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Post by chica on Sept 20, 2017 0:26:41 GMT -5
Has anyone noticed that the red flowers on the St.P cover if you break down Beatles it reads Be At Leso?
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Post by bandi on Sept 25, 2017 12:27:49 GMT -5
Yes Chica.
While we're looking at the SPLHCB cover again have a look at the flowers in the dirt (white/yellowish ones, depends on the print I think ?) that are shaped like a bass guitar that appear to spell 'Paul'.
Pretty cool, huh ? Those clever lads !!!...
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Post by B on Sept 25, 2017 17:54:37 GMT -5
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Post by B on Sept 26, 2017 15:13:04 GMT -5
Apollo C Vermouth used to tell us that while we were searching deep for answers, we weren't seeing what was right in front of us.
"Be at Leso" could be one such thing he was talking about.
After all, we are looking at a grave on the cover of Sgt. Pepper. Paul's?
And everyone always wants to know where Paul is buried, if he is dead.
Seems to me his grave could BE AT LESO (Leslo) !
Right there in front of you!
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Post by B on Sept 26, 2017 15:15:17 GMT -5
Or not. Thanks for your comments SF, it's a definite possibility, don't ya think? So, about the island, there is of course the subject of the Pepper cover, and how some have made out the flowers to say "BE AT LESO". Of course Les(l)o was the name of the island in Greece that the beatles purchased, but later sold back to the Greek govt. However, from: www.beatlemoney.com/johnapple.htmJohn soon afterwards bought, for a whim and twenty thousand pounds, two small uninhabited islands know together as Dornish off the northwest coast of Ireland. At considerable expense he had the colorful psychedelic horse-drawn wooden Sgt. Pepper wagon shipped to Dornish. It was the only standing structure on either island. John visited the islands once, traveling by helicopter to conduct a job interview with a potential manager of Apple. It was John's idea to hold the interview there. He later gave Dornish to a hippie commune (Flippo, p. 242).If Paul's ashes were held until a special place could be located, why not here, in the safe keeping of the hippie commune? Symbolically it makes sense, given Paul's Irish heritage. Another thought I had, that Pepper wagon was put on a little journey as illustrated here: Again, just a thought, but I wonder if the Wagon was delivered to the island with a "surprise" inside, preceded by this "funeral procession" of John's making? but on an island, none-the-less David Gilmour - On An Island (Official Music Video) www.youtube.com/watch?v=ooPTpZPu7tocouple of clues hidden here, possibly www.youtube.com/watch?v=IaGDVgI0Qqw
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Post by B on Sept 26, 2017 18:28:32 GMT -5
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iameye
Electric Arguments
Posts: 1,119
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Post by iameye on Sept 26, 2017 19:09:29 GMT -5
Man, these last 24 hrs....
lol
on an island, none-the-less
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Post by B on Sept 26, 2017 22:11:32 GMT -5
-----------------------------------------------------------------------^^^^ bury interesting!
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Post by kvo on Jun 6, 2022 7:11:07 GMT -5
Or not. Thanks for your comments SF, it's a definite possibility, don't ya think? So, about the island, there is of course the subject of the Pepper cover, and how some have made out the flowers to say "BE AT LESO". Of course Les(l)o was the name of the island in Greece that the beatles purchased, but later sold back to the Greek govt. However, from: www.beatlemoney.com/johnapple.htmJohn soon afterwards bought, for a whim and twenty thousand pounds, two small uninhabited islands know together as Dornish off the northwest coast of Ireland. At considerable expense he had the colorful psychedelic horse-drawn wooden Sgt. Pepper wagon shipped to Dornish. It was the only standing structure on either island. John visited the islands once, traveling by helicopter to conduct a job interview with a potential manager of Apple. It was John's idea to hold the interview there. He later gave Dornish to a hippie commune (Flippo, p. 242).If Paul's ashes were held until a special place could be located, why not here, in the safe keeping of the hippie commune? Symbolically it makes sense, given Paul's Irish heritage. Another thought I had, that Pepper wagon was put on a little journey as illustrated here: Again, just a thought, but I wonder if the Wagon was delivered to the island with a "surprise" inside, preceded by this "funeral procession" of John's making? but on an island, none-the-less David Gilmour - On An Island (Official Music Video) www.youtube.com/watch?v=ooPTpZPu7tocouple of clues hidden here, possibly www.youtube.com/watch?v=IaGDVgI0QqwSome weird stuff in Happy Gilmore. A Gilmore is run down by a Beatle bug in this clip. Doesn't a body fall on a Beatle bug in Rosemary's baby? The Beatle bug as a harbinger of death? Then, Gilmore gets back up (resurrected), and continues his golf game to victory. But then, Tuesday's Gone (a sad ballad) is played at the end of the film as Gilmore's victory song. That song doesn't sound like a separation to me, it sounds like a death. Unusual choice for a victory. Tuesday is a very significant day in the Beatle story. For Gilmore, Tuesday's Gone with the Wind, and the Beatle bug didn't kill him. So, all will be okay for him now. An Internet commenter said that the song sounds other-wordly, almost like it had a spell cast on it. Hmm....
And the other video is just for fun. Linked it by accident, but it's funny.
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