From: owner-ecto-digest@smoe.org (ecto-digest) To: ecto-digest@smoe.org Subject: ecto-digest V6 #325 Reply-To: ecto@smoe.org Sender: owner-ecto-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ecto-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk ecto-digest Wednesday, November 1 2000 Volume 06 : Number 325 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Re: "...the sound of distant floor polishers..' [Bill ] Happy's website/Carl Adami [runly@hvi.net] Help.. again! ["ReNeEz DaBoMb" ] Music on TV shows ["Tom Masapollo" ] Re: "...the sound of distant floor polishers..' [jjhanson@att.net] Fiddlechicks [anna maria "stjärnell" ] Re: "...the sound of distant floor polishers..' [Joseph Zitt ] KaTe [Loretta Pontillo ] Re: feelin' tropical songs [Sue Trowbridge ] RE: feelin' tropical songs ["Mattoon, Melanie" ] More on Bette [jjhanson@att.net] FW: Favorite Instruments [Phil Hudson ] Re: FW: Favorite Instruments [jjhanson@att.net] Re: feelin' tropical songs ["Rosana L. de Oliveira" ] Re: Favorite Instruments [Anthony Kosky ] Sarah Brightman concert ["Michael Pearce" ] Re: Favorite instruments [RedWoodenBeads@aol.com] Re: Favorite Instruments [meredith ] Re: "...the sound of distant floor polishers..' [meredith ] Re: blindrockergirls in seattle [meredith ] Re: KaTe [Markku Kolkka ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 30 Oct 2000 23:22:49 -0800 (PST) From: Bill Subject: Re: "...the sound of distant floor polishers..' On Tue, 31 Oct 2000, kerry white wrote: > A related question is a variation on the "Singer or The Writing" > thread that pops up every eon or so: Are voices beautiful sounds that > MUST have 'content', or, can they be instrumental,ie: foreign languages? > I gave a tape of non- english ecto music to a woman and later had to > take it back because she " couldn't stand not knowing what was being > said". > > Strong feelings, one way or the other, out there? bye, When I hear poetry being read to me in a foreign language which I do not understand I can then appreciate the music in the poetry, the rhythm, meter, cadance and time which make poetry more than mere prose. I find that it is us North Americans who most often cannot deal with foreign languages which we cannot understand; people of other cultures often gobble up our English-spoken pop music without a complaint. - - Bill G. wicbp (wish I could be playing): The copy of _Pop Romantique_ (French pop) which I just found at Rasputin Music. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 08:16:14 +0000 From: runly@hvi.net Subject: Happy's website/Carl Adami Happy's website will be launching the first week of November...hopefully. She's working very hard to get it ready. For those interested, Carl Adami (Happy's one-time bassist) will be performing with his new group, Outloud Dreamer, this Thursday, November 2, at 10 p.m., at Joyous Lake in Woodstock. I just finished up a CD review for the Woodstock Times, and it's definitely Ecto fare! Beautiful, upbeat, loopy stuff with great vocals. If you'd like to read the review, just email me. It's kinda long, so I didn't want to post it here. Sharon Terra Incognita ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 29 Oct 2000 22:53:51 -0600 From: "ReNeEz DaBoMb" Subject: Help.. again! Hola y'all... I was hoping you could help me again... I heard this song on a top fourty station, and sense i don't listen to top fourty, i don't know what the song is, or who sings it. soooo i thought, cause you all are SOOOO good at this.. you could tell me who it is. the only lyric i remember is; "I've been waiting.... for you." a male is singing it, and the song sounds like a radio head, or vertical horizion type sound. That's all i can remember... Thanx Renee Happy Halloween!! - Go listen to something scary like the back Street boys. - -- ThIs Is WhY pEoPle Od On PiLlS, aNd JuMp FrOm ThE gOlDeN gAtE bRiDgE... aNy ThInG tO fEeL wEiGhTlEsS aGaIn! - -- ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Oct 2000 09:38:58 -0500 From: "Tom Masapollo" Subject: Music on TV shows Dave, I'm a big Roswell fan and they use Dido's music for the theme song (Here with me) They also feature the music of various artists throughout the show. At the end of the show they tell you who the artists were and usually show an album cover. BTW, Dido will be in Phila this week in concert!! Yeah! Sarah Brightman does her song (Roswell theme) on "La Luna" later, tom m. >One other note.. I noticed at the end of Fox's new show Freaky Links >they do a little thing where they tell you what music they use on the >show each week. Nice to not have to strain your eyes to try and catch it >in the credits, wish more shows would do it this way. >-- >dave ____________________________________ Tom Masapollo Haddon Heights, NJ E-mail: masapollo@moorestown.tt.slb.com _____________________________________ ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 14:49:25 +0000 From: jjhanson@att.net Subject: Re: "...the sound of distant floor polishers..' kerrywhite asks: > A related question is a variation on the "Singer or The Writing" > thread that pops up every eon or so: Are voices beautiful sounds that > MUST have 'content', or, can they be instrumental,ie: foreign languages? > I gave a tape of non- english ecto music to a woman and later had to > take it back because she " couldn't stand not knowing what was being > said". > > Strong feelings, one way or the other, out there? Repeated listenigns to my first Cocteau Twins album, "The Pink Opaque", finally got me over the hurdle of having to understand the lyrics and to just understand the voice. Now, I listen to a lot of music that I can't understand a word. One of my favorite singers, Haris Aleixou from Greek, is incredible, such a passionate voice--you feel the emotion without necesasrily understanding the words. Her new album, "Whispers" is great by the way. Jeff Hanson n.p. Haris Alexiou - Whispers n.r. The Hundred Secret Senses - Amy Tan ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 06:49:56 -0800 (PST) From: anna maria "stjärnell" Subject: Fiddlechicks Hi.. Proof that they have sites for everything..www.fiddlechicks.com Anna Maria np-Emm Gryner_Science Fair __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Messenger - Talk while you surf! It's FREE. http://im.yahoo.com/ ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 09:30:07 -0500 From: Joseph Zitt Subject: Re: "...the sound of distant floor polishers..' On Tue, Oct 31, 2000 at 12:47:51AM -0600, kerry white wrote: > A related question is a variation on the "Singer or The Writing" > thread that pops up every eon or so: Are voices beautiful sounds that > MUST have 'content', or, can they be instrumental,ie: foreign languages? > I gave a tape of non- english ecto music to a woman and later had to > take it back because she " couldn't stand not knowing what was being > said". Well, to toot me own horn for a moment, you can hear from my MP3s (at http://www.metatronpress.com/mp3 ) that almost all the vocals that I've been doing over the past few years are in made up "languages". And I love listening to many singers, such as Lisa Gerrard, who tend to do the same. OTOH, I've been wanting to know for years what the Bulgarian women are singing on KaTe's "The Sensual World" album, and what Youssou N'dour is singing on "In Your Eyes". And on the other other hand, I think I'd appreciate the music of some godawful lyricists (like Yoko Ono (much as I love her music) and, especially, Morrissey) if they sang in a language I couldn't understand. - -- |> ~The only thing that is not art is inattention~ --- Marcel Duchamp <| | jzitt@metatronpress.com http://www.metatronpress.com/jzitt | | Latest CD: Jerusaklyn http://www.mp3.com/josephzitt | | Comma: Voices of New Music Silence: the John Cage Discussion List | ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 15:01:46 -0500 From: Loretta Pontillo Subject: feelin' tropical songs hey ecto people, here's a task for us... maybe not a strictly ecto one, but I'm pretty sure that fans of Celine Dion and Britney Spears would be at a loss here. I'm feeling pretty bummed out/snowed in ALEADY and it's not even quite November yet. So I'm making a tropical mix for myself. So far I have: Put the Lime in the Coconut (the original and the muppet version) Montego Bay The Banana Song - Day-o Margaritaville I'm sort of on the fence about it, but sometimes I really like "Copa Cabana" - -- it's so funny Key Largo (Sarah Vaugn)-- not strictly tropical but it could serve as an intro or outro to the mix... a lot of these seem to be about drinking -- odd. Well, anyway. Does anyone have any suggestions of tropical feeling songs? I hope I'm making sense here. Loretta ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 18:15:04 -0500 From: "Rosana L. de Oliveira" Subject: Re: Favorite Instruments At 05:42 PM 10/30/2000 EST, Megan wrote: >I've noticed that many of my friends have a soft spot for certain >instruments (usually ones they play themselves). They always keep an ear out >for artists with new and inventive ways of playing them. In my case, I know >I have a particular weakness for harp, cello, and harpsichord. Does anyone >else care to share their preferences? > >-Megan Hello, You listed instruments that are also big favorites of mine, especially the harp. I would also include the flute in my list. Regards, Rosana rioliv@br.homeshopping.com.br http://www.geocities.com/jerayna - ------- n.p. Mike Oldfield - The Songs Of Distant Earth ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 14:34:37 -0500 From: Joseph Zitt Subject: Re: feelin' tropical songs On Tue, Oct 31, 2000 at 03:01:46PM -0500, Loretta Pontillo wrote: > a lot of these seem to be about drinking -- odd. Well, anyway. Does anyone > have any suggestions of tropical feeling songs? I hope I'm making sense > here. One immediate thought: KaTe Bush's "Eat the Music". - -- |> ~The only thing that is not art is inattention~ --- Marcel Duchamp <| | jzitt@metatronpress.com http://www.metatronpress.com/jzitt | | Latest CD: Jerusaklyn http://www.mp3.com/josephzitt | | Comma: Voices of New Music Silence: the John Cage Discussion List | ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 15:12:36 -0500 From: Loretta Pontillo Subject: KaTe just off hand, do you know why we/they spell it "KaTe" with a capital T? and yeah, of course, silly me! have to add that. :) Eat The music. Loretta - -----Original Message----- From: Joseph Zitt [mailto:jzitt@metatronpress.com] Sent: Tuesday, October 31, 2000 2:35 PM To: Loretta Pontillo Cc: 'ecto@smoe.org' Subject: Re: feelin' tropical songs On Tue, Oct 31, 2000 at 03:01:46PM -0500, Loretta Pontillo wrote: > a lot of these seem to be about drinking -- odd. Well, anyway. Does anyone > have any suggestions of tropical feeling songs? I hope I'm making sense > here. One immediate thought: KaTe Bush's "Eat the Music". - -- |> ~The only thing that is not art is inattention~ --- Marcel Duchamp <| | jzitt@metatronpress.com http://www.metatronpress.com/jzitt | | Latest CD: Jerusaklyn http://www.mp3.com/josephzitt | | Comma: Voices of New Music Silence: the John Cage Discussion List | ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 12:27:28 -0800 (PST) From: Sue Trowbridge Subject: Re: feelin' tropical songs On Tue, 31 Oct 2000, Loretta Pontillo wrote: > I'm feeling pretty bummed out/snowed in ALEADY and it's not even quite > November yet. So I'm making a tropical mix for myself. So far I have: I'd recommend picking up the BELEZE TROPICAL compilation on David Byrne's Luaka Bop label -- lots of great Brazilian music that will definitely put you in a tropical mood. Also, there's a great song by Beck called "Tropicalia" on his MUTATIONS album that would fit right in. - --Sue Trowbridge trow@slip.net ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 14:39:53 -0600 From: "Mattoon, Melanie" Subject: RE: feelin' tropical songs Harry Belafonte's "Jump in Line (Shake, Shake Senora)" always puts me in a tropical mood. np Tricky, Maxinquaye - -----Original Message----- From: Loretta Pontillo [mailto:lpontillo@exchange-east.xceed.com] Sent: Tuesday, October 31, 2000 2:02 PM To: 'ecto@smoe.org' Subject: feelin' tropical songs hey ecto people, here's a task for us... maybe not a strictly ecto one, but I'm pretty sure that fans of Celine Dion and Britney Spears would be at a loss here. I'm feeling pretty bummed out/snowed in ALEADY and it's not even quite November yet. So I'm making a tropical mix for myself. So far I have: Put the Lime in the Coconut (the original and the muppet version) Montego Bay The Banana Song - Day-o Margaritaville I'm sort of on the fence about it, but sometimes I really like "Copa Cabana" - -- it's so funny Key Largo (Sarah Vaugn)-- not strictly tropical but it could serve as an intro or outro to the mix... a lot of these seem to be about drinking -- odd. Well, anyway. Does anyone have any suggestions of tropical feeling songs? I hope I'm making sense here. Loretta ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 21:10:38 +0000 From: jjhanson@att.net Subject: Tropical Songs One song, a bit more latin than tropical, to consider is Bette Midler's hilarious "In These Shoes" off her latest album. The album also features her doing the excellent "God Give Me Strength" the Costello/Bacharach tune from the film Grace of My Heart. Still don't understand why Kristin Vigard didn't garner more attention from doing the singing in that role--I guess most people though Illeana Douglas was really singing. Jeff Hanson ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 13:19:32 -0800 (PST) From: Bill Subject: Re: feelin' tropical songs On Tue, 31 Oct 2000, Loretta Pontillo wrote: > I'm feeling pretty bummed out/snowed in ALEADY and it's not even quite > November yet. So I'm making a tropical mix for myself. So far I have: I am not a fan of Gloria Estefan's pop music in English, but her Hispanic album _Mi Tierra_ is absolutely awesome, the whole thing; very genuine Cuban and Latin American music. Give it a try. Also, of course, just about any music from Latin America should do. Anything by Irene Farrera is very good. Juan Luis Guerra's _Batacha Rosa_ is another fine album. Of course, all of these are sung in Spanish; beware of foreign lyrics. ;) - - Bill G. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 21:28:51 +0000 From: jjhanson@att.net Subject: More on Bette I just looked through the booklet of the new Bette CD and noticed some surprising things: In These Shoes --written by Kirsty MacColl/Pete Glenister Moses - written by Patty Griffin Color of Roses - written by Beth Nielsen Chapman/Matt Rollings Her last album she covered two unrecorded songs by Maria McKee. Even if you dont' like her you gotta admit she's got good taste in music. Jeff Hanson n.p. Bette Midler - Bette ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 13:56:40 -0800 From: Phil Hudson Subject: FW: Favorite Instruments Has anyone ever heard the Swedish NyckelHarpa? Its appearance is unique. It looks as if a 12-string guitarist, a violinist, a hurdy-gurdy player and a guy with a bucket of glue ran full tilt into each other at a crossroads; it has frets, wooden playing keys, two strings for each note, four live mice that run around inside the soundhole, and a bow. ( Ok, I lied about the mice, but if you've seen a nyckelharpa, you know they'd fit right in) The sound can be ethereal and amorphous, or can really kick in and sound like two violins or violas playing simultaneously. Anyone familiar with Hedningarna's "Tra" or "Hippjock" will have heard the nyckelharpa; it predominates most of those two albums. ( another quick plug for my favorite Nordic heathens!) BTW: I'd love to own one, if anyone has one stored under the bed and would like to sell it, please let me know! Phil np: Judy Tzuke " welcome to the cruise" ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 22:19:04 +0000 From: jjhanson@att.net Subject: Re: FW: Favorite Instruments Phil Hudson asked about nykelharpas: Milla Jovovich toured with a Nykelharpa player on her first tour--it's used quite extensively on The Divine Comedy. And man, was her nykelharpa player cute! It was funny because he was much more striking in appearance than Milla--who is the "supermodel". Jeff Hanson ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 20:38:10 -0500 From: "Rosana L. de Oliveira" Subject: Re: feelin' tropical songs At 03:01 PM 10/31/2000 -0500, Loretta Pontillo wrote: >a lot of these seem to be about drinking -- odd. Well, anyway. Does anyone >have any suggestions of tropical feeling songs? I hope I'm making sense >here. Hello, There is a lot of Brazilian stuff that I could recommend. The ones that immediately spring to my mind are Banda Eva, an "axé music" band from Bahia state (they generally play at the northeastern Carnival), anything from Jorge Benjor (there is a very good compilation of his being sold at Amazon.com titled "Brazilian Collection" which probably will suit the type of tropical music that you are looking for quite well) and perhaps Daniela Mercury as well (I would recommend the album "O Canto da Cidade"). Hope that helps, Rosana rioliv@br.homeshopping.com.br http://www.geocities.com/jerayna - ------- n.p. Wendy Rule at MP3.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 15:01:40 -0800 (PST) From: Bill Subject: Re: feelin' tropical songs On Tue, 31 Oct 2000, Rosana L. de Oliveira wrote: > [...] and perhaps Daniela Mercury as well (I would recommend the album > "O Canto da Cidade"). _Feijo com Arroz_ is my favorite of hers. - - Bill G. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 16:04:46 -0800 (PST) From: Anthony Kosky Subject: Re: Favorite Instruments > On Mon, Oct 30, 2000 at 05:42:30PM -0500, Datura Child wrote: > > I've noticed that many of my friends have a soft spot for certain > > instruments (usually ones they play themselves). They always keep an ear out > > for artists with new and inventive ways of playing them. In my case, I know > > I have a particular weakness for harp, cello, and harpsichord. Does anyone > > else care to share their preferences? > Oddly, for me the two don't coincide very much at all (favorite instruments and ones I play myself that is). The only instrument I can play with any semblance of competency is the lever (Celtic) harp. Certainly this is the instrument I most want to play, and would most like to one day actually be good at, so in that respect it is my favorite instrument. But as an instrument to listen to, especially in recorded music, I find them to be not terribly interesting. I do enjoy going to harp concerts sometimes, but I find myself more watching the techniques and looking for ideas for pieces I might be able to learn, than I am getting absorbed in the music. To listen to, I actually prefer medieval harps, or better yet brae harps, which don't have the same subtlety, but have more interesting and aggressive sounds. On the other hand, one of my favorite instruments to listen to is the hurdy gurdy. I get very excited about almost any album which has any hurdy gurdies on it, especially if they're being played by Nigel Eaton. (I was ecstatic when I he turned up on Ovo). But I don't think I would be particularly interested in learning to play the hurdy gurdy, because I'd feel like its range was too limiting. My feeling is that you react to different things when listing to music than when trying to play it, at least I do. When listening, the overall sound and effect of an instrument can be very important. Especially if it's an instrument like a tabla or a hurdy gurdy which has bizarre and unusual sound. By being outside the norm of what I expect to hear, can give an instrument an extra impact and convey a lot of emotion. On the other hand, when playing something (or at least trying to), I find I'm aware of much more subtle details. e.g. whether I can get the tone I want on a particular note, or how different the harp will sound after it's been raining. I suspect these kind of things are lost in the overall effect for a listener, or at least don't have the same interest. I think I'll go back to sleep now... - -Anthony __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? From homework help to love advice, Yahoo! Experts has your answer. http://experts.yahoo.com/ ------------------------------ Date: 31 Oct 2000 16:46:27 -0800 From: "Michael Pearce" Subject: Sarah Brightman concert Well, I and a friend saw the concert last night, and I was extremely impressed. When she sang popular songs, covers, her own work, I kept thinking, "This is what Kate would be doing now if she hadn't given up." Or whatever the hell made Kate walk away from the kind of work she did at Hammersmith in 1979. The operatic stuff was very unKatelike but nevertheless quite beautiful and I am normally repelled by opera. The set design was spectacular. Her support team (12 choralists, 15 in the orchestra, about 8 in the band and 4 dancers) all combined to make this an event. It isn't often that I will spend $80 for a ticket, but being in the 6th row center was worth it. I bought a DVD of her previous performances, and my friend bought a two-CD set (called "Fly" which she did in harness on two of her numbers) which I am ripping right now. If you have not yet heard her, do. And go to this concert; she heads east from here, and then to Europe. She's amazing. Michael ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 23:56:00 EST From: RedWoodenBeads@aol.com Subject: Re: Favorite instruments Personally, I think that when executed well, the guitar/bass/drums combination is just fasinating. The way the deep tones of the bass curve around the repetitive groove of the drum, the way the guitar cascades over the vocals. One of my absolute favorite examples of this is The Sundays first album, which I think is just so powerful in its guitar/vocals/bass/drums delivery. Another good example of this is Miss America by Mary O'Hara. There are other instruments, but a lot of the time its built around Mary, Rusty MacCarthy's guitar and the drums and jazzy basslines. I love that rawness, that stripped down, intimate four-artists-giving-their-all feel. One singer I would love to hear in this fashion is Kristy MacColl. Is there anything she's done that's more stripped-down like that? I love elegant use of the guitar, for example in Jeff Buckley's GRACE, particularly in the title track and "Mojo Pin". I am also absolutely in love with 10,000 Maniacs' Robert Buck's riffing. For me, he represents the ultimate graceful guitarist, with soaring, powerful leads that shimmer and gleam. I have come to not care for flashy solos, especially when they are heavilly distorted, but I get into The Pixies sometimes. As far as the more exotic instruments, well, the mandolin (yeah, I know, real exotic) always gets me. When played well, it really adds to the color of a song. Fairport Convention tends to have the best mandolins, but R.E.M. and 10,000 Maniacs have some great mandolin work as well. I actually play both guitar and mandolin, so I suppose that's why I can really get into these instruments. But I don't play violin/viola, and that's another instrument I very much enjoy. I'm not as big on the extravagent string arrangements, I like more of the solitary violist, such as Alastair Galbraith, Slavador Garza and, well, Mary Ramsey. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 01 Nov 2000 00:39:05 -0500 From: meredith Subject: Re: Favorite Instruments Hi! My favorite instruments to listen to are the harpsichord, fretless bass, cello, tabla, and Javanese gamelan. And in the hands of the right individual, a Parker Fly electric guitar. Tasty. I agree with Anthony that one's favorite instrument to listen to isn't necessarily going to be your favorite one to play. I'm somewhat limited in my musical performance skill, only playing piano (though Susan Werner did show me the C and G chords on the guitar the other weekend -- whee!), and piano doesn't rank high on my listening list at all, unless it's prepared piano, or Tori Amos is playing it. On the opposite end of the spectrum, I think the real caption to that famous Far Side cartoon should have been, "Welcome to Hell -- here's your piccolo." +==========================================================================+ | Meredith Tarr meth@smoe.org | | New Haven, CT USA http://www.smoe.org/~meth | +==========================================================================+ | "things are more beautiful when they're obscure" -- veda hille | | *** TRAJECTORY, the Veda Hille mailing list: *** | | *** http://www.smoe.org/meth/trajectory.html *** | +==========================================================================+ _____NetZero Free Internet Access and Email______ http://www.netzero.net/download/index.html ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 01 Nov 2000 00:45:25 -0500 From: meredith Subject: Re: "...the sound of distant floor polishers..' Hi again, (Ever notice that nobody does a Klaus around here any more? :) Joe wondered: >OTOH, I've been wanting to know for years what the Bulgarian women are >singing on KaTe's "The Sensual World" album, and what Youssou N'dour is >singing on "In Your Eyes". I can't translate the Bulgarian bits, but I can tell you (in case you haven't already figured it out, and really if you haven't I'll be surprised) that in "Never Be Mine" they're singing at the end "never be mine" phonetically, as Bulgarian women who have no clue to the English language would upon seeing the words for the first time. The resulting "nayva bi meenay" is very, very cool. I really am done now. +==========================================================================+ | Meredith Tarr meth@smoe.org | | New Haven, CT USA http://www.smoe.org/~meth | +==========================================================================+ | "things are more beautiful when they're obscure" -- veda hille | | *** TRAJECTORY, the Veda Hille mailing list: *** | | *** http://www.smoe.org/meth/trajectory.html *** | +==========================================================================+ _____NetZero Free Internet Access and Email______ http://www.netzero.net/download/index.html ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 01 Nov 2000 00:42:28 -0500 From: meredith Subject: Re: blindrockergirls in seattle Hi! Andrew responded to Cy: >>Not a snot, cyoakha grace o'manion > >That's so cute, and it made me smile because I had this sort of >experience with a couple of the local artists. I immediately thought of Kristeen Young. On stage, she's a crazed banshee. Off stage, she's one of the most quiet, shy, self-deprecating, *nicest* people you'll ever meet. I'm sure a psychologist could come up with a slick term for the complete 180 she displays onstage and off - if not, one should invent the term and write the paper with her as the case study. It's quite striking. Speaking of Kristeen, I hope Don Keller (or someone else who may have been there) will fill us in on KY's Halloween show in NYC this evening. +==========================================================================+ | Meredith Tarr meth@smoe.org | | New Haven, CT USA http://www.smoe.org/~meth | +==========================================================================+ | "things are more beautiful when they're obscure" -- veda hille | | *** TRAJECTORY, the Veda Hille mailing list: *** | | *** http://www.smoe.org/meth/trajectory.html *** | +==========================================================================+ _____NetZero Free Internet Access and Email______ http://www.netzero.net/download/index.html ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 01 Nov 2000 08:25:07 +0200 From: Markku Kolkka Subject: Re: KaTe At 22:12 31.10.2000, you wrote: >just off hand, do you know why we/they spell it "KaTe" with a capital T? This FAQ is answered in http://gaffa.org/faq/faq_4_1.html - -- Markku Kolkka markku.kolkka@businesstori.com ------------------------------ End of ecto-digest V6 #325 **************************