|
Post by SunKing on Nov 23, 2003 16:56:03 GMT
Brian Epstein - Hey JudePlease look at the colour -yellow- It's really important....
|
|
|
Post by Eggman on Nov 24, 2003 3:20:16 GMT
Could you explain a little Sunny?
|
|
|
Post by PaulBearer on Nov 24, 2003 4:42:18 GMT
Where's the photo from?
|
|
|
Post by Fwings on Nov 24, 2003 5:47:41 GMT
The one on the right is from the Sgt. Pepper cover. On most guides it refers to it as a "stone figure"... is it supposed to represent Brian's car? Sorry, I confuse easily.
|
|
|
Post by Perplexed on Nov 24, 2003 7:20:34 GMT
are you saying that an anti-semitic group was responsible for these events?
|
|
|
Post by Fwings on Nov 24, 2003 8:17:15 GMT
That's what I thought at first, but the song Yellow Submarine was written and published before Brian's death.
|
|
|
Post by LUCY on Nov 30, 2003 23:55:03 GMT
is it just me or do i see a gag over his mouth??
|
|
|
Post by Perplexed on Dec 1, 2003 7:31:32 GMT
Well, here I go off the deep end again, another cypherin' tangent.
Hey Jude is similar to He Yod. (there is no J in Hebrew, J's seem to often represent "Y', yodh, yod, yud, yude, iota, jot etc etc in English. (Heaven and Earth shall pass away, but not one jot=iota=yod="Y"from the Law, the smallest letter in Hebrew.)
Jehovah is something put in for YHWH, because the masoretic scribes didn't want the Lord's name misused and taken emptily, or in vain. The right vowels, I believe, were for Yah-hoo-way, but that is a very long and unwinable argument. Anyway, It was hidden by altered vowel points,rendering it Ye-ho-wah and a peculiar Englsh habit of "Jay"- a -fying every word that should start with a "yuh" or Y sound. I think "y" just sounds unstable or vague to Anglo ears, and then there's the French contributions of langauge as well. They love the "j" sound.(Also, Hebrew "w' or wav is "vav" to Ashkenazi speakers.) (Correct me, my Jewish friends where my errors could be. I am Gentile, but find Hebrew etc. very interesting. I may be amiss, so input is desirable to prevent my WASP point of view from missing reality..........)
Anyway, YHWH's short "nick" name in a scripture or two is simply "Yah", spelled "YH" in Hebrew. Vowels did not start being written until I think 3rd cent BC when "points" were added for clarity. Till then, paleo-Hebrew amounted to consonants. (With 4, I think exceptions.) Of course, Hebrew reads from right to left, so it would appear on the page as H-Y, or He (hay) Yud (yod, yude, yodh depending). So, Yah on paper looks like:
Hay Yude or He Yodh.
The song, therefore, contains an invocation.
|
|