ANSWERS: 11
  • I burned it down! Okay, why did this get downrated?!?!?! And without any explanation!!!!
  • the troll is guarding it. watch out!
  • you`ll get over it soon
  • It's about 50 feet to our leffffffffffffffffffffffffffft
  • It's over the river Kwai!
  • in my back yard
  • Go to the troubled waters and look directly up.
  • Ask Robert Plant. He should have found it by now.
  • Madison County
  • Get over it.
  • 1) It is missing at the end of the Crunge: ""The Crunge" is a song by English rock band Led Zeppelin from their 1973 album Houses of the Holy. It was also released as the B-side of "D'yer Mak'er". This song evolved out of a jam session in the studio. John Bonham started the beat, John Paul Jones came in on bass, Jimmy Page played a guitar riff, and Robert Plant started singing. This song is a play on James Brown's style of funk in the same way that "D'yer Mak'er" experiments with reggae. Since most of James Brown's earlier studio recordings were done live with almost no rehearsal time, he often gave directions to the band in-song e.g. "take it to the bridge" - the bridge of the song. Plant pays tribute to this at the end by asking "Where's that confounded bridge?" (spoken, just as the song finishes abruptly)." Source and further information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Crunge 2) Here are usually those musical bridges: "In popular music, especially occidental, a bridge is a contrasting section which also prepares for the return of the original material section. The bridge may be the middle-eight in a thirty-two-bar form (the B in AABA), or it may be used more loosely in verse-chorus form, or, in a compound AABA form, used as a contrast to a full AABA section, as in "Every Breath You Take". Very commonly the "bridge" is in a contrasting key to the original melody. More often than not, the "bridge" is a perfect 4th higher. For examples, see Richard Rodgers' "Mountain Greenery" and Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Meditation". Lyrically, the bridge is typically used to pause and reflect on the earlier portions of the song or to prepare the listener for the climax. The term may also be used to refer to the section between the verse and the chorus, although this is more commonly referred to as the pre-chorus. The hit Justin Timberlake single "SexyBack" has a pre-chorus that is simply referred as the "bridge". The theme "The song that goes like this" from the musical play Spamalot spoofs in its lyrics the abuse of the bridge in romantic songwriting: Now we can go straight/into the middle eight/a bridge that is too far for me. Bachman-Turner Overdrive" Source and further information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridge_%28music%29 3) Lyrics (end of the song): "Excuse me Oh will you excuse me I'm just trying to find the bridge... Has anybody seen the bridge? (Have you seen the bridge?) I ain't seen the bridge! (Where's that confounded bridge?) (spoken by Robert Plant) " "In the dictionary it says, "bridge: a musical passage linking two sections of a composition." This song, unlike almost every other song ever written, does not have a bridge. There's no real chorus or transition from the main phrase of music and this gives the song the feeling of a run-on sentence. Hence the funky and abrupt ending." Source and whole song here: http://www.songmeanings.net/lyric.php?lid=7776 So the idea is that unexpectedly, the song does *not* have a bridge! 4) Music (Slideshow, no video): Led Zeppelin- The Crunge http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HKPVUOUuomU

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