06-22-2004
I've been listening to a ton of Iced Earth lately. Their latest album has a 3-part song called "Gettysburg" which is over half an hour long! It is very unusual for a metal song in that it teaches a history lesson. I learned more about the Battle of Gettysburg listening to this than I ever did in history class. The lyrics are basically several small "snapshots" telling the story with musical interludes between them. Some lyrics are dialog - for example one part where a Rebel soldier tells of his best friend who fights for the North and how he wants God to strike him down before he has to kill his friend. Other parts are more narrative in nature. The music is great too. Tons of tempo and style changes, and they even mixed in a 55 piece symphony orchestra with their guitar and drum work in order to establish different moods for different parts of the song.
Check it out, I bet you'll like it.
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
music123
music123(1) General Commands Manual music123(1)
NAME
music123 - plays various sound files (usually including MP3, Ogg and Wav).
SYNOPSIS
music123 [ -hqrvz ] file ...
DESCRIPTION
music123 is a shell around various command line programs to play music files. It will descend directories trees with -r, and randomize
file lists with -z. The programs used and the options given them are listed in /etc/music123rc or ~/.music123rc.
OPTIONS
-h Show command help and exit;
-q Quiet mode. No messages are displayed.
-r Recurse into directories, instead of ignoring them.
-v Display version information and exit.
-z Play files in random order.
-Z Play the files randomly and endlessly.
-l Loop. -z -l differs from -Z in that -z -l will randomize, play through the song list (without repetition) in random order once, and
repeat the songs in that order over and over; -Z will randomly play the songs, without any order, and will possibly play a song
right after itself.
-i Ignore extension case.
-L List files and exit.
-T Start a task that handle commands, only one command supported : quit, using q or Q will quit the application at the end of the cur-
rent song.
-D Set music123 not to delay between songs. (May make music123 harder to kill).
-d Customize the time music123 delays between songs. -d takes one argument, expressed in seconds, which may have a fractional part.
-@ Play the files listed in the mandatory argument of -@. Other files can be added on the command line, and this option can be given
several times. Note that music123 doesn't yet play URLs.
-- End option list.
EXAMPLES
Play three songs:
music123 test1.ogg test2.mp3 test3.wav
Play a couple of directories and other songs at random:
music123 -z -r Rock/ test1.ogg Pop/ test4.wav
FILES
/etc/music123rc
Describes which programs music123 uses, which files types it supports, and which options it passes those programs.
~/.music123rc
Per-user config file to override the system wide settings.
AUTHORS
Authors:
David Starner <dvdeug@debian.org>
July 24, 2002 music123(1)