From: owner-ecto-digest To: ecto-digest@ns2.rutgers.edu Subject: ecto-digest V2 #1 Reply-To: ecto@nsmx.rutgers.edu Errors-To: owner-ecto-digest Precedence: bulk ecto-digest Tuesday, 17 January 1995 Volume 02 : Number 001 The Ecto digest is now being generated automatically. Please send problems and questions to: ecto-owner@nsmx.rutgers.edu. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: THE OLIVE-LOAF VIGILANTE Date: Sun, 15 Jan 1995 21:25:45 -0500 (EST) Subject: Re: Required Listening Hi! The other night, all Greg Brown had was his guitar and his shades. I can certainly respect the fact that lots of other people think he's great, because obviously a lot of other people do. It's just that I cannot deal with his voice in the slightest, and his music bores *me*. The other people in the audience seemed to be getting into it, and the more power to them. But hey. We can't all like everything. If everybody liked everything, the New Yorker wouldn've have a film reviews section at all. :) Meredith meth@delphi.com ------------------------------ From: cornflake boy Date: Sun, 15 Jan 1995 21:56:05 -0500 Subject: Re: do you know of any lists bhutchin@pen.k12.va.us (Bradley N. Hutchinson) sez: > I'm interested in trying to find a plce to find out >about traditional british music (celtic, gaelic, I don't even >know enough to be sure I know the correct term for it) you know, that >thing I have about finding bagpipe music, and all those things that Paddy >plays on Kates recordings. besides the usenet group rec.music.celtic, i can't think of any other electronic fora for celtic music offhand, but i'm sure that if you point your web browser at http://celtic.stanford.edu/ceolas.html, i'm sure you will find some mention of anything to do with celtic music on the net. you might also want to take a peek at the list of musical mailing lists, which can be got at http://server.berkeley.edu/~ayukawa/lomml.html. woj ------------------------------ From: Jacob Paul Leonard Date: Sun, 15 Jan 95 18:37:00 M Subject: Heeeelllp! Song IDs needed! [LONG] Brian: I'm sorry all your stuff got stolen. This is all I know. I hope it helps. >and finally, >A8. (very slow, piano, almost a whisper, hoarse voice) >intro:"How can you sleep, > How can you sleep through this? > What are your thoughts..?" >Chorus:"Older than lonely > Older than old, > There's only minutes, > Minutes to go, > You have to feel this, > You have to cry, > I can't go on, > I can't deny..." This is a song called "The Lonliest Night Of All" by Lisa Germano. The first time I heard it I cried. I know I'm a baby. - Jacob Paul Leonard ------------------------------ From: Jacob Paul Leonard Date: Sun, 15 Jan 95 18:45:00 M Subject: Please read this I know that this isn't list related but it is the only way I can contact so many people at once. Here go's. . . Does anybody remember a documentary that aired on HBO in the early eighties about The Coconut Grove Fire? Dick Cavet Narrated. Please contact me even if you barely remember it. THaNks!! -Jacob Paul Leonard jleonard@st.ceu.edu ------------------------------ From: Jacob Paul Leonard Date: Sun, 15 Jan 95 18:58:00 M Subject: You are witnessing a start!! Please!!!! Can anyone tell me more about Katell Keineg? I cannot believe how amazing she is. Her lyrics, her voice, her instrumentation. She is one of the most powerful musicians I have heard in years. Please!! If you haven't gotten her CD "Oh, Seasons. Oh, Castles." yet leave your computer right now and buy it. You won't be dissapointed. -Jacob Paul Leonard jleonard@st.ceu.edu ((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((* "I won't accept, at this stage anything that isn't all I want!" -Katell Keineg "Hestia" ((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((*))((* ------------------------------ From: "Scott S. Zimmerman" Date: Sun, 15 Jan 1995 19:06:53 -0800 (PST) Subject: Magnetic Fields > I also got one of the Magnetic Fields albums ('The charm of the highway > strip') which also blew me away. What other albums does this guy have > anyway? (I know i know I should look at the CMJ interview, so no flames). There's another album named "Holiday" that's released on Feel Good All Over. It's fairly readily available at better record stores. I don't know which of the two albums I prefer. What I'd really like to hear are the earlier Magnetic Field releases where Susan Anway sings. I think one of those albums is called the Wayward Bus? Other Magnetic Fields things I have: Alien Being 7" on Harriet records: "Long Vermont Roads", "Alien being", "Beach-a-boop-boop" "100,000 Fireflies" 7" on Harriet: "100,000 Fireflies", "Old Orchard Beach" (Susan sings on these--beautiful!!) The song "100,000 Fireflies" also appears on the Spin Art "...One Last Kiss" compilation. A video for "Love Goes Home to Paris" is on the Munch (part 1) video compilation on Season Records. Munch is great set of low-fi amateur music videos. It exemplifies why MTV sucks. :) - -Scott ------------------------------ From: cornflake boy Date: Sun, 15 Jan 1995 22:23:58 -0500 Subject: Re: Vowel Movement Mklprc@aol.com sez: >Michael Handler writes, >> Vowel Movement's self-titled release should be out February 28th, >> AFAIK. The frontpeople are Johnette and Holly Near (formerly of The >> Oblivious). >Wasn't Holly Near a feminist folksinger in the '70s? different holly near. the oblivious opened up for concrete blonde during their tour in 1993. greg, jessica, meredith and i saw them at the stone pony in asbury park. i remember that the oblivious made my ears ring (considering the amount of noise i've put my ears through, that's an accomplishment). greg thought they were nifty. i just remember the pain. :) +w ------------------------------ From: cornflake boy Date: Sun, 15 Jan 1995 23:08:53 -0500 Subject: Re: Required Listening Laurel sez: >Greg Brown boring? Well I suppose it depends on what one likes. bingo! i'm not sure that i'd say he is "boring". i had never heard of him before the show. all i knew was that meredith had heard a lot of his songs on wfuv and was none too impressed with him. after seeing him play live, i'd say that four or five years ago, i probably would've liked him quite a bit. now, my tastes don't run in that "new acoutic folk" vein very much and he just doesn't appeal. he does play a mean guitar though - i really liked the chords on the third song he played (couldn't tell you the title, but there was a line about going down some road in the chorus). i'll also add that i find his use of the word "folk" to describe his music somewhat misguided. a solo acoustic guitar does not equal folk music. >(sidenote to vickie: if Robin "Adnan" Anders (drummer from Boiled >in Lead) plays on his albums, he can't be all bad... right? ) really? yikes! maybe he is folk after all! ;) ;) ;) woj ------------------------------ From: cornflake boy Date: Sun, 15 Jan 1995 23:27:39 -0500 Subject: magnetic fields kyrlidis@templeton.cchem.berkeley.edu (Angelos Kyrlidis) sez: >I also got one of the Magnetic Fields albums ('The charm of the highway >strip') which also blew me away. What other albums does this guy have >anyway? well, the current formation of magnetic fields (just stephen merritt) has at least one other disc out: _holiday_. there is also a slew of 7" singles floating about too. if you see any singles by the sixths, that is stephen as well, though he's joined by a different indie-rock luminary on each one. once upon a time, the magnetic fields also included susan anway on vocals and a few others on some instruments (like tuba and cocktail drums - whatever they are). in that incarnation, two albums were released: _distant plastic trees_ and _the wayward bus_ (the latter contained all the material on the former, incidentially). there was also the accompanying slew of singles and a few tracks on compilation albums. unfortunately, all that stuff is out of print and hard to come by. it's hard to say which version of the band i like better. susan's vocals were pretty but stephen's aren't too shabby either. i'll take 'em both. woj ------------------------------ From: Laurel Date: Sun, 15 Jan 1995 22:48:41 -0600 (CST) Subject: Re: Required Listening On Sun, 15 Jan 1995, cornflake boy wrote: > Laurel sez: > >Greg Brown boring? Well I suppose it depends on what one likes. > > bingo! > > i'm not sure that i'd say he is "boring". i had never heard of him > before the show. all i knew was that meredith had heard a lot of his > songs on wfuv and was none too impressed with him. after seeing him > play live, i'd say that four or five years ago, i probably would've > liked him quite a bit. now, my tastes don't run in that "new acoutic > folk" vein very much and he just doesn't appeal. he does play a mean > guitar though - i really liked the chords on the third song he played > (couldn't tell you the title, but there was a line about going down > some road in the chorus). True enough. I can't tell you the name of the song as he plays lots of nifty chords and does a number of songs about roads. :) I first loved Greg Brown's songs, before ever hearing him. Lots of the Minneapolis music crowd plays his tunes (e.g. the Flash Girls, Steven Brust, various members of Boiled in Lead, etc.) and I first grew to love his stuff that way. woj mentioned not caring for his voice-- I know a number of folks who feel that way, tho they think he's written some nifty songs. Friends of mine who attended the Winnipeg Folk Festival a couple of years ago keep making me jealous by telling me how Richard Thompson and Greg Brown "discovered" each other at one of those workshop thingies where a bunch of the performers play together. I'd say RT and Greg Brown are two of my fave songwriters. (Them and Peter Gabriel probably head my list of male songwriters, tho that's hard to pin down). > i'll also add that i find his use of the word "folk" to describe his > music somewhat misguided. a solo acoustic guitar does not equal folk > music. True. Methinks that's probably a label that's been applied to him. I always think ofhim as more of a blues guitarist who writes nifty songs that fit into many styles. He can do the down home almost country bit, he can rock, he can play the blues. Synchronicity. Right now I'm listening to Shawn Colvin's "Cover Girl" album and the current track is the Greg Brown song "One Cool Remove" with Mary Chapin-Carpenter helping out on vocals. Mighty nice. (Labels are pointless. I've loved Lyle Lovett's records for years and used to have to track them down in teh country section-- wheras I alwasy thought of him as more blues/jazz/folk/somethingcoolthatilike. Now he's in contemporary or rock. Same can be said for a number of artists. Including k.d. lang and Mary Chapin-Carpenter, etc.) > >(sidenote to vickie: if Robin "Adnan" Anders (drummer from Boiled > >in Lead) plays on his albums, he can't be all bad... right? ) > > really? yikes! maybe he is folk after all! ;) ;) ;) I know Robin's done percussion for Greg's last two albums. Not sure beyond that. Occasionally he'll sit in at a midwest Greg Brown show, as well. (For those unaware, Greg records on the Red House Records label-- in fact he was the first to record on that label. Label is based in Minneapolis-- Greg is from Iowa and first gained fame on "A Prairie Home Companion") His voice and style has grown on me. I prefer the "Dream Cafe'" album to his latest ("The Poet Game"), but it may grow on me. Anyone who has young kids should check out the GB album "Bathtub Blues" for really fun kidstuff. I've rambled enough... :) best, Laurel Krahn Director of Operations Iway Internet Services ------------------------------ From: jeffw@triple-i.com (Jeff Wasilko) Date: Sun, 15 Jan 1995 20:58:55 -0800 (PST) Subject: Re: You are witnessing a start!! Jacob Paul Leonard writes: > > Please!!!! Can anyone tell me more about Katell Keineg? I cannot > believe how amazing she is. Her lyrics, her voice, her instrumentation. > She is one of the most powerful musicians I have heard in years. Please!! > If you haven't gotten her CD "Oh, Seasons. Oh, Castles." yet leave your > computer right now and buy it. You won't be dissapointed. Let me second that. I 1st heard Katell at Woj-n-Meth's a while back. The first track didn't do much for me, and I didn't spend much time listening. A few weeks later, I ended up buying it and loving it! If anyone has any info about her I'd love to hear it... Jeff - -- Jeff Wasilko, Systems Rep., Information International Inc. +1 617 937 9400 (jeffw@triple-i.com, jeffw@jane.camex.com) "With all the confidence I have, it seems I could go forever, but forever has no rest stops."--Happy Rhodes [smoe] ------------------------------ From: "Alex Gibbs" Date: Mon, 16 Jan 1995 09:47:18 -0700 Subject: IRC logs of Happy's show available It took a while, due to some old friends turning up, but I finally got the IRC #ecto logs from the two days of the Middle East show ready. Thanks to Neil K. Guy and Gersham Meharg they are available from the Ecto home page at http://www.helix.net/ecto/ in hypertext format (thanks Neil) or as UNIX-compressed text files, which must be uncompressed. The latter are also available by direct ftp from ftp.helix.net:/pub/helix-users/ecto/HRshowME* which stands for Happy Rhodes show Middle East. The two log files are too large to post to ecto: 176k and 152k (74k and 58k compressed). Because of their size, as a courtesy to helix.net, do not download them more than is necessary. The file HRshowME.txt explains more, and I have some to add: - --==<>==-- Happy Rhodes show on IRC from The Middle East Club, Philadelphia, Jan 5-6 1995. During the shows, Happy Rhodes and ectophiles at the club talked to people on IRC channel #ecto, which was logged. On Jan 5th there were more people on #ecto chatting, but there was less interaction with those at the club since the link was weak. On Jan 6th there were less people on #ecto, but more ectophiles at the club, and there was a *lot* more interaction with the show. HRshowME1.irc.Z - Jan 5th IRC log. Activity in The Log Start Line Search For: Pre-show: Talk in #ecto and with ectophiles at the club 4 --- The show: Narration by Bob, messages from Happy, talk 850 yay!!! Post-show: Talk with those who were there, random talk 1966 1000 miles HRshowME2.irc.Z - Jan 6th IRC log. Activity in The Log Start Line Search For: Pre-show: Talk in #ecto and with ectophiles at the club 4 --- The show: Narration by Bob, messages from Happy, talk 1193 Happy_R Post-show: Talk with those still there & who were, more 1995 stunned Thanks to Bob Brown for linking the world to the shows and telling us what was happening so we could be there in spirit! Thanks to Happy Rhodes for her music and for bringing the collective heart into the shows by amazingly talking to us *during* her performances! - Alex Gibbs - --==<>==-- If you haven't been on IRC #ecto and have wondered what it is like then these files will give you an idea. There are often multiple conversations going on at once, some of them obscure, so it's not always obvious why someone said what they did and to whom they said it, and they don't always know either! Don't worry about it, enjoy it, and keep on moving. I recommend starting with the second log first since it's smaller, less complex, has more Happy, and is a bit more like normal #ecto in parts. However, if you want to see ectophiles chatting up a storm then the first one is it. Of course if you were there then you know what to expect and I'll accept money or good CDs to remove things you wish you hadn't said. ;-} (The log file from Thursday starts just after 9pm EST. I believe Happy said one thing before then and I'm sure there was plenty of chatting. If anyone has an earlier log worth adding, please let me know.) /-\ |_ |= >< Alex R. Gibbs arg@kilimanjaro.opt-sci.arizona.edu Betelgeuse ------------------------------ From: Michael Matthews Date: Tue, 17 Jan 1995 03:30:07 -0500 Subject: Today's your birthday, friends... i*i*i*i*i*i i*i*i*i*i*i *************** *****HAPPY********* **************BIRTHDAY********* *************************************************** *************************************************************************** ****************** Dennis G Parslow (p00421@psilink.com) ****************** ****************** Ross Alford (zlraa@marlin.jcu.edu.au) ****************** *************************************************************************** -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Dennis G Parslow Fri January 17 1964 SDCN Ross Alford Thu January 17 1957 Positive Nancy Whitney Mon January 19 1959 slippery when wet Sarah Noelle Pratt Ferguson Tue January 20 1970 Seanympf-Aquarius Terry Partis Sun January 22 1933 Rocker Ilka Heber Mon February 01 1965 Mermaid Bob Lovejoy Sun February 02 1947 Aquarius Diane Burke Sat February 02 1963 slow children Timothy S. Devine Tue February 03 1970 Aquarius Stephen Thomas Fri February 04 1966 Aquarius Doug Burks Tue February 14 1956 Blank Siri Wed February 14 1990 Woof! - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- ------------------------------ From: S.L.Fagg@bnr.co.uk (Nightwol) Date: Tue, 17 Jan 1995 10:52:30 +0000 Subject: Technology and your Life (no musical content) A friend on the net Emailed me this - I think it's a gas and I'm sure many Ectophiles will recognise themselves below (except for #17!). Enjoy! :-) > 30 Signs That Technology Has Taken Over Your Life: > -- Joe Mullich, AmericanWay Magazine, 11/15/94. > > 1. Your stationery is more cluttered than Warren Beatty's address book. > The letterhead lists a fax number, e-mail addresses for two on-line > services, and your Internet address, which spreads across the breadth > of the letterhead and continues to the back. In essence, you have > conceded that the first page of any letter you write *is* letterhead. > > 2. You have never sat through an entire movie without having at least one > device on your body beep or buzz. > > 3. You need to fill out a form that must be typewritten, but you can't > because there isn't one typewriter in your house -- only computers > with laser printers. > > 4. You think of the gadgets in your office as "friends," but you forget > to send your father a birthday card. > > 5. You disdain people who use low baud rates. > > 6. When you go into a computer store, you eavesdrop on a salesperson > talking with customers -- and you butt in to correct him and spend > the next twenty minutes answering the customers' questions, while > the salesperson stands by silently, nodding his head. > > 7. You use the phrase "digital compression" in a conversation without > thinking how strange your mouth feels when you say it. > > 8. You constantly find yourself in groups of people to whom you say the > phrase "digital compression." Everyone understands what you mean, > and you are not surprised or disappointed that you don't have to > explain it. > > 9. You know Bill Gates' e-mail address, but you have to look up your own > social security number. > > 10. You stop saying "phone number" and replace it with "voice number," > since we all know the majority of phone lines in any house are > plugged into contraptions that talk to other contraptions. > > 11. You sign Christmas cards by putting :-) next to your signature. > > 12. Off the top of your head, you can think of nineteen keystroke symbols > that are far more clever than :-) > > 13. You back up your data every day. > > 14. Your wife asks you to pick up some minipads for her at the store and > you return with a rest for your mouse. > > 15. You think jokes about being unable to program a VCR are stupid. > > 16. On vacation, you are reading a computer manual and turning the pages > faster than everyone else who is reading John Grisham novels. > > 17. The thought that a CD could refer to finance or music rarely enters your > mind. > > 18. You are able to argue persuasively the Ross Perot's phrase > "electronic town hall" makes more sense than the term > "information superhighway," but you don't because, after all, the > man still uses hand-drawn pie charts. > > 19. You go to computer trade shows and map out your path of the exhibit hall > in advance. But you cannot give someone directions to your house > without looking up the street names. > > 20. You would rather get more dots per inch than miles per gallon. > > 21. You become upset when a person calls you on the phone to sell you > something, but you think it's okay for a computer to call and > demand that you start pushing buttons on your telephone to receive > more information about the product it is selling. > > 22. You know without a doubt that disks come in five-and-a-quarter-and > three-and-a-half-inch sizes. > > 23. Al Gore strikes you as an "intriguing" fellow. > > 24. You own a set of itty-bitty screw-drivers and you actually know where > they are. > > 25. While contemporaries swap stories about their recent hernia surgeries, > you compare mouse-induced index-finger strain with a nine-year-old. > > 26. You are so knowledgeable about technology that you feel secure enough > to say "I don't know" when someone asks you a technology question > instead of feeling compelled to make something up. > > 27. You rotate your screen savers more frequently than your automobile >tires. > > 28. You have a functioning home copier machine, but every toaster you own > turns bread into charcoal. > > 29. You have ended friendships because of irreconcilably different opinions > about which is better -- the track ball or the track *pad*. > > 30. You understand all the jokes in this message. If so, my friend, > technology has taken over your life. We suggest, for your own good, > that you go lie under a tree and write a haiku. And don't use a >laptop. > > =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= > 31. You email this message to your friends over the net. You'd never get > around to showing it to them in person or reading it to them on the > phone. In fact, you have probably never met most of these people > face-to-face. - -- Steve Fagg a.k.a. Nightwol ( 'phone: +44-1279-402437 ) ( s.l.fagg@bnr.co.uk (work) nightwol@dircom.co.uk (home) ) *** We tried to add it all up and got merely sunrise. *** *** Try putting that in a letter to someone in exile. *** ------------------------------ From: S.L.Fagg@bnr.co.uk (Nightwol) Date: Tue, 17 Jan 1995 11:25:44 +0000 Subject: Re: Best of '94 *LONGISH* At 9:46 am 16/1/95 +0000, Martin G Bridges wrote: >Best Live Performances of '94 >============================= >1) Sarah McLachlan - Bloomsbury Theatre, London >It was a long time coming but I've rarely enjoyed myself more at a concert. >I couldn't believe it could stand up to my expectations but it far and away >exceeded them. Only complaint was that it was too short!! > >2) Indigo Girls - Shepherds Bush Empire, London >By contrast, this one seemed to go on for ever!! Not that that was a >problem! Despite the most uncomfortable seats I have ever sat in, a >storming night. Can't wait for the video. >> >Most Disappointing Live Performances of '94 >========================================== >1) Tori Amos - London Palladium >Talking of living up to expectations, this didn't. Don't get me wrong, it >was a good concert, but I'd been led to believe that it was going to be >something special. Everyone has to have a bad night, and I think this was >Tori's. Her heart didn't appear to be in it. Just wanted to say that I was with Martin at these three gigs and I concur wholeheartedly with his opinions. Personally I wasn't too phased by the seats at the Empire, but then (a) I'm a skinny runt whereas Martin is a BigGuy(TM) and (b) I was sitting on the aisle so could stretch my legs a bit! :-)) I guess true fans would say we should have been sweating it out with the rest of them down in the heaving mass of standing punters, but then I've long been resigned to my "boring old fart" status! :-) For me though I would have to insert Sarah McLachlan at The Vic Theatre, Chicago as my #2 in between Martin's #1 and #2. That was my first experience of Sarah live and I was knocked out by it (and the experienced was enhanced by being in the company of a big buch of wonderful Ectophilic friends too ;-)) - all the more surprising then that the London gig should top it so comprehensively, but it did! I wish I'd been able to see Peter Gabriel live - from the Live CD it seems that his shows may have been able to topple even Sarah from the #1 spot - I'm deeply envious of all you people out there who DID get to see him! Here's looking forward to some great CDs and some great live shows in 1995! - -- Steve Fagg a.k.a. Nightwol ( 'phone: +44-1279-402437 ) ( s.l.fagg@bnr.co.uk (work) nightwol@dircom.co.uk (home) ) *** We tried to add it all up and got merely sunrise. *** *** Try putting that in a letter to someone in exile. *** ------------------------------ From: ab580@leo.nmc.edu (Karl L. Snyder) Date: Tue, 17 Jan 95 14:36:58 -0500 Subject: _UNIVERSITY_ !! Well, I bought my first new album of the year today... Throwing Muses' new album _University_... Mmmm... I'm in heaven. For anyone who loved Kristin Hersh's solo album _Hips and Makers_ I highly recommend it. GO BUY THIS ALBUM! But, be forwarned, for those who have never heard Muses, only Kristin's resent album, this is not that marvellous primal voice over acoustic instruments, this is far louder... It proves that Kristin Hersh can live in either medium. Of course, by nature of the project it isn't as intimate as her solo work, but by no means does it lack passion. The fourteen song album is very strongly written, ranging from hard electric driven rock to slightly more laid back sonic tales... The drummer, David Narcizo, saouds as marvellous as ever, and Jane Scarpantoni, the cellist who played on _HaM_ even appears on several tracks... Oh, Muses are now back to a trio, with a new member Bernard Georges... and before I say anything specific about any of the songs I'm going to go and listen to them more than once. Oh boy... (bounce, bounce) - -- "Their discourse, splendid as it had been, resulted in nothing, and their respective opinions and policies were exactly the same when they left the church as when they had entered it." - E.M. Forester _Where Angels Fear to Tread_ ------------------------------ From: Jacob Paul Leonard Date: Tue, 17 Jan 95 05:11:00 M Subject: Coconut Could everyone that responded to my post about THE COCONUT GROVE please write me back. I lost your addresses. SORRY!!! -Jacob Paul Leonard jleonard@st.ceu.edu ------------------------------ From: jeffw@triple-i.com (Jeff Wasilko) Date: Tue, 17 Jan 1995 18:28:02 -0800 (PST) Subject: Imago dead? I saw a post on alt.music.alternative.female about Aimee Mann's new album, and one writer seemed to indicated that Imago was going broke/bust. Any truth to the that rumor? I hope not, with Aimee & Paula Cole on that label.... - -Jeff - -- Jeff Wasilko, Systems Rep., Information International Inc. +1 617 937 9400 (jeffw@triple-i.com, jeffw@jane.camex.com) "With all the confidence I have, it seems I could go forever, but forever has no rest stops."--Happy Rhodes [smoe] ------------------------------ End of ecto-digest V2 #1 ************************ ======================================================================== Please send any questions or comments about the list to ecto-owner@nsmx.rutgers.edu