From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V2 #27 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Monday, November 16 1998 Volume 02 : Number 027 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Re: First Concerts [jenncyn@aol.com (JennCyn)] Re: Essay Question [Stephen Miklos ] Re: [Fruvous on the Brain] [Angie Armstrong ] Re: you've gotta see this ["Meghan Grammer" ] Re: River Valley, Ohio [joshw@bgnet.bgsu.edu (Josh Woodward)] Re: - Are Fruvous the Spawn of Satan??? ["Meghan Grammer" ] canadian west coast humor ["Nowik, George" ] Fish Flavored Liquor? [Loren Becker ] A Sad Goodbye ["Ann Marie & Cameron" ] re: Fruvous junque, Pisco fries, curling Murrmaids etc (sort of a Katonah review [Srm9988] First concerts [Srm9988n@aol.com] Re: [Semi -review of Alfred, etc. (it's a novel... oops)] [Angie Armstron] magasinage ... (was Re: renaming the world) ["amy" ] Re: Essay on Canadian Music [jerry smith ] The Princess Bride [was Re: rainbow connection] ["amy" ] Re: The return of Amy Rigby... [puggles@mindspring.com (Kelly MacDougal)] Re: fruhead/rentaholics [jianbabe@aol.com (JianBabe)] Re: speaking of frvous and broadway (sort of) . . . [Eve Lauria First concert without parental units > was, i think, They Might Be Giants at > Roseland, Nov 1996. hmm. Now THERE'S an interesting category. My parents and I have very similar tastes in music, so we just kept going to shows together! :) I think my first concert without parental units was seeing BNL for the first time a few years ago, with several members of m-pact and friends thereof... (soooooomuchfun ) - - jenn ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1998 15:56:53 -0500 From: Stephen Miklos Subject: Re: Essay Question Nicole the Wonder Nerd wrote: > On Tue, 03 Nov 1998 11:22:48 -0600, the sky opened up and Josh Drury > spake thusly: > >Nicole the Wonder Nerd wrote: > >> On 3 Nov 1998 07:05:25 GMT, the sky opened up and kazmar100@aol.com > >> (Kazmar100) spake thusly: > >> >Explain in one hundred words or less, the meaning of the song Present Tense > >> >Tureen. > >> I think it's a sort of modern zen koan, ... > >Cool. cut it down to 17 syllables, and you could make it a haiku. Now is no longer now, once it's been thought about. Light through closing door. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1998 21:30:47 GMT From: Angie Armstrong Subject: Re: [Fruvous on the Brain] (Friday night, after about twenty minutes together (munching on what still remained of the Wilmington brownies) ladywench and I decided what makes Fruvous Fruvous. Most bands have groupies; these guys have confectioners. :) - -- Lori) ROFLMAO!!!! Oh, the tears, the tears streaming... I'll have to tell Julia that. (she's been teasin' me about the FrüBars, too (wow, the umlaut worked today... cool!)) I cannot WAIT for FrüCon... you and I have GOT to get together at some point, Lori :^D I did ok the rest of the day, re: the tie. 'Twasn't until I got on the net to check out my email that I started Früvin' (of course, it probably has something to do with my latest set of autographs on the Summer '97 PostCard I snagged from Tobey. It's carefully taped to my monitor). I once learned in a seminar that to keep motivated at work, one should place pictures of family/friends, vacation spots, etc that you are working for/toward... what better inspiration than the Lads? More $$ means new car means more Stuff (or should I say, Junque?) means more ROADTRIPS!!! *EFG* - --Angie ____________________________________________________________________ More than just email--Get your FREE Netscape WebMail account today at http://home.netscape.com/netcenter/mail ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1998 16:45:39 -0500 From: "Meghan Grammer" Subject: Re: you've gotta see this >> I particularly liked the striking abundance of speling an grammer >> errers. File it under "Mandatory schooling; the case for: exhibit A". i think the word "grammar" should be removed from the english language, on the grounds that whenever anyone says grammar i look around and say "what?" smoochies, meghan (grammer) ------------------------------ Date: 16 Nov 1998 21:31:36 GMT From: joshw@bgnet.bgsu.edu (Josh Woodward) Subject: Re: River Valley, Ohio Donna Hunt (isis@apk.net) wrote: : I don't know how many of you will have already heard : about this, but I thought it was sad, interesting, : and Fruvous-related. Indeed! In fact, much of southeast Ohio is littered with River Valley references. You'll lose count if you try to count the number of references on the strech of 33 from Columbus to Athens. :-) - ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Josh Woodward, CheEsy Fru. joshw@mail.bgsu.edu Web Site and Tape List: http://www.dc-adnet.com/joshw/ "It's just a tender blind spot, not the ruination of your soul." -- Peter Mulvey ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1998 16:40:51 -0500 From: "Meghan Grammer" Subject: Re: - Are Fruvous the Spawn of Satan??? >Speaking of preaching the FrüGospel, I just realized something >about the Wilmington show... > >Follow me here.... > > - Früvous played in a church > - the 'stage' was actually an altar > - they did a great show > >Now, doesn't it also follow that those of us that were there >were attending the The First Church of Früvous? > >Since the guys were on the stage, which was actually the altar, >doesn't that mean that they were, technically, preaching the >FrüGospel? but it was a Unitarian church, so it would have to be an all-accepting, open-minded, search-for-individual-truth, believe-what-you-want, inherent-worth-and-value-of-all-people type of preaching. speaking of which, are any of you illustrious früfans also UU's? just wondering.. smoochies, meghan ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1998 21:44:37 GMT From: "Schwan, Phil" Subject: Re: [Re: Fru and Broadway...] Let me start by saying I'm a RENT fanatic. I can play most of the songs on guitar or piano and sing them with my friends all the time. I've only seen the show once...from the front row in Boston. The only thing more fun than sitting in that lobby singing, playing cards, and chatting for 10 hours for the tix was the actual show itself. I had never heard the music before, but I went to the merch stand and bought the cds during the intermission. I lived and breathed Phantom and Les Mis throughout high school and beyond...and let's not forget the classic West Side Story:) >>*sigh* Michael Ball... I was actually going to avoid this thread, but someone >>evoked the name of Michael Ball... "Empty Chairs at Empty Tables" did it for >>me, and yeah... I used to fantasize being able to sing "A Little Fall of Rain" >>with him. Then I saw the "Les Mis" special on PBS (about 40x) and actually >>saw him. I have this tape. What an AWESOME concert! >>I've got a copy of "Love Changes Everything" from Aspects of Love that sends chills everytime I listen to it. I have a ALW Greatest tape with this on it. Lost count of how many times I've played it. If I weren't a bass, I could hit that last b-flat:) >>all sorts of material on the Musical, learned a ton of the music (I actually >>was able to cleanly hit that god-awful high note for about 1 year, but fell >>out of practice and now it's a strain) Hehe...so was I for awhile. Falsetto is a wonderful thing!:) - -Phil, who is also ill and unable to sing:( "There is no greater unhappiness than when a person starts to fear the truth lest it denounce him". -Leo Tolstoy ____________________________________________________________________ More than just email--Get your FREE Netscape WebMail account today at http://home.netscape.com/netcenter/mail ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1998 22:07:03 GMT From: "Nowik, George" Subject: canadian west coast humor sign upon entering canada through the border in british columbia: "Welcome to Super Natural British Columbia." the comma between super and natural was almost entirely scratched away. either jian's comments about buddhas and bowls was right, or the truth is out there. take your pick. -= norg =- ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1998 22:35:40 GMT From: Loren Becker Subject: Fish Flavored Liquor? Gee, and I thought he was Mexican... loren. who just couldn't resist the reference. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Chile, Peru Fight Over Liquor Pisco By CARLA SALAZAR Associated Press Writer LIMA, Peru (AP) — Latin American pride has sent nations to war over disputed borders and even a soccer game. But Chile and Peru are at each other's throats in an ego clash over a fiery liquor called Pisco. The Andean neighbors both claim the colorless brandy distilled from mashed grapes as their national drink, and have even taken their case to an international group to determine who can use the name. Only the brave dare say Pisco is Chilean in Peru or Peruvian in Chile. Both consider Pisco their own, drinking it straight or in a tart lime cocktail called a ``Pisco sour.'' Afraid Chile was winning the Pisco war through aggressive lobbying and increased production, Peru began an international marketing campaign in September to convince the world that Pisco is as Peruvian as llamas and Machu Picchu. Its goal is to boost Peru's exports and have the International Wine Association in France declare that Pisco originated in Peru, giving it bragging rights. ``Chile entered the international market ahead of us, but now we're starting to compete with them,'' said Agnes Franco, Peru's vice minister of industry. That may be, but export figures show the fight for now is fueled mainly by pride. Chile leads in international sales of Pisco, but ships only about $900,000 worth a year. Peru's foreign sales run about $125,000 a year. Chile has almost doubled production since 1992, while Peru's output hasn't changes since 1984. Feeding the rivalry is a grudge between the South American nations from a war they fought in the late 19th century in which Chile grabbed a part of southern Peru that Peruvians still claim. Peruvians see Chilean imperialism everywhere, including in the Pisco war. They charge that in the 1930s Chile even tried to create a town called Pisco to back its claim to the liquor, a charge denied by Chile. Showing more business savvy than Peru, Chile trademarked the Pisco name in 1931. The move enraged Peruvians. ``Peru has a city, a port and a valley called Pisco. Pisco is Peruvian. Chile is trying to take what is ours again,'' said Isabel Alvarez, a restaurant owner in Lima. Pisco was first produced in Peru's southern Pisco valley as far back as the 16th century, made from grapes brought by the Spanish conquerors, Peruvians argue. The word ``pisco'' means ``bird'' in the Quechua language of Peru's Inca Indians. Chile contends the name Pisco was given to the liquor by early Chilean producers who exported it through the Peruvian port of Pisco. Most Chileans see Peru's claim to Pisco as absurd, arguing that Chile has done much more to develop and market the liquor. ``Are we going to have to start offering 'booze sour' instead of Pisco sour at cocktail parties now?'' said Julio Larenas, a caterer in Santiago, Chile's capital. In 1995, Chile petitioned the International Wine Association to declare Pisco a Chilean liquor, but a Peruvian delegation narrowly managed to block the motion, Peruvians producers say. The wine association has yet to pronounce on which country originated Pisco. Another bone of contention between the countries is who invented the Pisco sour, which is made by mixing Pisco with lime juice, sugar, ice and egg white. Chilean historians say the Pisco Sour was devised in the early 1900s by American and European steamship passengers traveling around the continent's southern tip and stopped for layovers in the Chilean port of Coquimbo. The ships stopped in Chile ``to fill up with Pisco and flamenco dancers,'' said George Gilder, an expert on cocktails. ``Gringos couldn't drink it, so they had to mix it as a cocktail.'' Peruvian historians contend the Pisco sour was invented in the early 1900s by an English barman at the luxury Maury hotel in downtown Lima when he didn't have whiskey to prepare a whiskey sour. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1998 22:47:47 GMT From: "Ann Marie & Cameron" Subject: A Sad Goodbye I am going to make this short and sweet - My mother is cutting off my internet access - goodbye all Life101 ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1998 22:54:48 GMT From: Srm9988n@aol.com Subject: re: Fruvous junque, Pisco fries, curling Murrmaids etc (sort of a Katonah review Drea warned me: >>>(Umm, Chrissy, Michelle, Drea? >> > We *must* get together sometime! :) ) > Lori...are you *sure* about this? Do you *really* want 2/3 of the Trouble >Trio there? Add Fiona and you're *really* in trouble *g*> Oh yes, I'm sure. I *like* trouble. :D (I've got a degree of separation too........ ROTFLMAO) - -- the little Murrmaid ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1998 23:02:46 GMT From: Srm9988n@aol.com Subject: First concerts caroline sigged: >~Caroline >whose face hurts from grinning so much at Katonah. I still haven't gotten that grin off my face. That's okay -- maybe it'll freeze that way. Staying on topic, my first concert was...um, this i guess is no surprise to any of you who've read my previous humiliating posts... Bee Gees. I was fourteen. I then moved along to the Hooters (several times -- at the Vet after a Phils game, the Tower, and other Philly-area venues). Always wanted to see Springsteen but never could manage to get tickies. Did Billy Joel though, and Gary U.S. Bonds. And... I was at Live Aid Philly! After that it's been too many to relate or even remember, but you get my drift. - -- Lori ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1998 23:35:17 GMT From: Angie Armstrong Subject: Re: [Semi -review of Alfred, etc. (it's a novel... oops)] It's all coming back to me... More on 11/13 @ Alfred: well, in bits and pieces anyway. Did I forget to mention the 7th inning stretch?? During a brief lull (hmm, was it just before King of Spain? I can't remember), someone in the front asked "Can we stretch?" Jian seemed amusingly caught by surprise but said sure... and before long Mike or Dave (again, premature senility kicks in) was playing "Take me out to the Ball Game" on the keyboard and the Lads were singin' along... as well as "typical" 7th inning stretch chatter from the "game announcer." It amazes me how certain details stick out, and others are just a haze. For now, I'm off to see "Mask of Zorro" again 'cause it's at the $1 theatre and well, I'm a fencer and can't resist... :^) - --Angie ____________________________________________________________________ More than just email--Get your FREE Netscape WebMail account today at http://home.netscape.com/netcenter/mail ------------------------------ Date: 16 Nov 1998 23:19:10 GMT From: "amy" Subject: magasinage ... (was Re: renaming the world) Ohhhh . . . *smack* . . . DUH! Of course! Sheesh! Thanks for the French - to - English translation, guys! I'm a little slow on the uptake, but I catch on eventually :) - -- amy - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- - ---- I'm waitin' at the station with my old friend sublimation you know the Wright boys designed planes . . . musta been a long time . . . between trains --Susan Werner - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- - ---- Srm9988n@aol.com wrote in article ... > Amy asked Fiona, but hey I'll answer 'cause I read it too: > > > What does "magasinage outre-frontieres" mean??? > > > It's Quebecois for cross-border shopping. Magasinage will never > show up in a "French" class (I believe the French French just > say "le shopping", which drives the Academie Francaise up the > wall.) > > --Lori (who found it necessary to buy not one but TWO Quebecois > dictionaries) > ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1998 18:24:46 -0500 From: jerry smith Subject: Re: Essay on Canadian Music Might be hard to sell the mood swing angle particularly if Prof. Flake is over about 20 years old. Gringos have tuned into Hank Snow, Ian & Sylvia, Lenny Breau, Randy Bachman, the Cape Brenton sound - there's a real long list of Canadians - over the years. Quality music finds its way over political boundaries. My "experience of joy" with Moxy Früvous has been in the discovery of extremely talented musicians, who are also very intelligent, making quality music that is fun to listen to and who are fun to watch when they're performing live. Jerry Smith KatieWow wrote: > i was recently assigned to write an essay "stemming from an experience of > joy" (don't ask--my writing professor is a total flake). anyway, i've > decided to base my essay on the experience of a früvous show, but make the > overarching theme of the essay a discussion of how the increasing popularity > (in America, at least) of "Canadian music" (e.g., früvous, BNL, etc.) > dictates a shift in mood from the dour, shoot-me-now attitude of the grunge > era to a new era of reflection rather than disgust and revelling in joy > rather than wallowing in self-pity. it's going to be really fun, but i was > wondering if anyone had thoughts on the subject. i'll be sure to document > your input in the paper. thanks! > ~~kate ------------------------------ Date: 16 Nov 1998 23:28:55 GMT From: "amy" Subject: The Princess Bride [was Re: rainbow connection] Hello. My name is Inego Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die. Hah--I'll take that over Jeffrey Geiger any day! - -- amy (wondering if anyone got that. If not, sorry, please ignore me, just amusing myself!) - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- - ---- I'm waitin' at the station with my old friend sublimation you know the Wright boys designed planes . . . musta been a long time . . . between trains --Susan Werner - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- - ---- Chad Maloney wrote in article <36502DEE.81C3E9F0@rosevc.rose-hulman.edu>... > petit_chou@juno.com wrote: > > > > AUGH! I am, like, Queen Obsession when it comes to the Princess Bride! > > Any of you out there who claim to truly love it and have never read the > > book need to get off of your duffs and locomotor to whatever bookstore > > you are not currently boycotting and BUY THAT MO-FO! ("The Princess > > Bride" by William Goldman) Well worth the over-inflated cost of a > > paperback. > > Or if you want something nice you can keep, just wait a little bit > and the 25th anniversary edition will be coming out and it has an > intro by Goldman and an epilogue that may be the first chapter of > Buttercups's Baby, the supposed (can we ever believe Goldman?) sequel. > I used to have a TPB webpage, so Random House emails me updates about > Bride related stuff. Pretty neato. > > http://www.randomhouse.com/princessbride/ for more info. > > Of course, I don't have the whole movie memorized any more, but I > do know way too many Frufacts for anyone's own personal good... > > - Chad > ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1998 23:54:37 GMT From: mityjack@bluemoon.net (Mighty Jack) Subject: Re: - Are Fruvous the Spawn of Satan??? Meghan Grammer (gramcracker@geocities.com) wrote: : > : >Now, doesn't it also follow that those of us that were there : >were attending the The First Church of Früvous? : but it was a Unitarian church, so it would have to be an all-accepting, : open-minded, search-for-individual-truth, believe-what-you-want, : inherent-worth-and-value-of-all-people type of preaching. Works for me. : speaking of which, are any of you illustrious früfans also UU's? : just wondering.. Kinda sorta... haven't been to the local UU church in a while, but that's where I'd go if I decided to start getting up early on Sunday again... :-) : smoochies, : meghan ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1998 23:37:03 GMT From: "Schwan, Phil" Subject: Holy Sig! Has anyone else noticed that Sheryl's sig file is bigger than her posts, even when she includes the post she was replying to sometimes? - -Phil - ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Begin sig file----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A few months after the accident I had an idea for a short film about a quadriplegic who lives in a dream. During the day, lying in his hospital bed, he can't move, of course. But at night he dreams that he's whole again, and is able to do anything and go everywhere. This is someone who had been a lifelong sailor, and who had always loved the water, and he had a beautiful gaff-rigged sloop. Not like my boat, the Sea Angel, which was modern and made of fiberglass. In the story the boat is a great old wooden beauty, whose varnish gleams in the moonlight. In his dream he sails down the path of a full moon, and there's a gentle breeze, perfect conditions -- the kind of romantic night sailing that anyone can imagine. But by seven in the morning, he's back in his bed in the rehab hospital and everything is frozen again. The dream is very vivid. And as time passes it becomes even more vivid. At first it's just a dream, and he recognizes it as such. But suddenly one night he finds himself actually getting out of bed and leaving the hospital, fully aware of walking down the corridor and out the door, then into the boat, which, magically, is anchored not far away. And he gets on board and goes sailing, long into the night and the moonlight. Soon these voyages become so real to him that when he wakes up in his bed at seven in the morning, his hair is soaked. And the nurse comes in and says, "Oh, I'm sorry. I didn't dry your hair enough last night when I gave you a shampoo. You slept with wet hair." He says nothing, but he's thinking that his hair is wet from the spray when he was out on the water. One time he comes back still wearing his foul weather gear, and he has to hide it in the hospital room closet because the nurses are going to wonder where it came from. Now his wife and family, his wife and children, have been very distressed all along because, since he became paralyzed, he has not been able to pull out of a serious depression. He has shut them out of his life. His children are afraid of him because he is not himself and they don't know how to be with him, and his wife has been talking to the doctors and the psychologists at the hospital about what to do because he is apparently unable to cope or to come out of his shell. But as he continues to go sailing in his dreams and as these dreams become more and more real, his mood begins to improve and he seems less withdrawn. In the mornings he is more content and much more communicative. His wife notices the change, but she can't understand it, and he won't explain it. It's not something that he can talk about. He's not sure if he's going crazy. He thinks that he may be losing his mind. But since the family is feeling the benefit of his improvement, his dreams are making their lif! ! e together happier. He sails in Tenants Harbor, or a similarly idyllic spot in Maine, and there's a fellow there, an older man, who always turns on the light in his cabin down by the water when our man is sailing. He doesn't sleep very well, and he always gets up to watch the younger man go out in the wooden boat. Sometimes he comes down to his dock, and we can tell from the yearning in his eyes that the sailboat is something he loves and admires. Not that he's jealous, but he never misses a chance to see the boat sailing so beautifully in the moonlight. Well, there comes a time when our protagonist realizes that these voyages offer a way of escaping from his paralyzed condition, that he could just sail and sail on happily -- it's what he loves most in the world -- until one night he would go out into the middle of the ocean, and he wouldn't take supplies or anything. He would just sail until he dropped. And he would die happy. He would just go sailing down the path of the moon, as far as he possibly could go, and leave everything and everyone behind him. And one night he starts to do that. He just decides he's going to go, with no idea where; he is going to sail away forever. But then, as he is heading out to sea, he starts to think about what he has in his life, how grateful he is for his wife and his children. Because, during the days, you see, he's changed. His kids are less afraid of him, and they're playing with him, and his wife...they're clearly in love. He is coming out of his depression. So here he is doing the thing that he loves most for himself, thinking that he could sail on and forget the world. But along the way he begins to realize what he is leaving behind. He turns the boat around and comes back. And he goes straight to the dock of the older man who has always loved this boat. He ties up right at the dock, and when the old man comes down to greet him, our man says, "Here, this is for you." He gives up the boat. He no longer needs it. And he goes back to the hospital, and he wakes up, and he's frozen and he's a quadriplegic again. But he has an entirely new basis for the future with his family and toward recovery. - ----------------------------------------------------------------------- End sig file---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1998 01:31:03 GMT From: puggles@mindspring.com (Kelly MacDougal) Subject: Re: The return of Amy Rigby... I feel a bit like an outsider on this one, please don't lynch me (quick glances for nooses and tall tree's) but I like Amy. I was kinda pleased to see her at Alfred. I bought both CD's. MY husband likes her too especially the drummer song. ------------------------------ Date: 17 Nov 1998 00:21:18 GMT From: jianbabe@aol.com (JianBabe) Subject: Re: fruhead/rentaholics > Subject: Re: speaking of frvous and broadway (sort of) . . . > > Yes, it's out of date since I hardly touch it anymore (I did the thing > like 3 years ago and haven't done much since). For some obFruContent, > Jian is able to sing not only songs from the show, but obscure dialog > as well. ;-) > > "In 3 years I'll be 20..." And did my heart ever do a jump when you said that...if Jian is the reincarnation of Michael Ball when he was a young hottie...not that he's so bad anymore, but he is in his late 30's or something and doesn't remind me of Alex all that much anymore. I want to see Jian do this...I would swoon. Eve > > ----------------------------------------------------------------------- > Josh Woodward, CheEsy Fru. joshw@mail.bgsu.edu > Web Site and Tape List: http://www.dc-adnet.com/joshw/ > > "It's just a tender blind spot, not the ruination of your soul." > -- Peter Mulvey > ------------------------------ Date: 17 Nov 1998 00:40:33 GMT From: jianbabe@aol.com (JianBabe) Subject: Re: tri-lingual? Mike speaks French quite well, oui? ~J ~~~~~~~~~~ "Who will you be when you're finally who you are? Well, we'll see, won't we? But there will be more to be by far" Greg Simon/"The Great Out There" ------------------------------ Date: 17 Nov 1998 00:53:30 GMT From: jianbabe@aol.com (JianBabe) Subject: Re: the return of Amy Rigby.... >another cool lady is the one who sings about the relaxation tape man. >Michaela Majoun played this one Friday morning on the Women's >Hour, but I didn't catch her name. Absolutely hilarious. Anyone >know who I'm talking about? Christine Lavin! She is so hysterical, go see her sometime, you won't be disappointed. She was my fave singer for a while when I was younger (spake the offspring of folkies.) ~Joni ~~~~~~~~~~ "Who will you be when you're finally who you are? Well, we'll see, won't we? But there will be more to be by far" Greg Simon/"The Great Out There" ------------------------------ Date: 17 Nov 1998 00:34:14 GMT From: jianbabe@aol.com (JianBabe) Subject: Re: First concerts??? You know what? I've been raised the daughter of folk singers, so I have seen so many concerts, practically since before I was born. This, needless to say, has been a wonderful experience and the reason I went to see Moxy in the first place. But, the first non-folk-or-folk-related concert I saw was Dave Matthews Band, about 4 years ago, when I was in 7th grade. I was a real DMB freak back then. For some reason, they don't do anything for me anymore. hmmm. ~Joni ~~~~~~~~~~ "Who will you be when you're finally who you are? Well, we'll see, won't we? But there will be more to be by far" Greg Simon/"The Great Out There" ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V2 #27 *******************************************