2017-11-11

Josu Freire - Like You (Original Mix)



i know you, "like it", and i wouldn't want to disappoint, it's not my style as, standard, hahahahahahahaha, :) #edio

Vincenzo D'amico - I Can't Stop (Original Mix)



you know, "i can't stop", why would i want to?, i enjoy doing, what i do, or i wouldn't do it as, standardz, hahahahahaha, :) #edio

Premiere: Archie B - Trip



oh how would it feel, to take a, "trip", on the wings, of a bumbling bee, would you even care, as long as you fly free as, standardz, hahahahaha, :) #edio

Premiere: Apollo 84 - Mantis



did you know, that the, "Mantis", (an order Mantodea of insects that contains over 2,400 species in about 430 genera in 15 families). is the largest family is the Mantidae mantids. Mantises are distributed worldwide in temperate and tropical habitats. They have triangular heads with bulging eyes supported on flexible necks. Their elongated bodies may or may not have wings, but all Mantodea have forelegs that are greatly enlarged and adapted for catching and gripping prey; their upright posture, while remaining stationary with forearms folded, has led to the common name praying mantis. The closest relatives of mantises are the termites and cockroaches Blattodea, which are all within the superorder Dictyoptera. Mantises are sometimes confused with stick insects Phasmatodea, other elongated insects such as grasshoppers Orthoptera, or other insects with raptorial forelegs such as mantisflies Mantispidae. Mantises are mostly ambush predators, but a few ground-dwelling species are found actively pursuing their prey. They normally live for about a year. In cooler climates, the adults lay eggs in autumn, then die. The eggs are protected by their hard capsules and hatch in the spring. Females sometimes practice sexual cannibalism, eating their mates after copulation. Mantises were considered to have supernatural powers by early civilisations, including Ancient Greece, Ancient Egypt, and Assyria, Insects have appeared in mythology around the world from ancient times. Among the insect groups featuring in myths are the bee, butterfly, cicada, dragonfly, praying mantis and scarab beetle, Insect myths may present the origins of a people, or of their skills such as finding honey. Other myths concern the nature of the gods or their actions, and how they may be appeased. A variety of myths tell of transformations, such as between the soul of a living or dead person and a butterfly in Japan. Finally, insects appear as symbols of human qualities such as swiftness, or as portents of forthcoming trouble; accordingly, they may appear as amulets to ward off evil. The Kalahari Desert's San people, tell of a bee that carried a mantis, across a river. The exhausted bee, left the mantis on a floating flower, but planted a seed in the mantis's body, before it died. The seed grew to become the first human, The mantis was revered in southern African Khoi and San traditions where man and nature were intertwined. Several ancient civilisations considered the insect to have supernatural powers; for the Greeks, it had the ability to show lost travellers the way home; in the Ancient Egyptian Book of the Dead the bird-fly, is a minor god that leads the souls of the dead, to the underworld, in a list of 9th-century BC Nineveh grasshoppers buru, the mantis is named necromancer buru-enmeli and soothsayer buru-enmeli-ashaga as, standardz, hahahahahaha, :) #edio

Andres Blows - Floor (Original Mix) [Psicodelica]



it's time to leave the ground, "floor", behind us, and head upwards as, standardz, hahahahahahahahahaha, :) #edio

Kikko Esse - Room 33 (Original Mix) [Soulstice Music]



well peep's, it's time to begin another adventure like in, "Room 33", but without all the weird subliminal messages, and sex, so onward to the realm eternal as, standardz, hahahahahaha, :) #edio

Jay De Lys - Music Don't Stop (Tolstoi & Andsan Remix) [Chuggy Traxx]



ammmmmmmmmm back, mo fo's, with a little pre-flight entertainment, so if you would like, to make your way, to the v.i.p lounge, and you know the, "Music Don't Stop", even when we do, i know there's a summit up there somewhere, so let's begin the ascent, onward's and upward's as, standardz, hahahahahahahaha, :) #edio
also i have a YouTube page, it has a copy of all my latest tracks,5000+ and if you keep going back, pretty much every track I've posted, just go to liked video's, and hit play all, and you won't have to keep pressing play, but unfortunately you wont get to read, what i write, but you will get access to a constant stream of tracks, for over a years solid play time, but you know, ya can't have it all looolz ;)

Inve & Forsi - Pure Disco (Original Mix) [miniMarket]



you knew, i had to give you, one more, right?, and now it's time for me, to go on my own solo journey, so i hope you, enjoyed all the tracks we played, in the, "pure disco", of the mind, and with that said, it's time for me, to go to the place, where the dreams are made, up and out, second star to the right, and straight on, 'till morning, and with that I AM out as, standardz, hahahahahaha, :) #edio
end transmission :) #peace

Matador - Juniper (Original Mix) [Rukus]


did you know, the more practical uses of, "juniper", (an evergreen shrub or small tree that bears berrylike cones, widely distributed throughout Eurasia and North America. Many kinds have aromatic cones or foliage), have been known to people for several millennia, it features only sporadically in ancient mythology. Juniper was a symbol of the Canaanites' fertility goddess Ashera or Astarte in Syria. In the Bible's Old Testament, a juniper with an angelic presence sheltered the prophet Elijah from Queen Jezebel's pursuit. Similarly a later apocryphal biblical tale tells of how the infant Jesus and his parents were hidden from King Herod's soldiers by a juniper during their flight into Egypt, and From the point of view of witches and occultists, the juniper's most common use is in the making of incense, for which both the dried berries and needles and the essential oil are used. The berries, having a relatively high oil content, tend to burn with a good deal of smoke and any incense containing them is likely to produce a good fug if that is what appeals to you, Manifestation - for incense intended for use in rituals where manifestation is an important part of the working, IE evocations, where oodles of smoke are helpful to the working. Purification - as an incense or smudge in most rituals of purification, including the blessing of houses and other buildings and for dedicating new working areas and temples; for animals, (eg welcoming and dedicating new familiars); and for purifying people, for example baby-blessing ceremonies, initiations etc. A small bunch of twigs or a few berries in a pouch can also be hung in the rafters of a building or over the lintel of the doorway as a longer-term protection, in the Scottish Highlands on New Year's morning, juniper was burned in both house and byre to purify buildings and inhabitants. This is echoed by the tradition in some parts of Cornwall and Brittany of using juniper wood in the Beltane fires, between which cattle and other livestock were driven as a means of purification, throughout Central Europe there was a custom of burning juniper berries in the house in the three days leading up to Beltane so as to fumigate the house and welcome summer, while it has also been reported that in Aberdeen-shire in NE Scotland and in what is now Czechoslovakia juniper berries were used to fumigate stables to expel demons and other unwanted guests. also a folk medicine custom in some parts of the South West of England of burning the wood and needles close to a sick person. This practice is closely allied to the above New Year customs and presumably recognises that the vaporised oil released into the air had some beneficial purifying effect to dispel infection, Like many plants, there was a definite ritual which had to be followed when pulling or collecting juniper so that the power and essence of the plant was not lost. In the case of juniper, it had to be pulled up by the roots, the branches made into four bundles and held between the five fingers while intoning the appropriate incantation, I will pull the bounteous yew, Through the five bent ribs of Christ, In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost Against drowning, danger and confusion,Folk tradition records a divinatory significance to the appearance of juniper in dreams, for: "it is unlucky to dream of the tree itself, especially if the person is sick; but to dream of gathering the berries, if it be in winter, denotes prosperity. To dream of the actual berries signifies that the dreamer will shortly arrive at great honours and become an important person. To the married it foretells the birth of a male child, The largest body of folklore concerning juniper comes from Iceland where it was traditionally believed that juniper and rowan could not grow together because each creates so much heat that one or other of the trees would be burn up. For the same reason it was considered not a good idea to bring sprigs of both woods into the house together unless you particularly wanted your house to burn down. Another Icelandic belief has it that if you are building a boat, you must either use both juniper and rowan wood or use neither of them in the boat, otherwise it will sink, In Wales it was said that anyone who cut down a juniper tree would be dead within a year, while in Newfoundland it was believed that wolves and bears are repelled by juniper wood and for this reason people who kept stock would ensure that juniper wood was used in building enclosures or stockades in which livestock would be kept. Also in Newfoundland it is believed that you will always find water under a juniper tree, though this seems to contradict the natural history of juniper which, as mentioned above, generally grows best on limestone or chalk soils which are usually well-drained, The juniper also features in one of the most horrific of Grimms' Fairy Tales, The Juniper Tree, (10), in which a pregnant woman eats the berries of the juniper tree, which grows in the garden of her house, as a result of which she becomes ill, and lives just long enough to give birth to a son. She is buried beneath the juniper tree, and after a period of mourning, the father remarries; in time a daughter is born, and the stepmother becomes jealous, seeking to gain, all of the father's wealth for the daughter. She first physically abuses, and then kills her stepson, (by beheading him, with the lid of a chest as he chooses an apple, from within), and feeds his flesh in the form of a stew, to his father. His half-sister collects his bones, and lays them beneath the juniper tree in the garden, below which the boy's mother, had been previously buried. Amidst a magical mist and flames, the bones are transformed into a bird, who is able through his song, to reveal how he was murdered. By singing his song to various enchanted listeners, he is able to gather to himself, the things he needs to dispense justice. He is clearly intended to be seen, as a magical bird as his plumage is described, as being beautiful and he is able to lift aloft a huge millstone, which he subsequently drops, onto his stepmother and kills her. Once justice has been dealt out, to the stepmother, the bird is transformed once, again into the child, and normality is resumed. However, the shamanic initiatory elements, within the Grimm's story are unmistakable. The sequence of events may be summed up as: initial death,(by beheading, IE dismemberment), the return to the cauldron/womb of transformation, (IE the cooking pot), the stripping of the traveller's flesh, from his bones and the consumption, of that flesh, by the traveller's life guide/father, the return of the stripped-down traveller, to his ancestors and the world tree, shape-shifting, subsequent re-integration and return to the normal world. and that The Juniper tree's name is derived from the Latin word juniperus. In Latin, juniperus is combination of the word junio, which means young, and parere, to produce, hence youth producing, or evergreen as, standardz, hahahahahahaha, :) #edio