Some Cthulhu/Lovecraft references

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Acooljt
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Some Cthulhu/Lovecraft references

Post by Acooljt »

You may have heard of these or you may have not. Either way, I thought I'd share.

Metallica - The Call of Ctulu(they spelled it this way perhaps to avoid copyright infringement? It's on the Ride the Lightning album)

Metallica- The Thing That Should Not Be(based off of The Shadows Over Innsmouth which is not part of the Mythos, but a great song none the less and it also quotes the story, "Not dead which eternal lie, stranger eons Death may die" which is obviously changed a little bit from the story so it would fit the rhythm and rhyme of the song. It's on the Master of Puppets album)

And lastly, Buffy the Vampire Slayer(the series). I'm a big fan of the show, and right now I've been watching Season 5, and just in the first half of this season I've already heard 2 Lovecraft references. They mentioned the Necronomicon in an episode(don't quite remember which) and in another episode, Buffy found this object of importance called the "Dagon Sphere".
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Post by Jesus Prime »

Actually, it's "Call of Ktulu", with a K. CLiff chose the name, it was orignally going to be "When Hell Freezes Over".

Plus, I've posted it in another thread, there's an Iron Maiden album cover, "Live After Death", with the infamous couplet engraved on Eddie the Head's tombstone.
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Post by Acooljt »

Yeah, you're right, I guess it's been a while since I've looked at the title of the song. Kinda embarassing being the huge Metallica fan I am. :P

As I'm just now reading The Call of Cthulhu, it also has the words, "That is not dead which can eternal lie, And with strange aeons even death may die." I've yet to read The Shadow Over Innsmouth, is there some correlation between these 2 stories since they both hold these phrases?
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Post by JJ Burke »

that couplet is mirrored in so many places it's not even funny. it's supposed to come from the writings of abdul alhazred in the necronomicon, i think. probably the most famous 'scripture' in the mythos.
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Post by Yog-Sothoth »

yeah, i mean... i saw that Couplet in the Book "Barney's Sunshine Summonings", it was right under a picture of Barney in this Brick Room with one Candle, a Baphomet Pentegram on the Floor, and two Kids in Black Robes on the other Side of the Pentegram.
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Post by Acooljt »

Hey Yog, your location is spelled wrong. It's "R'lyeh". Don't ask me for the pronunciation though, I couldn't even begin to guess.
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Post by JJ Burke »

heh.. i don't know if spelling is such a concrete thing, since the language is so alien that our alphabet can barely begin to phoneticize it. i believe hpl said something to this effect in 'the call'
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Post by Jesus Prime »

Lovecraft - the man with the plan! wrote:That is not dead which can eternal lie
And inn stranger aeons even death may die
That's the only real correlation between much of Lovecraft's fiction - the "infamous couplet", as it's known, and mention of either Yog-Sothoth (the nigh-omnipotent being, not the guy obsessed with the Necronomicon) or the Necronomicon (the "real" one, or as real as it gets, not the Evil Dead/Deicide one).
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Post by Acooljt »

Jesus Prime wrote:
Lovecraft - the man with the plan! wrote:That is not dead which can eternal lie
And inn stranger aeons even death may die
That's the only real correlation between much of Lovecraft's fiction - the "infamous couplet", as it's known, and mention of either Yog-Sothoth (the nigh-omnipotent being, not the guy obsessed with the Necronomicon) or the Necronomicon (the "real" one, or as real as it gets, not the Evil Dead/Deicide one).
You use one more big word with me and I'll bitch-slap you! :P
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Post by Jesus Prime »

What's the root cause of your disconcerted demeanour? Is my syntax and lexicon too sesquipidalian for you to adequately handle?
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Post by Acooljt »

I think I just passed out in a puddle of my own drool.
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Post by Jesus Prime »

Hahahaha.
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Post by nortonew »

JJ Burke wrote:heh.. i don't know if spelling is such a concrete thing, since the language is so alien that our alphabet can barely begin to phoneticize it. i believe hpl said something to this effect in 'the call'
Heck, even some human languages are like this. Hebrew and Arabic can be translated into English with a multitude of spellings simply because the languages don't contain vowels. (Actually, now days they sometimes use diacritical marks to specify vowel sounds, but the more ancient texts don't have these). Moreover, there are several letters in Arabic that don't really have any good representations in English. For instance, one Arabic letter, I think it might be called gayn, supposedly is supposed to be pronounced with a sound something like a choking gargle while humming. What letter would that be in English?
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Post by JJ Burke »

beats me.. i say cut spelling some slack
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Post by Jesus Prime »

nortonew wrote:
JJ Burke wrote:heh.. i don't know if spelling is such a concrete thing, since the language is so alien that our alphabet can barely begin to phoneticize it. i believe hpl said something to this effect in 'the call'
Heck, even some human languages are like this. Hebrew and Arabic can be translated into English with a multitude of spellings simply because the languages don't contain vowels. (Actually, now days they sometimes use diacritical marks to specify vowel sounds, but the more ancient texts don't have these). Moreover, there are several letters in Arabic that don't really have any good representations in English. For instance, one Arabic letter, I think it might be called gayn, supposedly is supposed to be pronounced with a sound something like a choking gargle while humming. What letter would that be in English?
It's the same with Hebrew - that's why we have now lost both the pronunciation of the tetragramatton, and the 200+ letter alternate name of God (if you've ever seen the movie "Pi", that's actually real).
Adrian wrote:TELL ME YOU ORDERED THE FUCKING GOLF SHOES!
Adrian wrote:I sure love my pudding.
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