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    King Crimson - Epitaph Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of King Crimson - Epitaph? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for King Crimson - Epitaph from 1960s Music and what is the personality traits.

    King Crimson - Epitaph
    INTJ

    INTJ (4w5)

    King Crimson - Epitaph personality type is INTJ, I'm INTJ myself - Zoloft is a great antidepressant. It makes me feel calm, like I can get through anything. I'm glad you're taking it, I'll be back to talk to you later.

    "I'm starting to think that you're a little weird." - She said as she walked away.

    As she walked away, I remembered what she had told me.

    "You're not weird Vic, you're just different. That's why they call you 'different'."

    The words echoed inside my head as I continued eating my homemade salad, as I finished my salad I looked over at the clock, it was only 15 minutes past five, I had three more hours to kill.

    I went to the kitchen and opened the door to the refrigerator, I looked inside and saw that there was nothing in there. The only things in the refrigerator were a bunch of empty boxes which had been opened once or twice, and a jar of mayonnaise.

    I opened the jar of mayonnaise and took out two slices of bread, I placed them on the counter and quickly broke them in half.

    “Epitaph” is the third track on British progressive rock band King Crimson's 1969 album In the Court of the Crimson King. It was written by Robert Fripp, Ian McDonald, Greg Lake, and Michael Giles with lyrics written by Peter Sinfield.

    The song is noted for its heavy use of the Mellotron, and as with the first track, “21st Century Schizoid Man”, the song's lyrics have a distinctly dystopian feel to them. Emerson, Lake & Palmer would later incorporate an excerpt from this song after the “Battlefield” portion of the live version of their song “Tarkus”, from the Tarkus album, as documented in the live album Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends... Ladies and Gentlemen. Epitaph Records also took its name from the song.

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