Earth Day, turn those amps OFF!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


Earth Day, turn those amps OFF!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I've said it before, I'll say it again, it is Environmentally IRRESPONSIBLE to leave your equipment on for long periods of time, before or after, or truly despicable, ON all the time!

On, 20 mins, listen, done, off!

Doctors, Lawyers, Trust Fund Kiddos, come on now.

Where were you in 1970?, I was there in Manhattan (went to college at Pratt in Brooklyn 1966-1970)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_Day

 

 

elliottbnewcombjr

Haha same - my main reason for keeping gear OFF when possible is to save the tubes. That said the engineer in me does hate wastefulness without justification

@elliottbnewcombjr do you run Class D amplifiers? Because that saves a ton of energy. Where would you draw the line? Active preamps OK?

Teach Your Children Well (have a code you can live by)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkaKwXddT_I

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[Verse 1]
You, who are on the road
Must have a code that you can live by
And so, become yourself
Because the past, is just a goodbye

Teach, your children well
Your father’s hell, did slowly go by
And feed, them on your dreams
The one they pick’s the one you’ll know by


[Bridge]
Don’t you ever ask them why
If they told you you would cry
So just look at them and sigh
And know they love you


[Verse 2]
And you of tender years (Can you hear and do you care?)
Can’t know the fears (And can you see?)
That your elders grew by (We must be free)
And so please help (To teach your children)
Them with your youth (What you believe in)
They seek the truth (Make a world)
Before they can die (That we can live in)

Teach, your parents well
Their children’s hell, will slowly go by
And feed, them on your dreams
The one they picks, the one you’ll know by

[Bridge]
Don’t you ever ask them why
If they told you you would cry
So just look at them and sigh
And know they love you

 

Graham Nash explains his inspiration for the song in his 2013 autobiography:

The origin of the song came from my recent infatuation with art. I had begun collecting photographs around that time, powerful images that had an emotional effect on me. One, in particular, was a Diane Arbus image of a boy in Central Park. It spoke volumes to me. The kid was only about nine or ten years old, but his expression bristled with intense anger. He had a plastic grenade clenched in a fist, but it seemed to me that if it were real the kid would have thrown it. The consequences it implied startled me. I thought, ‘If we don’t start teaching our kids a better way of dealing with each other, humanity will never succeed.’

Many feel the song is really about how the baby boom generation must teach their parents about the way the world should be. In fact, it’s a lesson for parents and for their children.

– Crosby, Stills & Nash debut album, 1969

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Ok, Ok, I’ll Get a Haircut. Just let me fold up my traveling soapbox.