The birth of Elvis Presley was marked by the appearance of a mysterious blue light over his house.

   In August 1974, John Lennon sighted a UFO from the window of the New York penthouse that he shared with then-girlfriend, May Pang (who also saw the spacecraft).

   Rolling Stones singer Mick Jagger and girlfriend Marianne Faithfull encountered a luminous cigar-shaped mothership while they were camping in the English countryside in 1968.

  

   Jimi Hendrix, the legendary guitar player, was well aware of his Starseed identity. "Jimi was not of this Earth," claimed longtime friend Curtis Knight who hired Hendrix to join his rock group, The Squires. One of their songs was called "The UFO." "What I'm telling you is exactly what Jimi told me a long time ago," said Knight, "Jimi was a spiritual messenger. He was sent here from another place so that through his music and his guitar he could put his message across to the world."

   Jimi once told a reporter from the "New York Times" that he was really from Mars.   

 

(Information source: "Alien Rock" by Michael C. Luckman) 

 

 

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Of course Hendrix and Lennon were not of this Earth. I've always known/felt that about them. It makes perfect sense when you listen to every note and lyric they recorded. I've been playing guitar for 14 years and I still don't know how Jimi was able to create such distinct and powerful sounds from nothing more than his guitar and amp (and wah pedal). I hope to infuse my own playing with the same imaginative spirit. I've been recording some new songs with a new band/project and so far it is sounding amazing. The other members are just as open-minded as I am. We don't have a band name yet but have decided on an album title: "A Fearless Generation."

:-)
I think the "reallty from Mars" stuff is a joke. He was just riling them up.

But I do believe he was not off this planet. Just like Elvis and John Lennon, also mentioned in the thread.
And Kurt Cobain spoke about the feeling of having been adopted when he was little and felt like his real family was somewhere in space, and he imagined that he could speak with them. He said he only met a handful of other aliens, and that maybe one day we'd all figure out what we're supposed to do here, but for now that he was homesick all of the time, and so are all the other aliens.

You can hear him speak this stuff at the beginning of the movie: About A Son.
Daniel Johns is definitely no doubt about it - starseed. Silverchair has been a source of sanity for me since I was 13. I'm 28 now. ;)



Ma Nithya Sudevi said:
The lead singer, songwriter and guitarist of the Australian band Silverchair has also expressed interest in aliens and other worlds, and in one interview, his Mom tells the interviewer that until he was five, he had an imaginary friend called Robin. Johns himself confirms it, and says Robin was more than just an imaginary friend, he was real. That band's music was so pivotal in the late nineties, helping so many teens who were dealing with depression and eating disorders, because Johns himself went through a very public battle with anorexia. He was/is also an outspoken animal rights activist, promoting veganism before it was mainstream.

His more recent music is often compared to the Beatles, and I'm sure there's a Starseed origin for Him.

(The pic is a still from the interview in which he discusses Robin.)
I've often wondered that same thing about Roger Waters. I get a feeling he is from another planet.
I'm late, i'm late..

I saw the post on the Starseed anthem or something, and read some of the posts, haven't seen the youtube yet.

But i noticed there were folks on both sides of the 'rock music' thing.

My experience is depends on the artist, and the consciousness behind the music. Its hard for me to listen to too much Nirvana, can't listen to Green Day -- too much anger, The Offspring yea but can't listen to the 'hard' sound too long

If its loud, angry, disjointed, I can't listen.

One of my teachers made an interesting comment on rock music, and he was probably generalizing. He said it rearranges the hemospheres of the brain. And thats what I feel when I hear the songs I immediately know I can't listen too

I listen to alot of mantra music nowadays..

This is for this thread on Jimi...my uncle gave me Axis Bold as Love in the old days..hahaha

you have to listen to this song, I always thought it was very bizaare, just didn't fit with Purple Haze, Voodoo Chile..

Its called Up From the Skies, ...a message?

I found this on it..

"Up from the Skies" is a song by English/American psychedelic rock band The Jimi Hendrix Experience, featured on their 1967 second album Axis: Bold as Love. Written by lead vocalist and guitarist Jimi Hendrix, the song details the experience of a specimen of extraterrestrial life returning to Earth and displaying concern with the damage caused by the human beings living there. It was released as the only single from Axis: Bold as Love, in the United States and France only, and reached number 82 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart.[1]

"Up from the Skies" was recorded on 29 October 1967, the last day of recording for the album, at Olympic Sound Studios in London

I think he even made an attempt at ET voices, on the song, like tongue-in-cheek

A new Starseed anthem?

great thread

Deva
Actually, Daniel Johns is now branching out and funding his own music projects so he can make what he wants, so he can have that freedom. He has been involved in side projects apart from silverchair for years. ;) With the last album they put out, Daniel said he didn't care if other people didn't like it. If they did, cool. If they didn't, that's cool too. I've felt Daniel's energy for a very long time. Sometimes music is the only thing I find myself able to relate to. And silverchair's music has grown with me through the years (most recent example: when they released their last album in 2007, I had been in a long distance marriage due to reasons beyond my control, and he and his now ex wife were also in a long distance marriage, living in separate countries, I could relate to a lot of the music probably in a much deeper way then most people did). But their music is kind of like therapy for me in a way. Not really sure how else to explain it, but if I'm upset, there's a silverchair song or 10 that I can put on and will ease my energy down. I tend to just go with it rather then question and analyze it like I do with most other things because music is the one pure and real thing left for me in this world.

Now as far as you guys talking about the music industry? The business side of it? Yeah, not cool with that. I was going to school for audio production and engineering at one point but one of the reasons I left and took a different path was because I learned just how jaded and effed the music industry/business side is and how they hold a tight reign on the creativity, and that's the one thing these people need to express.

I think our "rockstars" came here to inspire us, wake us up, connect to us, make us realize we're okay and we're not alone, because how many of you felt alienated and alone? Didn't feel like you fit in here? I hear Kurt Cobain speaking about how he felt as a child and I felt the exact same way. My husband joked and said the only real differences he can see between me and Kurt Cobain are the age, the rockstar/band thing, the earth location, and the gender. And just because he's a starseed, doesn't mean he's going to appeal to all starseeds. We are all different types of energy, different things will appeal to different types. Many came here to inspire us and remind us, to wake us up and appeal to us. Who speaks to you? Why?


yhin briite said:
There is only a handful of big record companies left. They control almost all popular music and are linked to the manufacturers of the cd players ie Sony. You know why cassettes dissapeared? Because the tape is magnetic. It can conceivably record and play back light and thought, if the speakers frequencies went up that far. Jim Morrison and the Doors used to record psychic energy on purpose on to the real to real masters which would then make its way on to the cassettes and vinyl to a lesser degree. Any digital copy of these recordings would cut off those energies and now in fully digital environments, they could never be recorded in the first place. The problem with Daniel Johns and Silverchair is that they are hook line and sinker under the watch of major labels. Can't be political, can't be activation inducing, can't be free. This is what drove Kurt to such anger on In Utero. Funny album name that? good cover art too. The whole MTV unplugged thing was a way to fulfill their locked in 3 record deal which was initially with Geffen but they were forced to sell to a major when Nirvana went huge. Kurt, like Jimi, and so many others were locked into uncreative deals with business men who controlled their every move. Rock-stars have disappeared lately, only pop-stars remain. Hip-Hop stars are going the same way, what a nucence to the system Public Enemy were. Now its just Kanye and Snoop-dog. Hardly activation material. What happened to Zac De la Rock from Rage Against the Machine? At least he is still alive. I wonder how they got to him? He is very dangerous! Hope he comes back. The last real rock-star i think was Jeff Buckley. They got him too huh? Oh hang on... Cody Chesnutt!!! WTF happened to him? He was a cross-over hip-hop-rock-star too! He could unite everyone with his music! But he has never made a second album after like 8 years or more. Come back Cody! I saw him live once and he played all new material and it was like soothing and all about lov and not gangster at all but he never laid it down. He totally looked like that Ethiopian prince type of African. I don't care what anyone says. They were all murdered and it's about time people investigated their deaths and why. I have a theory about Saturn's Return. Once you have gone through it your soul can't be controlled through secret majick any more which is why they all die at 27. It is the last year of their usefulness to make money and if they live through it then they can become extremely active politically like Bob Marley, or John Lennon. Look how that ended. Bob had the C.I.A. after him! Why are they so scared of rock-stars? What is the real power of music? Music? Vibration? Frequency medicine that can activate the other 10 dna strands maybe? Reconnect the heart chakra to the solar-plexis? Maybe a rock-star could convince the world to turn vegetarian? That would be a major blow. Or start a fresh religion? All rock-stars take a lot of drugs too. What's that all about? Ahh i know, a fully activated rock-star playing a concert whilst on some wicked drugs could potentially channel some mega-awesome musical genius from outside the matrix and blast this whole vibrational prison to eternity. BOOM. go 11 11. That's me!! I'm telling you. A rock-star of world famous proportions who is deliberately hell bent on activation can focus the whole worlds energy all at once and make them feel awesome. Could stop wars! Could crush the banks! Can pull down the Light of Venus and amplify it throughout the ley lines and blast this little planet to XANADU!!!! sorry... i get carried away... please please please please listen and download my songs pleaaasssee..... http://soundcloud.com/techpunk-9-records i swear im tha real deal.
This is especially a reply to Jacqulyn-

I felt the same exact way about silverchair when I was 13. Actually, I felt like Daniel Johns was my only friend in the word, even though, obviously, we had never met. All the kids at school were extremely hostile towards me, and especialyl when I went vegetarian, they would torment me by sticking meat in my face or accusing me of being anorexic with vegetarianism as the guise. My mom knew how difficult it was on me, but she ate meat herself, as did all of my family, so even from them, I felt like the odd one out. Then one day, she called me into the living room to see something on tv. (I avoided tv like the plague back then.) She had just flipped the channel to Much Music (a Canadian version of MTV) and they were interviewing Daniel Johns about being vegan. It was like suddenly I had found what I had been looking for- a role model who shared my beliefs, and who played music that touched on my many young emotions. (Neon Ballroom was my soundtrack that year...)

It was great when the band switched to Eleven, a private label, and that they don't care whether the public likes the music or not... and also, it's great that the other band members let Daniel handle pretty much all the creative stuff; they support his audio visions.

Now, to yhin briite:

Dude, you ROCK. (But you already knew that.) Listened to your tracks, and love them. :)

And, to everyone here- How many of us are able to simply play music from a young age, without any formal training? I remember the first time my fingers touched my grandma's piano. I was a baby, but fully conscious, and knew that the force with which I hit the key determined the volume and duration of sound, and within months, could play simple melodies, and by 3, was 'composing' very classical sounding music. It's something I still do. (My mom had the wisdom to keep me out of lessons so that this ability wouldn't be lost to the forced learning of chords and disciplined practie, although sometimes I think it would be nice to be able to read and write music...)
Kate Perry's new album "California Girls" contains a song called "ET." The lyrics indicate that Kate is quite knowledgeable in regards to Space People. She herself might even be a Starseed!
funny!
there is a quote from jimmy hendrix that I find quite inspirational:

"when the power of love overcomes the love of power the world will know peace"

I think it really represents our starseed mission, doesn't it?
Yes, I think it does too..... sort of like when we don't even think about love because we all ARE LOVE and so at peace in love totally
:) indeed so... i feel like they are taken out at times due to the messages they put out
love & light
~namaste~

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