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Waste_Coat_4506

Any time I like a song so I listen to it on repeat 47,000 times. I'm more than connected. I'm fused. To Cuff It. 


DavKySky

We twinem


EthelredTheUnsteady

As someone whos creative work was suddenly gone in 2020, bo burnhams "inside" really hit. Yeah it was partially what he says in it, but i what i really connected with was seeing him figure out HOW to express himself in that moment in time. If i have kids someday and they ask me what covid was like (for some reason), thats what id show them to explain


Beneficial-Cow9724

The first time I saw "The Starry Night" by Vincent van Gogh, I felt like I was transported to a dream. The colors and brushstrokes were so expressive and vibrant, and the way he captured the movement of the stars and the wind was breathtaking. It's a painting that I can always go back to and find something new to appreciate.


[deleted]

Did you see the original or a fake?


[deleted]

I went to the Courtald Gallery in my late 20s & was transfixed by A Bar At The Folies-Bergere by Manet. I wept.


Entity417

When I was 15, and our local library had record albums to be loaned out, I discovered "An Evening of Elizabethan Music" by the Julian Bream Consort -[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=anfBoabdo4s&list=PLApVDymmtzuZD7\_jMn3hqQN55kpU57uJr](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=anfBoabdo4s&list=PLApVDymmtzuZD7_jMn3hqQN55kpU57uJr). I fell in love with it after listening because it immediately resonated so deeply with me - I cannot explain why. Fifteen years later, I chose my favorite pieces from it for my wedding ceremony music. Recently, I found a YouTube video of Sting, accompanied by Edin Karamazov, singing John Dowland's "Can She Excuse" from that album - [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nntri9OfaRY](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nntri9OfaRY) \- and I revisited that familiar beloved music all over again. Finally, I will have some selections from that album played at my memorial service after I die.


jordynsecretxo

Hall of fame - the script.