Talk:Jayson Park
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I'm going to guess that Gangnam Style *there* sounds a bit like this, or this. BoArthur 14:05, 7 October 2015 (PDT)
- Empress? Aw man, I had my own ideas for a kind-of-sort-of Queen... Basically, an Indian raga-rock band named Rani with at least Farrokh Bulsara as the lead singer and and an Indian George Harrison on sitar... maybe the two could coexist?
- Also, I really love both covers! The bossa nova one in particular is how I personally imagine Gañnam Style *there* would sound like--and heck, probably nu jass in general, what with all the ganja they're smoking. Juan Martin Velez Linares 21:01, 07 October 2015 (CDT)
- You may change Empress to Rani, if you want. I'm not sure that M. Farrokh Bulsara would exist *there* in the same form as here. We do have plenty of doppelgangers. Look up Bill Clinton. He's in Louisianne, the NAL, and I think a few other places. BoArthur 06:52, 8 October 2015 (PDT)
- True, true. My vision for M. Bulsara was that he was born in Samrazji Guzarat to parents from... some sort of religion (the Parsi community is at the very least much reduced compared to *here* and probably focused on trading ports if it exists at all) and began playing the harmonium at around age 7. Heavily inspired by Bollywood (Breuckbay?) singers, he began playing in bands around either Mumbai or Delhi (one of those two) which were pioneering a fusion of Indian classical music and rock 'n' roll in the style of Western Zone-Rock bands fusing classical and psychedelic idioms with rock. In around 1971-1972, he joined up with tanpurist Anil Bhagwat, an Indian counterpart to George Harrison on sitar, drummer/percussionist Natver Tibrewal, violinist Viji Shankar (her great-uncle being Ravi Shankar, based on Gingger Shankar *here*), and Indian counterparts to John Deacon and Brian May. He might died of AIDS as *here*, though I think that maybe due to Western and Islamic attitudes being less influential in India *there* he was more open about his bisexuality. (I seem to recall that India was a lot more open to gay/bisexual/transgender people before the British came around.) Perhaps because of this he actually got treatment and managed to live a little longer, if not having remained alive to the present day (though he's probably retired from music on account of his disease). Just my few cents. Probably too crazy even for IB, though. Juan Martin Velez Linares 09:53, 08 October 2015 (CDT)
- You may change Empress to Rani, if you want. I'm not sure that M. Farrokh Bulsara would exist *there* in the same form as here. We do have plenty of doppelgangers. Look up Bill Clinton. He's in Louisianne, the NAL, and I think a few other places. BoArthur 06:52, 8 October 2015 (PDT)