From: owner-ecto-digest@smoe.org (ecto-digest) To: ecto-digest@smoe.org Subject: ecto-digest V11 #31 Reply-To: ecto@smoe.org Sender: owner-ecto-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ecto-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk ecto-digest Tuesday, February 1 2005 Volume 11 : Number 031 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Recent changes to the Ectophiles' Guide ["The Ectophiles' Guide" ] Kaki King [Greg Bossert ] Setlist from second show? ["Joe Casadonte" ] Re: Setlist from second show? ["Jeffrey Burka" ] Kaki King [Steve VanDevender ] Re: Setlist from second show? ["Jeffrey Burka" ] Re: Kaki King [Bernie Mojzes ] Re: Kaki King [raven@igc.org] more 2004 albums ["JoAnn Whetsell" ] happy rhodes pre-release disks [Bernie Mojzes ] Cocteau Twins, Reunited [Craig Gidney ] Cocteau Twins news [Neile Graham ] Re: Cocteau Twins, Reunited [Greg Bossert ] Re: happy@tin angel [Paul Blair ] Set lists, I have set lists! (and CD info) [Vickie Mapes Subject: Recent changes to the Ectophiles' Guide Latest changes to the Ectophiles' Guide 30 January 2005 New Guide entries added for: * Clara Engel * Mirah * Joanna Newsom Changes made to the entries for: * Bettie Serveert (two additional albums) * Marianne Faithfull (additional album) - -------------------------------------------------------------------------- You are receiving this email because you have asked to be notified of updates to the Ectophiles' Guide to Good Music at http://www.ectoguide.org/. If you are no longer interested in receiving these notifications, please unsubscribe yourself using the form at http://www.ectoguide.org/guide.cgi?newsubscribe&action=unsubscribe ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 04:43:26 -0800 From: "London, Sherry" Subject: id help Could it possibly be Saint Etienne?? With vocalist Sarah Cracknell? sherry Date: Sun, 30 Jan 2005 21:00:27 -0800 From: Paul Schreiber Subject: Re: CD id help Neile asked: >> A couple years ago, a friend burned me a copy of one of her CDs. I >> really like it, and want to buy a copy (and some more by the artist). >> >> Only one problem: I don't know what it is. I wrote down the artist as >> "St. Germain," and the CD has 11 tracks: >> Track 01 5:59 [snip] > Do you have a way of putting it in a computer with access to the CD > Database? It would tell you. Why, this very computer I'm using now, in fact. However, this CD does not appear to be in CDDB. :/ Paul ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 06:29:08 -0800 From: Greg Bossert Subject: Kaki King as a matter of some thousands of miles and great heaping lacks of money prevented me from making it to the tin angel, i consoled myself by tricking some friends into taking me to a show by someone of whom i had not heard. the astute reader of Subjects will promptly lambast me as a Bad Student of the Guitar, since apparently one cannot open a recent issue of a guitar magazine (not even the ones with large hairy tattooed men on the covers) without being overcome by the clammer of praise for ms. King. good thing, i suspect, that i was oblivious, 'cuz if i had read some of that before seeing the show, i would have had different expectations, and simply been one of a herd of guitar nerds (some of them large, hairy, and tattooed) who were there to see some GIRL whack a guitar into utter submission. instead, hapless and unprepared, i saw a talented composer and musician playing an intriguing blend of fingerstyle jazz, "new acoustic", celtic, slack key, and country. admittedly, she is perky and petite, and does pound on her fretboard with all ten fingers (tipped by some scary nails) in a frenzy any large hairy tattooed metal maniac would envy (drummers take note as well -- she often keeps cross rhythms thumped against the body of her guitar). but, though the guitaristic gymnastics were both impressive and entertaining, the performance would not have rated a mention here if the music weren't good. (sadly, this point seems to be largely missed in the press coverage i have since read...) in particular, compared to the tracks from her first record, the stuff she is playing "noodles" less, and develops some extended thematic and harmonic structure. the most obvious comparison is to the lamented Michael Hedges, both in the death defying fingermanship, and the happy blend of influences. her most recent album _Legs to Make Us Longer_ is produced by David Torn, which is 'nuff said. live, for the most part, she played acoustic guitar, though she switched to lap steel through a looping peddle for one piece, and played a niftily modified nylon string koto-style for another. she closed with "my insect life", her only vocal piece, sung in a sweet small voice over more looped lap steel and acoustic guitar. in concert, it had a notable Lisa-Germano-like effect (only accentuated by some minor technical glitches); alas, the recorded version is a bit more tame. in fact, in general the record lacks some of fire (vis the large hairy tattooed men all agog) of the live performance, but then again that's to be expected. anyway, that's that -- she's worth seeing if the opportunity presents itself, and fans of guitar should check out the new album (Dan, you here? buy this!). plus, it's my first concert review here on ecto since 1952 (give or take, and not counting the Aimee Mann DVD i mentioned a few days ago, since she wasn't actually live in my living room alas alack) and whiled away some un-Happy hours... 'tah - -g - -- "i've never been afraid to change the circumstances of the world" - -- Happy Rhodes - -- "except for bunnies..." - -- Anya [demime 0.97c-p1 removed an attachment of type application/pkcs7-signature which had a name of smime.p7s] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 10:45:19 -0500 From: "Joe Casadonte" Subject: Setlist from second show? I was at the first show, and had a great time (despite the horrible sound). I, personally, forgot to write down the setlist from the first show, so I can't even offer that to the group (sorry!). But I'd be interested to hear what I missed from the late show. Anyone more diligent than I out there? - -- Regards, joe Joe Casadonte jcasadonte@northbound-train.com - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Llama Fresh Farms => http://www.northbound-train.com Gay Media Resource List => http://www.northbound-train.com/gaymedia.html Perl for Win32 => http://www.northbound-train.com/perlwin32.html Emacs Stuff => http://www.northbound-train.com/emacs.html Music CD Trading => http://www.northbound-train.com/cdr.html - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Live Free, that's the message! - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 19:53:01 +0100 From: "Inigo Op't Roodt" Subject: Re: CD id help http://www.stgermain.co.uk/ greetz ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 14:31:33 -0500 From: "Jeffrey Burka" Subject: Re: Setlist from second show? well, here's most of it. largely out of order (other than, as usual, the beginning and end). I know there was a fourth song from the new disc, but I can't recall the title and don't have the jewel case with me here...and although I submitted the disc to cddb when I ripped it, so far there's nowhere for me to check the title for now! Anyone else remember what it was? And did I miss anything? One and Many Ra is a Busy God Mercy Street Pride Soon (for Ed Shockey) The Chosen One Fall The Chariot To the Funny Farm Lay Me Down Feed the Fire Collective Heart Summer The show lasted about 75 minutes, and while Vickie told me there was no encore for the first show, Happy 'n co did leave the stage and came back for an encore. The club looked pretty much full to me, which must have been gratifying for Happy. We were seated right up front, where the instruments, particularly Hanny's bass, seemed to overpower things a bit. But generally speaking, the sound was quite good and Happy's voice was in *fine* form. I'm still getting used to the new disc. Right now, I have to say I'm really thrown by the production on the chorus of The Chosen One. I've been hearing Happy perform that for nearly, what, 4 years now? Seems like she sang it at EctoFestWest in 6/01. Anyway, the chorus to me sounds...broken, and really doesn't fit the rest of the song. Weird. jeff n.p. _Happy Rhodes_ (that's the only thing resembling a title on the disc or cover art!) ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 11:54:29 -0800 From: Steve VanDevender Subject: Kaki King Greg Bossert writes: > as a matter of some thousands of miles and great heaping lacks of money > prevented me from making it to the tin angel, i consoled myself by > tricking some friends into taking me to a show by someone of whom i had > not heard. Hey, wait a minute, was this the same woman who was the musical guest on Letterman Thursday or Friday last week? (I think the show might have been a repeat.) I happened to see a woman playing guitar who closely matched your description: > instead, hapless and unprepared, i saw a talented composer and musician > playing an intriguing blend of fingerstyle jazz, "new acoustic", > celtic, slack key, and country. admittedly, she is perky and petite, > and does pound on her fretboard with all ten fingers (tipped by some > scary nails) in a frenzy any large hairy tattooed metal maniac would > envy (drummers take note as well -- she often keeps cross rhythms > thumped against the body of her guitar). but, though the guitaristic > gymnastics were both impressive and entertaining, the performance would > not have rated a mention here if the music weren't good. and I was quite intrigued. As for me, on Saturday night, also being on the wrong coast to easily attend the Tin Angel show, I instead saw the Firesign Theatre perform live in Portland. If you're a fan of their comic surreal audio theater, you'll probably really dig their show. I never thought a cafeteria menu could be so hilarious. It wasn't a normal cafeteria menu; "Clams Scared by Chickens" is the only item I can remember at the moment. They may not be as young as they used to be, but they have lots of fresh material. (During the show when one of them was doing his "old guy" voice he quipped, "Didn't we just used to pretend we were old?") The west coast is the right coast if want to see them; their remaining tour dates in the San Francisco bay area and Los Angeles are coming up this weekend. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 14:49:09 -0500 From: "Jeffrey Burka" Subject: Re: Setlist from second show? Ah. That was the fourth song from the new album was "Can't Let Go" jeff ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 15:36:25 -0500 (EST) From: Bernie Mojzes Subject: Re: Kaki King thanks greg, i'd noticed her when looking at the Tin Angel website - she seems to have a regular thursday night gig there. or at least, she's booked there for the next 3 thursdays... her website has samples of her music: www.kakiking.com definitely reminiscent of some of michael hedges less windham-hill moments. brni On Mon, 31 Jan 2005, Greg Bossert wrote: > as a matter of some thousands of miles and great heaping lacks of money > prevented me from making it to the tin angel, i consoled myself by > tricking some friends into taking me to a show by someone of whom i had > not heard. the astute reader of Subjects will promptly lambast me as a > Bad Student of the Guitar, since apparently one cannot open a recent > issue of a guitar magazine (not even the ones with large hairy tattooed > men on the covers) without being overcome by the clammer of praise for > ms. King. good thing, i suspect, that i was oblivious, 'cuz if i had > read some of that before seeing the show, i would have had different > expectations, and simply been one of a herd of guitar nerds (some of > them large, hairy, and tattooed) who were there to see some GIRL whack > a guitar into utter submission. > > instead, hapless and unprepared, i saw a talented composer and musician > playing an intriguing blend of fingerstyle jazz, "new acoustic", > celtic, slack key, and country. admittedly, she is perky and petite, > and does pound on her fretboard with all ten fingers (tipped by some > scary nails) in a frenzy any large hairy tattooed metal maniac would > envy (drummers take note as well -- she often keeps cross rhythms > thumped against the body of her guitar). but, though the guitaristic > gymnastics were both impressive and entertaining, the performance would > not have rated a mention here if the music weren't good. (sadly, this > point seems to be largely missed in the press coverage i have since > read...) in particular, compared to the tracks from her first record, > the stuff she is playing "noodles" less, and develops some extended > thematic and harmonic structure. > > the most obvious comparison is to the lamented Michael Hedges, both in > the death defying fingermanship, and the happy blend of influences. > her most recent album _Legs to Make Us Longer_ is produced by David > Torn, which is 'nuff said. live, for the most part, she played > acoustic guitar, though she switched to lap steel through a looping > peddle for one piece, and played a niftily modified nylon string > koto-style for another. she closed with "my insect life", her only > vocal piece, sung in a sweet small voice over more looped lap steel and > acoustic guitar. in concert, it had a notable Lisa-Germano-like effect > (only accentuated by some minor technical glitches); alas, the > recorded version is a bit more tame. in fact, in general the record > lacks some of fire (vis the large hairy tattooed men all agog) of the > live performance, but then again that's to be expected. > > anyway, that's that -- she's worth seeing if the opportunity presents > itself, and fans of guitar should check out the new album (Dan, you > here? buy this!). plus, it's my first concert review here on ecto > since 1952 (give or take, and not counting the Aimee Mann DVD i > mentioned a few days ago, since she wasn't actually live in my living > room alas alack) and whiled away some un-Happy hours... > > 'tah > -g > > -- "i've never been afraid to change the circumstances of the world" > -- Happy Rhodes > -- "except for bunnies..." > -- Anya > > [demime 0.97c-p1 removed an attachment of type application/pkcs7-signature which had a name of smime.p7s] > - -- brni i don't want the world, i just want your half. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 12:36:26 -0800 From: raven@igc.org Subject: Re: Kaki King At 11:54 AM 01/31/2005, Steve VanDevender wrote: > > was this the same woman who was the musical guest on > Letterman Thursday or Friday last week? > (I think the show might have been a repeat.) Yes, she was on Letterman. It was a repeat. - -- John ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 16:06:33 -0500 From: "JoAnn Whetsell" Subject: more 2004 albums I thoguht I'd mention some other albums from 2004 that haven't been discussed much here: Cowboy Junkies - One Soul NowThis is a spacious album, dark in mood, and languorous in feel. A continuation of the sound of Open, though some of the songs are more like those on Miles From Our Home. Catie Curtis - Dreaming in Romance LanguagesBased on some sound samples and reviews I wasn't planning to buy this album until I found a copy for $4 and picked it up. I'm glad I did. I haven't enjoyed a Catie Curtis album this much since her 1997 self-titled album. Hem - EveninglandA charming sophomore release. If you liked Rabbit Songs, you'll want to get Eveningland as well. Laura Love - You Ain't Got No Easter ClothesThe companion to the memoir of the same name. Easter Clothes is more personal, more folky, more tame, but just as heartfelt and just as good. Sarah McLachlan - Afterglow LiveI never bought Afterglow, but highly recommend Afterglow Live. I haven't gone through all the DVD yet, but the cd alone is worth the price. It made me fall in love with Sarah again. Juana Molina - Tres cosasJust another plug, because I really love this album and don't know how to describe it. Jon Pareles of the NY Times named it one of the top 10 albums of the year. Here's what he had to say: "This whispery album is the latest invitation into the reveries of the Argentine songwriter Juana Molina. It's built from her acoustic guitar picking, her hushed voice, melodies with the simplicity of lullabies and rustling, rippling, melting synthesizer backdrops that fill the songs with mystery." Po' Girl - Vagabond LullabiesA bit of a blues, a lot of folk, and a soulful delivery. Po' Girl makes songs that are at once old-fashioned and contemporary. Their second album is a bit rough in places, but it's a very enjoyable listen. JoAnn ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 20:18:34 -0500 (EST) From: Bernie Mojzes Subject: happy rhodes pre-release disks hi all, after all was said and done, there's still a few of these disks available. if there's anyone who still wants one of these (or wants to add to their previous request), drop me a private email and we'll get you set up. - -- brni i don't want the world, i just want your half. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 17:34:38 -0800 (PST) From: Craig Gidney Subject: Cocteau Twins, Reunited A reunited Cocteau Twins will be playing at the Coachella Festival in late April. Read about it here: http://www.cocteautwins.com. 2005 is looking to be a good year for music. - --Craig Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 17:44:29 -0800 From: Neile Graham Subject: Cocteau Twins news For those interested, from http://www.cocteautwins.com/html/news.html: January 2005 YES, YES - IT'S OFFICIAL NOW Thanks for the flood of e-mail telling us about this. Did you think we wouldn't know? :-) "Ah, the official announcement. Many apologies to all who tried to get confirmation from us about this...We weren't teasing, it's just that nothing could be announced before the damn thing was confirmed....So, who's going?" - - Robin Guthrie, 1/31/05 A REFORMED Cocteau Twins will be performing at the Coachella Valley Music Festival (http://www.coachella.com/ ) on Saturday April 30, 2005, along with a number of other artists, including former label-mates Bauhaus, plus Weezer, Chemical Brothers, Wilco, and more. More news and details as they become available. - -- - ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Neile Graham .... neile@sff.net/@drizzle.com ... www.sff.net/people/neile Les Semaines: A Weekly Journal ........ www.sff.net/people/neile/semaines Editor, The Ectophiles' Guide to Good Music ........... www.ectoguide.org Workshop Administrator, Clarion West ................ www.clarionwest.org ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 18:33:20 -0800 From: Greg Bossert Subject: Re: Cocteau Twins, Reunited On Jan 31, 2005, at 5:34 PM, Craig Gidney wrote: > A reunited Cocteau Twins will be playing at the Coachella Festival in > late April. 'scool. glad to see it's all three of them. i've been listening to "heaven or las vegas" a lot recently. anyone have recommendations for post-Twins output? i know Robin and Simon have been involved in various projects for their label, but i haven't heard anything... they are appearing with bauhous?! new order? gang of four? stereophonics? which century is this again? is it me, or is it irksome to a high degree of irkedness that the coachella site seems to assume you know all about their little show, e.g. what flarkin' country it is in! there is not a single address for the festival on the site. there is a list of hotels, neatly lacking country or state/province info. i confess that the list of nearby towns gives it away, but probably only because, to my surprise, i actually live in the same country/state... wankers. - -g - -- "i've never been afraid to change the circumstances of the world" - -- Happy Rhodes - -- "except for bunnies..." - -- Anya [demime 0.97c-p1 removed an attachment of type application/pkcs7-signature which had a name of smime.p7s] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 1 Feb 2005 00:07:37 -0500 From: Paul Blair Subject: Re: happy@tin angel Regrettably, I don't have a set list either. But I seem to remember that Happy covered Annie Lennox' "Into the West" in the second show (after it was over someone in the audience called out "Lord of the Rings!" to which she responded: "What's that?") The set list in the first show was largely the same as in the second, though she started with "Ra is a Busy God" and played "One and Many" second. She didn't play "Soon," but she did play "Summer" before "Fall" (she noted that she only had one season left to do, but that she couldn't do Spring because it didn't fit her aesthetic--it's not dark enough). The first show started out with a nasty buzz in the amp which persisted despite much tweaking and twiddling of wires. (At one point, Happy said, "If we have to stop, please forgive us.") She eventually asked if there was another amp in the house, which fortunately there was--Bon said it was the third one for that evening. Apparently this was the capper on "the week from hell," which Happy started by spending several nights in the Greater Cincinnati airport. ("There's bad hair days and then there's airport hair, which is a whole other level of nastiness.") Bob Muller couldn't make it owing to some emergency that had its origin in the heating of the farmhouse that he and Happy are renovating. And apparently Bon and Hansford had their own disasters this week, which went unspecified. During the time the amp was being swapped out Happy mentioned that she'd had to go online in Cincinnati to get her lyrics off the web... and then observed how many songs of hers dealt with insanity. (She gave quite a list, and didn't even mention "Cohabitants.") "I even once wrote a song called 'O Hand of Mine'... what was I thinking?" During the first half of the first show Happy & co. were somewhat distracted by fighting the sound problems, so even though the music was good, they weren't really relaxed. The second half of the first set was sublime, though, as was the second show. Besides her funny banter, she also provided some ear-opening details about her songs. After she finished "The Chariot" in the first show, she said (quoting from memory): "The chariot was my mother's orange Cadillac. My mother always had a Cadillac, and though it wasn't always orange, this one was orange, with a cream-colored top. When I was growing up I didn't live with my biological mother, but she would come to visit us, and I would see her driving down the road in this car, and when she arrived, there was this God who had come to us--It was like she glowed. She wore nice clothes, and spoke well, and was clean and smelled good, and she had manicured nails... and she would pile me and my brothers into the car and drive off with us... and then after some time she would bring us back and leave us there in this living situation which really wasn't good at all--and you can imagine how I felt having her leave me there..." Wow. With regard to "Can't Let Go," she indicated that it was about how you grow up with certain survival skills and defense mechanisms that help you cope when you're a child. But then when you become an adult you sometimes retain those defense mechanisms and find out that they're working against you instead of for you, but you keep behaving the same way anyway because they're what you learned, and they're very hard to put aside. She also mentioned that "The Chosen One" was written before Bob Muller asked her to marry him. ;-) As for ectophiles in the audience, of course Vickie and Chris were there, right up front. (Chris got a spot right in front of the sound board for the second show, so he could set up his tripod and his fancy video equipment--in the first show he had to use a handheld.) Vickie brought glowsticks and a variety of other interesting lights but was hard put to find ectophiles in the audience to give them to, though all told I think there wound up being nine or ten of us with glowsticks. We were all very disappointed when there was no encore after the first set and our luminous homage wasn't even seen by the ecto goddess. Fortunately she saw it after the second set. Other ectophiles: John Henshon was able to slip in for half of the first show, and was there for the whole second show. And I met Bernie, and rubberbandgirl and her friends, in from Cincinnati. (Did I miss anybody that I met?) Fortunately the place was pretty full for both shows, and all the reserved seats were taken. The Tin Angel has revamped itself so that the bar no longer extends down the length of the back, but instead is across the back wall. This makes the room a lot bigger and means that the spots in the back are nowhere near as bad as they used to be, so getting in late doesn't carry the penalty it used to be. It still has those horrible stools down one wall, though--my back was killing me after the first show. It also seems that the Tin Angel was good about keeping the reserved seats reserved for Serrano's diners; at least I didn't notice any problems in that regard. I've only heard the pre-release CD once so far, and I think some of the mixes are going to take some getting used to, like Jeff said. I didn't know who Ed Sciaki was--Happy found out between sets that he had died and dedicated "Soon" to him in the second show. It turns out he was a well-known Philadelphia DJ who was very into Yes; he died one day less than a year before Happy's show: http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/obituaries/7830216.htm?1c http://www.geocities.com/broadcastpioneers/ian.html http://forum.yestalk.org/showthread.php?t=1149 ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 01 Feb 2005 00:21:29 -0600 From: Vickie Mapes Subject: Set lists, I have set lists! (and CD info) They were just about the same. Happy Rhodes Tin Angel - Philadelphia, PA January 29, 2005 1st show: Ra Is A Busy God One and Many Lay Me Down Mercy Street (amp change here) Pride To the Funnyfarm Into the West (not sung at 2nd show) Feed the Fire (acoustic version) Summer Fall I Have a Heart The Chosen One The Chariot The Suicide Song Can't Let Go Collective Heart (no encore) =========================== 2nd show (no opening act): One and Many Ra Is A Busy God Lay Me Down Mercy Street The Chariot If I Ever See The Girl Again - Building the Colossus joke a capella mini-medley Pride To the Funnyfarm Feed the Fire (acoustic version) Soon (not sung at 1st show) Fall I Have A Heart The Chosen One Can't Let Go Collective Heart Encore: Summer Thanks for your writeup Paul, it was nice to see you and the other Ectophiles (that also included Jeff Burka and Craig Gidney, it was so good to see you guys and I'm sorry I didn't get to say goodbye.) Everyone who wanted a CD got a CD, and Happy sent both brni and me home with extras, so if brni runs out, I can help some people out. The CD is fantastic, but then, I would say that. How could I not love everything Happy does, even with the occasional "huh?" which always makes life interesting. Happy doesn't want any of the songs on the CD digitized at this time, so I can't share, but I think people will really like the new album. I think it harkens back to Building the Colossus (which I love, no matter what Happy thinks of it) but without the goofiness (which is one of the things I love about it). Here's a track listing of the sampler, and the credits (oh, and here's the cover: http://vickie.teemingmillions.com/HR2005.gif: =============== Fall Charlie The Chosen One Can't Let Go One and Many (this is a killer song!) Find Me Here and Hereafter She Won't Go Produced by Bob Muller Written and Sung by Happy Rhodes Bass - Hansford Rowe, Carl Adami Guitars - Ted Kumpel, Bon Lozaga, Jon Cather Piano - Rob Schwimmer Sampling/Programming/Acoustic Guitar - Happy Rhodes Additional Programming - Fab Dupont This special pre-release CD was produced for the fans of Happy Rhodes and is not to be duplicated. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applicable federal laws. Copyright 2005 by Happy Rhodes/BMI ============= (My apologies if I got any of those names wrong. The font is very hard to read) Paul did a pretty good job of capturing the highlights (*thanks!*) but didn't mention just how transcendent "Into the West" was. To hear Happy sing a song from Lord of the Rings was a special little thrill. If anyone's interested :-) http://vickie.teemingmillions.com/HappyRhodes_IntoTheWest.mp3 Vickie ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 22:35:06 -0800 From: Greg Bossert Subject: Re: Set lists, I have set lists! (and CD info) On Jan 31, 2005, at 10:21 PM, Vickie Mapes wrote: > http://vickie.teemingmillions.com/HappyRhodes_IntoTheWest.mp3 thanks, Vickie! - -g - -- "i've never been afraid to change the circumstances of the world" - -- Happy Rhodes [demime 0.97c-p1 removed an attachment of type application/pkcs7-signature which had a name of smime.p7s] ------------------------------ End of ecto-digest V11 #31 **************************