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Re: I'm creating a web site as a resource for the non-racists on this group.
Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 09:01:26 -0600
Newsgroups: alt.flame.niggers
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"Kit" <email-address-deleted> wrote in message
news:email-address-deleted...
>
> I hope you do not like rock and roll music or jazz or blues, as any
> music historian will tell you that those originated with blacks. If
> you want truly "white" music, you're still ok with country, blugrass,
> and celtic music, not to mention many brands of world music, which are
> at least non-black. But me, I like rock as well.
LMAO!!! Another pseudo-intellectual musicologist, giving credit to
niggers where credit is not due. Where do you think niggers acquired
guitars, pianos, and brass instruments? Do you think they came over on
slave ships??? They weren't developed in Africa, they were developed in
EUROPE, along with the concepts of melody, harmony, modes and scales, and
the written form of the bass clef, the treble clef, and time signatures.
The only thing niggers brought to America was an instinct for rhythm, the
ability make make simple percussive intruments, and rudimentary "field
hollers".
Beginning with Gregorian chants through Classical forms and folk idioms
(Celtic, Scotch-Irish, French, Germanic, Spanish etc.), all American music
can be traced to Europe. Even the rock-and-roll backbeat had origins in
Celtic music. The only original music of a non-Western origin involves the
microtones (intervals smaller than a half-step) of Eastern music. What one
refers to as "blues music" are flat-thirds, flat sevenths, and the passing
tones of diminshed fifths and diminished sixths, all of which came from the
modes of natural, melodic and harmonic minor scales, WHICH WERE CONCEPTS OF
THE WHITE MAN. There is no historical evidence that Africans had any
concept of the octave or twelve-tone scales.
I'll give niggers credit for one thing, they are master mimics... monkey
see, monkey do. As for Elvis, his first big hit was "Blue Moon Of
Kentucky", a really great bluegrass song. You should realize that reading
'Rolling Stone' magazine does not make you educated in music history.

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