Errors-To: owner-ecto@ns1.rutgers.edu Reply-To: ecto@ns1.rutgers.edu Sender: ecto@ns1.rutgers.edu From: ecto@ns1.rutgers.edu To: ecto-request@ns1.rutgers.edu Bcc: ecto-digest-outbound@ns1.rutgers.edu Subject: ecto #458 ecto, Number 458 Wednesday, 24 February 1993 Today's Topics: *-----------------* left of fotfel Re: The word "equipoise". Asst. music and msgs Confessions Re: HaPpY Birthday Re: The sound of silence Re: The word "equipoise". Philadelphia concert tape PJ Harvey I could have used them :-) Jarre's "Zoolook" & Tangerine Dream's "Tyger" two MPs The word "equipoise". (and Gormenghast) PG on the Grannies A Quick Note or Two k.d. lang ======================================================================== Date: 24 Feb 93 10:50:33 EST From: Mike Mendelson Subject: left of fotfel > What Cathy says is the truth. The correct term is 'out of left field', > but I think the reasoning for left field might be different. > [stuff deleted] Lefties are supposed to be somewhat touched... > And left has never been as accepted as "right". > So that could have something to do with "out of left field". To wit, the Vega/Jackson collaboration "left of center" on the pretty in pink soundtrack. This song has always brought me the baseball analogy. There're lots of good synonyms for off the beaten track in there. -mjm ======================================================================== Date: Wed, 24 Feb 93 15:40:14 EST From: Greg Bossert Subject: Re: The word "equipoise". glenn finds an example of ectopoise: >Just thought you might be interested in knowing that although I had >never heard the word "equipoise" before advance announcements of >Happy's album, the night my copy of EQUIPOISE arrived, the book I was >reading, Mervyn Peake's TITUS GROAN (the first book of his GORMENGHAST >trilogy), used it. > >If any of you have read GORMENGHAST, do you agree with me that Happy's >music and the trilogy possess an odd sort of synergy together, even >beyond this word? indeed :) beyond the obvious parallels, in the fascination for dark fantasies and extreme states of mind, depression and the escape from depression, there is, for me, a strong connection between the works: Happy's music and _Gormenghast_ inspire a sense of recognition and understanding through strange and startling images. i had never thought "the past is warpaint", nor dreamed of the hulk of gormenghast castle as seen from Fuchsia's window, but when i encountered these things, i thought "yes, that's what i meant..." for years, there were rumours that Sting was planning on filming some portion of the _Gormenghast_ trilogy, though all that ever came of it was the movie "treacle and brimstone", which was sort of a sketch in the Peake style... Jeff beat me to my next Marillion quote ;) so will make my exit with a simple footah! -greg -- bossert@vizlab.rutgers.edu -- == i have never been afraid to change == Happy == the circumstances of the world == Rhodes ======================================================================== Date: 24 Feb 1993 15:43:35 U From: "Chris Waite" Subject: Asst. music and msgs Asst. music and msgs Hi everyone... Does anyone have any information about "LOVE CLUB"...they have a nice song called "Sad Eyes"... Also, what do people think of Shellyan Orphin? I think the singer is Carolyn Crawley? She also sings some with This Mortal Coil (She sings on Mr. Somewhere).... Does she have any consistantly good albums? I know she's from Rough Trade. I love her voice, but generally find myself disappointed with how she is using it. and does anyone know anything about Kim Deal? (She sings "You and Your Sister" for TMC) also, Vickie, when's a good time to catch you at home? OH, and my birthday is April 25th...making me a Taurus....foot size is still 10... :) Happy day all! -Christine ======================================================================== Date: Wed, 24 Feb 1993 12:46:32 -0800 (PST) From: Neile Graham Subject: Confessions Scott confesses to being a little disappointed when he actually read the lyric sheets to _Equipoise_. I must confess that I still hear "'e gonna steal my coffee" for "'e gonna steal my heartbeat." :) --Neile ======================================================================== From: "Michael Blackmore" Date: 24 Feb 93 14:19:44 EST Subject: Re: HaPpY Birthday Christine HAPPPPPPPPPYYYYYYYYYY BIRTHDDDDDDDDDAAAAAAYYYYYYY! HAPPPPPPPPYYYYYYYYY BIRTHDDDDDDDDAAAAAAAYYYYYYY! and many more! - Michael B ======================================================================== From: "Michael Blackmore" Date: 24 Feb 93 15:02:56 EST Subject: Re: The sound of silence Mitch and Michael Say: >>If I'm applying what I learned by watching science fiction on >>TV correctly, wouldn't music and antimusic cancel each other out, >>creating silence (which some would consider an improvement over >>some kinds of music)? >I may have dreamed this, but i think the Japanese are in fact working >on a system which will cancel out road noise by using a device which >pipes the inverse of ambient noise into a car's interior. Come, come there's much better and more advanced technology than that! Didn't you ever watch Dr. Suess's "The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T"? In in there's a device that absorbs all sound! In fact, it's a key part of the plot! If you haven't seen it, then do so and soon! It's a blast (well, a silent one, perhaps)! - Michael B. ======================================================================== Date: Wed, 24 Feb 93 15:56:58 EST From: Greg Bossert Subject: Re: The word "equipoise". thanks to Steve Fagg for the info on the Gormenghast radio show! i'll put that on the list next to the CD release of the Hitchhikers Guide shows... so i can fail to find either of them :) though i would hesitate to commit myself to any particular interpretation of "out like a lamb" (i am still half convinced by the "silence of the lambs" connection!), i agree strongly with Angelos' point that the bagpipes are elegiac in intent... anyone have any ideas about "vern"?? i am still chuckling over the militant-veggie interpretation of "the flight" :) footah with a side of fries! -greg -- bossert@vizlab.rutgers.edu -- == i have never been afraid to change == Happy == the circumstances of the world == Rhodes ======================================================================== Date: Wed, 24 Feb 93 14:14:47 MST From: dbx@teton.atmos.colostate.edu (Doug Burks) Subject: Philadelphia concert tape Greetings, I (fortunately) was one of the original 20 orders that Greg mentioned. Thus I do have a copy of the Philadelphia concert tape. I re-recorded it and fit it nicely on a single C-100 cassette. However, I held back from listing it as part of the tape dubbing project, waiting to see what Greg had in mind. Since Greg still seems uncertain about when he can get a good copy to me, with his permission, I can add that tape to the tape dubbing tape list. Its quality is still good. When Greg sends me a good copy, I could then replace the existing one with this better one. Any comments, Mr Footah? For the newer Ectophiles, the tape dubbing project is a project to distribute tapes of interest to Ectophiles. It currently holds 14 (15, if you count the Philadelphia concert), with several other tapes promised Real Soon Now. :) [Did the proposed Celtic and Canadian samplers ever get off the ground?] The tapes include Happy-related items and samplers of female vocalists. I'm overdue for posting the project FAQ, as I was waiting the new tapes. However, given the long break, after Greg comments about adding my copy of the Philadelphia tape, I'll clean up the FAQ and post it in a few days. Doug Burks _O_ dbx@olympic.atmos.colostate.edu |< She really is!! ======================================================================== Date: Wed, 24 Feb 93 15:38:21 CST From: kiri Subject: PJ Harvey she's great! grunggggie and wild... sheela na gig is definitely my favi kIrI equipoise review is coming! current favi: the whole album minus SOS - the cheesy trumpet just drives me crazy! the song is good minus the chorus. She definitely should have had a live trumpet in there - horns, brass etc. sound terrible synthesized ======================================================================== Date: Wed, 24 Feb 93 16:23:02 CST From: "The stuff that epigraphs are made of :-)" Subject: I could have used them :-) Yesterday, I tried the new Chicago subway alignment to see if it held promise as a route home. The prospects aren't promising, inasmuch as three trains came and went in the other direction before there were any going my way. But more to the point, during the long wait I had to endure a rock band plying its trade on the platform. At its best, their music was pedestrian; the most nota- ble number, on account of it being the nadir, was a truly execrable rendition of Prince's "Purple Rain." Which got me to thinking (uh-oh, you all say :-) ): If the ecto cover band first proposed in these pages in the summer of 1991 ever gets off the ground, it would be a great service to the health and well- being of Chicago straphangers for it to consider the subways as a performance venue. For that matter, I can think of far worse-case scenarios than for Happy herself to perform down there, should she ever hit this town. I could have used them all :-). Kudos to Neile for reminding us that you can load up on good recorded sound without having to resort either to rapid transit, or digging into your stock- pile of frequent flyer brownie points. She may well have saved us from the primrose path toward a merger with bit.listserv.transit-l :-). WRT her rumin- ation on the dichotomy, in Happy's "Running" (at least I think it was that) between "heart" and "coffee" as alternative versions of the same lyric: seems to me that if you're enough into coffee to reach the palpitation stage, as so many of us are, then to take away one's coffee is, ipso facto, tantamount to taking away one's heart. Today's brain teaser: what would experts on the Internet consider a dead giveaway that Stuart's post on the ICBM server was a spoof? (The nation could have used such logic in 1938 :-). ) WRT marylou's encomium for Mae Moore's _Bohemia_: I second. I've heard it, and indeed it's good. Hope it becomes more widely available to Americans real soon. Mitch --------------------------------- "As soon as whatever provisional well of confidence dries up, I will feel like a frightened motherless child. And I will--what? Lessee, I'll beg friends to assure me I'm fascinating, that my soul is complex so I can once more conduce to irony. An abyss opens up." --Maryse Holder (The most elegant exposition of Footah's Law (q.v.) I've seen today :-) ) ======================================================================== Date: Wed, 24 Feb 93 22:28:16 GMT From: brage@sphere.home.id.dth.dk (Jens P. Brage) Subject: Jarre's "Zoolook" & Tangerine Dream's "Tyger" Finney writes: > In general I dislike Jarre's music. I feel it's pretty, but very shallow, > comparing to Vangelis' works. However, "Zoolook" is an exception. I think some of his older works are fairly good (e.g. "Equinoxe"), but I would agree that Vangelis is generally better. And Jarre's later works are pretty boring... > Laurie Anderson did an amusing > back vocal on one song, but I didn't feel anything special. Well, it's not that Laurie Anderson's part is that special, but it came as a surprise to me that she was "singing" on my favorite track, "Diva", from "Zoolook". To go further out on the tangent (after all, I'll probably not have my "Equipoise" for another week... ;-)) of electronic music, anybody/everybody familiar with Tangerine Dream's "Tyger"? Unlike most other TD music, this album has some very good female vocals (so, in fact, this thread still have a tenuous connection with Ecto), unfortunately, I don't know who the singer is! I think this is the best TD album I've heard (if a bit atypical), and I spent two years looking for a copy. I finally found one in Virgin in Paris... The music is dreamy, sort of a mixture of classic music and pure synthesizer music and then the lyrics (actually more spoken than sung) adds the final touch... Recommended! In case anybody knows: What is the source of the lyrics? I suspect they weren't written by TD... Hmm, "Zoolook" and "Tyger"? Perhaps another connection there... :-) Jens P. Brage | Dance the circle dance of dreaming, brage@sphere.home.id.dth.dk | lonely by the crystal sea. /\ | Spin the web of mist and moonlight, \SphereSoft | come, beloved, and follow me. ======================================================================== Date: 24 Feb 1993 19:21:07 -0500 From: scasterg@waltham.columbus.oh.us (Stuart M. Castergine) Subject: re: I could have used them :-) Mitch says: > > Today's brain teaser: what would experts on the Internet consider a dead > giveaway that Stuart's post on the ICBM server was a spoof? (The nation could > have used such logic in 1938 :-). ) > Should I have used the .mil top level domain? ;-) --- scasterg@waltham.columbus.oh.us -- Stuart Castergine ======================================================================== Date: 24 Feb 93 18:48:42 EST From: Mike Mendelson Subject: two MPs I wrote: > mp--> > < Of course, he means "Save Our Souls." Which gives me a spontaneous I now notice we have (at least) 2 MPs. So, do you guys have, like, middle initials or something? -mjm ======================================================================== From: boek@mullian.ee.mu.oz.au (Christopher Boek) Subject: The word "equipoise". (and Gormenghast) Date: Thu, 25 Feb 1993 11:15:42 +1100 (EST) Glenn writes ... > > Just thought you might be interested in knowing that although I had never > heard the word "equipoise" before advance announcements of Happy's album, > the night my copy of EQUIPOISE arrived, the book I was reading, Mervyn > Peake's TITUS GROAN (the first book of his GORMENGHAST trilogy), used it. > I finished the book last night, and toward the end "equipoise" cropped up a > few more times. If any of you have read GORMENGHAST, do you agree with me > that Happy's music and the trilogy possess an odd sort of synergy together, > even beyond this word? > I never realised this. I've read the Gormenghast trilogy and it remains in my eyes one of the most classic set of books I've ever read. I've been meaning to read it again for ages now, and your mention of it has just given me the urge to do so _now_. (after I've finished 'Dracula', which I was inspired to read after I saw the film). While I'm on the subject, after I read Titus Groan etc borrowed from the library, I went out to try and buy copies of them. I went into one bookshop and asked for it, and they said, "No, but there's a shop down the road that's got them cheap at the moment ... I shouldn't be telling you this, but it's true". And, lo and behold, I picked up all three books for $10. Now, I'm a bit of a bargain hunter when it comes to books, but I've never before bought books like that cheap when I'd actually actually been looking for them! I hadn't thought about any connection between the two, maybe when I re-read them I'll be able to answer that ... Chris. -- | ||| ||| | ||| ||| ||| | ||Christopher Boek - boek@mullian.ee.mu.oz.au | ||| ||| | ||| ||| ||| | || Dept Elec Eng Univ of Melbourne Australia | | | | | | | | | / "Anybody remotely interesting is mad in |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| \_/\_/\_/\_/\__/(:*- some way or another" ======================================================================== From: drk@leland.stanford.edu Subject: Re: Asst. music and msgs Date: Wed, 24 Feb 93 16:58:47 PST Hi Ectophiles, Christine asked about Kim Deal. Kim was the bassist for the now- defunct greatest-band-ever: Pixies. She also sang regular BV in the band and the occasional lead. Her vocals are most prominent on the album "Surfer Rosa", which is one of the best alternative rock albums ever made, IMO. In case you can't tell, I like Pixies 8-). On the earlier albums she appears under the name "Mrs. John Murphy" (she was later divorced.) Kim currently writes, plays and sings lead with The Breeders, a band she actually co-founded with her identical twin sister, Kelly, before Pixies got together. A few months ago The Breeders played on Letterman. I found it strange to see two idential-looking people in one band. I know zilch about This Mortal Coil, and was unaware that Kim had worked with them. On what album(s) does Kim Deal appear? Is all their stuff import-only in the U.S.? Regards, ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- David R. Koehler "His DNA is skewed!" drk@leland.stanford.edu -- Dr. Beverley Crusher ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ======================================================================== Date: Wed, 24 Feb 93 19:36:42 EST From: Greg Bossert Subject: Re: I could have used them :-) Mitch epigramates (i am tempted at this point towards an exposition of the dangers of swallowing his seeds of wisdom lest one be stuck six months of the year in chicago, but really the whole thing was too ripe with, er, well, "ripe" suffices, i think ;) anyway: >Yesterday, I tried the new Chicago subway alignment to see if it held >promise as a route home. The prospects aren't promising, inasmuch as >three trains came and went in the other direction before there were >any going my way. it has been observed (and indeed recorded in song and story) that the topology of subway systems is neither intuitive nor euclidian -- the phenomenon Mitch reports is a classic example, in which 3 out of 4 trains go the other way on a closed, unlooped line. my theory that crack teams of transit workers disassemble the trains at the end of the other track, place the pieces into small cylinders and send them speeding through pneumatic tubes to the far end, at which point they are reassembled, and that furthermore that the fact that "the other track" is, by definition, the one at which i am not standing proves that this is all a plot to confuse me, is often refuted (the theory, that is, for those keeping score at home) by the observation that this is paranoid delusion and anyway it easier to confuse me by making faces or staring over my shoulder or, in truth, doing almost anything in my presence... ;) still, the smug look on the subway staff makes me suspicious... >But more to the point, during the long wait I had to endure a rock >band plying its trade on the platform. At its best, their music was >pedestrian; the most nota- ble number, on account of it being the >nadir, was a truly execrable rendition of Prince's "Purple Rain." given the recent discussion on subway color-coding, one can't help (honestly, one can't) suggest a few more songs to cover: Blue Flower Blue Heaven Blue Monday Blue Spark Blue Velvet Green Fingers Green Light Greensleeves [hmm] Orange Crush Red Earth Red Sails Red Shoes perhaps a bit less appropriate: Black Celebration Black Dog White Girl White Riot White Shadow Pink Flag and out of form but certainly more appropriate, a medley of Clannad's and X's versions of: I See Red >Which got me to thinking (uh-oh, you all say :-) ): if it had gotten *me* to thinking, y'all might have been spared all this ;) >If the ecto cover band first proposed in these pages in the summer of >1991 ever gets off the ground, it would be a great service to the >health and well-being of Chicago straphangers for it to consider the >subways as a performance venue. so, we'd get off the ground only to get under it, eh? the thought of us travelling the world, instruments in hand, bringing our interpretations of Happy's music to people in transit to exciting places, is truly frightening... ;) >For that matter, I can think of far worse-case scenarios than for >Happy herself to perform down there, should she ever hit this town. I >could have used them all :-). far more likely, i think, that Happy would stalk the chicago subway system, stake in hand, hunting for the ecto-band ;) >[quote from Maryse Holder deleted just to confuse the issue] (The most elegant exposition of Footah's Law (q.v.) I've seen today :-) ) "elegant exposition"... "Footah"... no, there is something wrong with those words in the same sentence... let's try it without the iffy bits: "The most [...] Footah [...] I've seen today :-)" that seems plausible... let's hope it's true! ;) -greg -- bossert@vizlab.rutgers.edu -- == i have never been afraid to change == Happy == the circumstances of the world == Rhodes ======================================================================== Subject: Re: Jarre's "Zoolook" & Tangerine Dream's "Tyger" Date: Wed, 24 Feb 93 18:36:05 EST From: Angelos Kyrlidis Hi, >To go further out on the tangent (after all, I'll probably not have my >"Equipoise" for another week... ;-)) of electronic music An interesting trivia-bit from the past. Which electronic music band has not one but two songs from the same album with titles *very* similar or identical to songs from Warpaint (the Happy connection)? [I *think* this was never actually posted-it goes back to days of muzing in Harvard Sq. with other distinguished ectophiles :) ] Angelos ======================================================================== Subject: PG on the Grannies Date: Wed, 24 Feb 93 21:55:14 EST From: Angelos Kyrlidis Hmm, or rather HMMMMMMMM... Is *this* where PG is heading, or is this just a grande facade for the Big Time crowd? Was it live or memorex (the vocal)? Is this what his upcoming tour will be like (probably not)? Angelos (take me to another place) PS. At least NIN won for Best Metal and not Asia or something... :) But wait, NIN are not metal, they're industrial, but not *really* industrial, just sort of, in the weak sense. ;) PPS. Arrested Development looked very promising. Anybody have their album? ======================================================================== Subject: Re: PG on the Grannies Date: Wed, 24 Feb 93 22:42:23 -0500 From: jeffy@syrinx.umd.edu Angelos sez: >Is *this* where PG is heading, or is this just a grande facade for the >Big Time crowd? Was it live or memorex (the vocal)? Is this what his >upcoming tour will be like (probably not)? Have you seen the video to "Steam"? To my mind, this was the closest one could come to a live-action, real-time staging of it, and I though it came off pretty well (other than the mis-timed steam eruptions...:-\ ) It also put me in mind of early Genesis in the sense of the whole costume/ theatrics of it. That wasn't Peter Gabriel on the stage, per se, but rather the persona of the character in the song/video. That said, it sounded like he was having a few problems with his voice. Hope he gets it warmed up a bit better before touring! Cirque du Soleil scared me. Humans shouldn't be able to do that. >PPS. Arrested Development looked very promising. Anybody have their album? My sister has it. It's pretty good--ups and downs, though. I much prefer Neneh Cherry's _Homebrew_ (though admittedly, I've heard it more and I absolutely adore "Trout") Jeff ======================================================================== Date: Wed, 24 Feb 93 22:43 EST From: robert@deepspace.nj00802.sai.com (Robert Lovejoy) Subject: A Quick Note or Two Hi everyone! Heard a new singer (to me, anyway) on WXPN today - I think the name was Tasmin Archer. Sounded really nice - anybody here know anything about her? I'm not sure if I like Belly or not. They only play one song, in which one is repeatedly asked to doff one's headgear whilst arboreal nutrition takes place! Maybe if I heard a few more songs... Thanks for the replies for Susanne! She has the computer and modem, so all I have to do is convince her they are relatively easy to hook up and operate! Meanwhile, I'll be sending her a disk shortly with most of this month's ecto digests and messages. This is pretty exciting for me, as I'm sure she will be overjoyed to see the response to EQP from all corners! Thanks everyone for all the help with the net and the fuzzy blue warmth around here! I always look forward to ecto! Bob Lovejoy ======================================================================== Date: Wed, 24 Feb 1993 19:41:09 -0800 From: piaw@pure.com (Na Choon Piaw) Subject: k.d. lang So I went back and listened to k.d. lang again, and decided that yes, the sound is indeed novel, and I do like her, but not as much as KaTe, Tori, or Happy. I don't know how the rest of you managed to interpret the album as being the outcome of the unrequited love of a woman for another married woman --- I couldn't get that interpretation out of the lyrics at all. (Maybe "Miss Chetaelain"?) The problem I have with love songs is that they can apply to anyone or romantic relationship. It's just too damned tiring. As one of my friends once said, "There're only 3 kinds of love songs: `I want you very badly because you're so wonderful,' or `I'm sorry that we just broke up,' or `You're so wonderful, aren't you glad we're in a relationship?'" For the longest time, the only love song I could even stand was "Somebody" by Depeche Mode, which certainly did not fall into the above categories. (I like a lot of Happy's love songs too, but I haven't analyzed them much because I just got her albums recently...) Piaw Harrison's Postulate: For every action, there is an equal and opposite criticism. ======================================================================== Date: 24 Feb 1993 23:00:53 U From: "Chris Waite" Subject: Re: Re- Asst. music and msgs Reply to: RE>Re: Asst. music and msgs Hello everyone!!! Wow! What a night!!! I just got back from "THE GREAT MIRACLE PRAYER FESTIVAL!!! Wow! Here's the line up list for it: Ganden Shartse Monks: Invocation ceremony Robert Thurman, Chair: Introduction Allen Ginsburg: Solo Reading-Poetry by Laurie Anderson A. Ginsburg & P. Glass: Duet from "Hydrogen Jukebox" Philip Glass: Piano Solo-Music for the Dalai Lama (*WOW*) P.Glass & L.Anderson: Pian/Vocal Duet (I don't remember the title) Laurie Anderson: Solo Performance (She told great stories!) L.Anderson & N.Khechog: Duet (another story!) Nawang Khechog: Solo Performance (Beautiful Tibetan flute player!) All Artists: Quartest with Ginsberg's poem "Thoughts Sitting Breating" Nawang Khechog: Epilogue on Tibetan Flute *Wow* All of the performances were wonderful... Laurie is an absolute masterful performer...Philip Glass is a beautiful composer/pianist... Allen Ginsberg is a delightful, funny poet/reader, Nawang is a powerful flautist and the monks were charming to say the least...(they looked very unfamiliar and nervous being on stage in a very endearing way)... It was quite an event and many "known" people, including Bill Murray, showed up...There were alot of reporters/cameramen around taking photos of people that I guess must have been pretty famous... Altogether a most beautiful event! In response to David Koehler (Mr. "you look like your "o" needs an umlaut") Ah...I've heard some music by the Pixies ( a couple years ago)..but hadn't realised that it was Kim Deal singing (though the name sounded familiar). She sings the 6th song on This Mortal Coil's "Blood". I don't know if she is on any of the other albums. Maybe someone else here knows? Hope everyone is having a happy night!!! -Christine :) -------------------------------------- Date: 2/24/93 8:12 PM To: Chris Waite From: drk@leland.stanford.edu Hi Ectophiles, Christine asked about Kim Deal. Kim was the bassist for the now- defunct greatest-band-ever: Pixies. She also sang regular BV in the band and the occasional lead. Her vocals are most prominent on the album "Surfer Rosa", which is one of the best alternative rock albums ever made, IMO. In case you can't tell, I like Pixies 8-). On the earlier albums she appears under the name "Mrs. John Murphy" (she was later divorced.) Kim currently writes, plays and sings lead with The Breeders, a band she actually co-founded with her identical twin sister, Kelly, before Pixies got together. A few months ago The Breeders played on Letterman. I found it strange to see two idential-looking people in one band. I know zilch about This Mortal Coil, and was unaware that Kim had worked with them. On what album(s) does Kim Deal appear? Is all their stuff import-only in the U.S.? Regards, ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- David R. Koehler "His DNA is skewed!" drk@leland.stanford.edu -- Dr. Beverley Crusher ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------ RFC822 Header Follows ------------------ Received: by axon.rutgers.edu with SMTP;24 Feb 1993 20:12:03 U Received: by leland.Stanford.EDU (5.57/25-eef) id AA24594; Wed, 24 Feb 93 16:58:53 -0800 Received: by adelbert8.Stanford.EDU (5.57/Ultrix3.0-C) id AA07226; Wed, 24 Feb 93 16:58:49 -0800 From: drk@leland.stanford.edu Message-Id: <9302250058.AA07226@adelbert8.Stanford.EDU> Subject: Re: Asst. music and msgs To: chris_waite.cmbn#u#mailcntr@axon.rutgers.edu (Chris Waite) Date: Wed, 24 Feb 93 16:58:47 PST Cc: ecto@ns1.rutgers.edu In-Reply-To: <9302242043.AA20842@ns1.rutgers.edu>; from "Chris Waite" at Feb 24, 93 3:43 pm X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.3 PL11] ======================================================================== The ecto archives are on hardees.rutgers.edu in ~ftp/pub/hr. There is an INDEX file explaining what is where. Feel free to send me things you'd like to have added. -- jessica (jessica@ns1.rutgers.edu)