I hereby claim:
- I am hasmanyguitars on github.
- I am jramer (https://keybase.io/jramer) on keybase.
- I have a public key ASAo_nZS-306VJVHTxtCrMNVv16n7I0qkSaZwib6bvqgXwo
To claim this, I am signing this object:
From 'http://matthewhutchinson.net/2011/1/10/configuring-subdomains-in-development-with-lvhme' for testing subdomains | |
#!/bin/bash | |
SUBDOMAIN=$1 | |
TLD=$2 | |
if [ $# -lt 1 ] | |
then | |
echo "which subdomain?" |
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
Rank,Artist,Album,Info,Description | |
500,Arcade Fire,Funeral,"Merge, 2004","Loss, love, forced coming-of-age, and fragile generational hope: Arcade Fire’s debut touched on all these themes as it defined the independent rock of the ‘00s. Built on family ties (leader Win Butler, his wife, Régine Chassagne, his brother Will), the Montreal band made symphonic rock that truly rocked, simultaneously outsize and deeply personal, like the best pop. But for all its sad realism, Butler’s is music that still finds solace, and purpose, in communal celebration. | |
" | |
499,"Rufus, Chaka Khan",Ask Rufus,"ABC, 1977","Fronted by Chaka Khan, one of soul music’s most combustible singers, Rufus built its mid-Seventies sound on heavy-footed, guitar-slathered funk. But after spending 16 months in the studio working on Ask Rufus, they came out with a record that gave their songs more room to breathe, anticipating the lithe, loose arrangements of Nineties neo-soul. Khan glided through the head-nodding “Everlasting Love” and the twisty-tur |