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Post by aaa-appreciator on Jul 11, 2020 18:10:58 GMT
Possibly the most famous mullet in the mastering world (though not the highest profile one in the FBI’s records), STeVe’s hairdo is the key to his magnetism for the opposite sex. When did the trademark mullet first appear though?
Today it’s a shadow of its former self, more akin to the wispy minge of an octogenarian (I imagine!) but when did he launch this killer look on the unsuspecting public? Keeping in mind it was probably mid-70s when STeVe was only 15/25/35 yrs old (depending on which SHite thread you’re following).
Is it possible to compile a photo library of STeVe through the ages? (I hope no one with photoshop skills takes this as an invite to put his face/mullet on historical figures!)
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Post by Chicken in Black on Jul 14, 2020 9:37:00 GMT
You know what’s also from England?
Besides the Beatles?
Yeah, that’s right. Prog music!
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Post by braindead on Jul 14, 2020 12:34:34 GMT
I have no idea when the mullet first reared its fugly frizz, but did you know that STeVE's mom is from England?
Is that the England in Great Britain,the United Kingdom or Brecknock?
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Post by Brick Wall on Jul 14, 2020 13:04:37 GMT
The mullet is. The mullet was. It has no beginning. It has no end. It is the mullet of STEVE.
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Post by essayceedee on Jul 15, 2020 0:40:59 GMT
It’s the second most-loved mullet, behind the Mullet of Kintyre.
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Post by hoffa_nagila on Jul 15, 2020 2:27:42 GMT
It’s the second most-loved mullet, behind the Mullet of Kintyre. Can't forget that great eighties hit, Once Upon A Long... Ago.
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Post by Potsie Hoofman on Jul 15, 2020 3:12:37 GMT
Is it more of a Kentucky Waterfall or a Tennessee Top Hat?
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Post by braindead on Jul 15, 2020 12:29:35 GMT
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, use of the term mullet to describe this hairstyle was "apparently coined, and certainly popularized, by a failed American "awwdeeo/remastering engineer/janitor/teaboy" who used "breath of life" (critics said "whiff of death"), as an epithet when he described his music remastering style. He expounded on the subject at length in a six-page, prescription drug fuelled article entitled "Mulling Over The Mullet With Remastered Music" whilst offering a selection of alternative names for the cut, including "Mullett Mastertape Thief" and "Mullett Splice".
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