>>5125196 >Founded in Melbourne, cunt, where Lisa is from. they've been based in australia for like two months. they recorded all their albums outside of it. also lisa cant do shit save singing, she's in there only because perry was fuckin her and he's a nice guy. dcd is literally perry's project and he's a brit paddy. deal with it.
>>5125202 irrilevant. if i were born in tokyo from french parents and then lived all my life in france i would be french, not japanese. dcd is a british band.
>>5125157 assuming you're asking a legitimate question, it's because crows and ravens are associated with death and misfortune in European culture and have been for thousands of years. tropical parrots were unknown in the continent until the 16th century.
>>5126008 Oh look. It's another episode of The Backwater British Isles Are Somehow Representative of Europe As A Whole. I hate this show. >the Italian peninsula and Greece have known about parrots since antiquity, ya dingus
>>5126013 >doesnt mean they were a common sight for the average man Nice goalpost move, kiddo, but the claim was that parrots were "unknown" until the 16th century, not "uncommon". That claim was false.
>>5126010 Not only that, even the British Isles knew about parrots due to them being exotic pets in international trade along with lions. Parakeets were a known quantity even before the century in courts of nobility across europe.
>Nobles kept birds, especially parrots (called “popinjays” before 1500). Noble women and noble men kept birds for very different reasons which are perhaps somewhat predictable. For the men, exotic species of birds were prestige animals through which to display wealth and power. Every royal and every noble man wanted the most rare and most expensive parrot, finch, or pigeon/dove that money and aviculture could produce. By contrast, their wives and daughters kept and demanded these birds for their species-specific social and verbal abilities. >Medieval Europeans raised four species of Psittacula parakeets before 1500: the African ringneck parakeet (Psittacula krameri krameri), the Indian ringneck parakeet (Psittacula krameri manillensis), the plum-headed parakeet (Psittacula cyanocephala) and the Alexandrine parakeet (Psittacula eupatria). The highest echelons of society had access to African grey parrots (Congo and Timneh subspecies). England’s Henry VIII notoriously kept an African grey. >But the rarest parrot of the European Middle Ages belonged to Kaiser Frederich II (von Hohenstaufen). In 1229, this noted lover of falconry received as a gift a rare bird indeed — at least to Europeans: a white cockatoo from genus Cacatua
>>5125188 >>5125192 >>5125196 You cunts do realise the most famous goth band of all time literally has a song called "Like Cockatoos", right? What's all this "please notice me big strong American" beating around the bush bullshit?
>>5129775 Too low res and the stylized writing is difficult to wrap my brain around. Can't quite make it out. Even with this slightly clearer, full page.