory and practice. The result is a collection of interviews, recipes, exercises, DIY instructions, and more鈥攁ll of it amounting to a call to create hope through action.
Inspired by a commitment to the idea that there can be no environmental justice without decolonial and racial justice, Almanac for the Anthropocene unites in a single volume both academic and practical responses to environmental crisis.
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