@Requiem 596401 wrote:
Still going strong buddy?
yep, but too lazzy to take train to my home, didn’t sleep 3 days
today frenchie music
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mwl2AFYLb84
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9b8erWuBA44
:t1523::big-joint::t1543::bounce_ci
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eSZ3GypxCFw
Hey DIggy, I fuck the police, send u a swiss law, very important to know :
[ATTACH=CONFIG]88085[/ATTACH]
in english :
Art. 19b88
1. the One who restricts to prepare narcotics in small quantities, for his own consumption or to allow thirds parties of more than 18 years to consumes it simultaneously in common having supplied for free, is not liable to penalty.
I didn’t realise Swiss law was that liberal (or more verging on being socialist/anarchist!)
perhaps that is why everyone there is so brainy at science; you won’t find science boring if it means everyone can get high :laugh_at:
I found this at work (of all the random things) in a box full of activities materials for the older people; usually in the UK they avoid anything vaguely Germanic as it creates a risk of a lot of Angst due to memories of WW II – especially this is a border area of the UK and loyalties were divided back then especially amongst the more affluent social classes! (the same Angst plagues nursing homes across the continent) In any case there are no working cassette players anywhere in the building; I do have a few at home I’ve recovered from work.
It is exactly what I’d expected it to be; an elderly chap singing Schlager music with some kind of electronic barrel organ accompaniment :laugh_at: I wonder how it crossed the North Sea?
Quite a find there GL.
that tape is much more modern than I initially thought and could be as recent as early to mid 1990s. The giveaway is the font on the cassette label itself is Arial rather than Helvetica; (there are subtle differences between the two).
Arial (unlike Helvetica; which is something else Switzerland is famous for other than tolerant drug laws) was virtually unheard of in Europe until Microsoft Windows became commonly used; making the tape most likely to have produced in the early to mid 1990s.
A curious thing with music is that although underground dance music progressed through Europe at the same rate; pop music did not! Schlager was still very popular in mainland North Europe throughout the 1990s (it may still be popular in some countries!) whilst in the UK our pop music was by then much more influenced by American urban and rock music.
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