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Difference between revisions of "Opening The Mouth"

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* If you listen very carefully, you can hear the word 'us' repeated throughout the track.
 
* If you listen very carefully, you can hear the word 'us' repeated throughout the track.
  
== Comments ==
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''Italic text''== Comments ==
 
* An Egyptian ritual [Sindawe]. ''"As the focus for offerings, the tomb was known as the "ka house"; statues of the deceased within the tomb are often called "ka statues" for the same reason. Statues of the deceased placed in the tomb serve as physical repositories for the dead person's spirit. Through the ritual of "opening the mouth," the statue was made an actual living being, able to receive offerings and live eternally as a physical container for the deceased's spirit (or "ka"). For these reasons, statues ideally were made of stone or other durable materials such as hardwood or metal."''  
 
* An Egyptian ritual [Sindawe]. ''"As the focus for offerings, the tomb was known as the "ka house"; statues of the deceased within the tomb are often called "ka statues" for the same reason. Statues of the deceased placed in the tomb serve as physical repositories for the dead person's spirit. Through the ritual of "opening the mouth," the statue was made an actual living being, able to receive offerings and live eternally as a physical container for the deceased's spirit (or "ka"). For these reasons, statues ideally were made of stone or other durable materials such as hardwood or metal."''  
 
** [DC] was reading the book "how to read Egyptian hieroglyphics" (collier+manley), and found the following on p126: ''"The front cover shows a detail of an inscribed ritual tool used in the rite of 'opening the mouth' - an obscure ceremony designed to breathe life into an embalmed corpse, a statue or an inscribed image."''
 
** [DC] was reading the book "how to read Egyptian hieroglyphics" (collier+manley), and found the following on p126: ''"The front cover shows a detail of an inscribed ritual tool used in the rite of 'opening the mouth' - an obscure ceremony designed to breathe life into an embalmed corpse, a statue or an inscribed image."''
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{{#ev:youtube|_WN9FErgjOk|300}}
 
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* "According to John 19:39, Joseph and Nicodemus took the body of Jesus, wrapped it in the fine linen, and applied the myrrh and aloes Nicodemus had brought. The disciples then conveyed the prepared corpse to the place previously bought for Joseph's own tomb, a man-made cave hewn from rock in the garden of his house nearby. This was done speedily, "for the Sabbath was drawing on"."<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_of_Arimathea</ref>
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[[Category:Released tracks]]
 
[[Category:Released tracks]]
 
[[Category:Geogaddi tracks]]
 
[[Category:Geogaddi tracks]]

Revision as of 20:15, 4 November 2014

Opening The Mouth
Running time 1:11
Appears on Geogaddi


Samples/Lyrics

  • If you listen very carefully, you can hear the word 'us' repeated throughout the track.

Italic text== Comments ==

  • An Egyptian ritual [Sindawe]. "As the focus for offerings, the tomb was known as the "ka house"; statues of the deceased within the tomb are often called "ka statues" for the same reason. Statues of the deceased placed in the tomb serve as physical repositories for the dead person's spirit. Through the ritual of "opening the mouth," the statue was made an actual living being, able to receive offerings and live eternally as a physical container for the deceased's spirit (or "ka"). For these reasons, statues ideally were made of stone or other durable materials such as hardwood or metal."
    • [DC] was reading the book "how to read Egyptian hieroglyphics" (collier+manley), and found the following on p126: "The front cover shows a detail of an inscribed ritual tool used in the rite of 'opening the mouth' - an obscure ceremony designed to breathe life into an embalmed corpse, a statue or an inscribed image."
  • The Gatekeeper remix of "Strawberry Skies" by Games samples this track.
  • "According to John 19:39, Joseph and Nicodemus took the body of Jesus, wrapped it in the fine linen, and applied the myrrh and aloes Nicodemus had brought. The disciples then conveyed the prepared corpse to the place previously bought for Joseph's own tomb, a man-made cave hewn from rock in the garden of his house nearby. This was done speedily, "for the Sabbath was drawing on"."[1]
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_of_Arimathea