From: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org (fegmaniax-digest) To: fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Subject: fegmaniax-digest V10 #168 Reply-To: fegmaniax@smoe.org Sender: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk fegmaniax-digest Monday, April 30 2001 Volume 10 : Number 168 Today's Subjects: ----------------- RE: fegmaniax-digest V10 #167 ["Yudt.Matthew" ] digest 166 ["ross taylor" ] I fergot to mention... ["Natalie Jacobs" ] Re: Floyd movies... ["Mike wells" ] Indulgent eyes. [Capuchin ] Re: Floyd movies... [Eb ] Re: Floyd movies... [Ken Weingold ] Re: Beefheart,... ["da9ve stovall" ] Conversational Traffic ["Lilac Doorway" ] Re: fegmaniax-digest V10 #167 [Traveling Riverside Blues ] Re: frenzy / intro movie / new user application [Miles Goosens ] Re: Conversational Traffic [Christopher Gross ] Re: Conversational Traffic ["Bret" ] Urgh and compilations and Walden Pond [Jill Brand ] rebel bubble ["Jason R. Thornton" ] Ciao Italia ["JH3" ] Vinyl transfers / Soft Boys CDR trades / et cetera ["Aaron L." ] RE: Urgh and compilations and Walden Pond ["Poole, R. Edward" Subject: RE: fegmaniax-digest V10 #167 > Yeah, just what I need... another talented musician whose albums I > need to > collect. You wouldn't believe the extent of my music obsession... > if it > weren't for free mp3s, I'd be selling crack to buy Neil Young > records. > At least you're not selling Neil Young records to buy crack... I'll second the guys who said Element of Light, Fegamania, and I Often Dream of Trains. To me, these are the quintessential Hitchcock/Egyptians records. (Excluding Soft Boys, in which UM is supreme Hitchcock.) I have a fascination with Eye, although from old discussions on this board I seem to remember it not being appreciated as much as Perspex Island or Respect. I'll never understand THAT. (WARNING: STRONG OPINION FOLLOWS) If those last two albums were put out 10 yrs earlier I don't think Robyn would be around today... just boring pop, or perhaps the drugs taken for listening pleasures weren't as good, I dunno. Matt, ...who seems to have missed the GBV thread... ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 14:37:51 -0400 From: "ross taylor" Subject: digest 166 Re: Nomi-- Fondly remember that SNL. They should do a Compilation of SNL musical guests, but include Gilda's impersonation of Patti Smith. I've got the Sound + Vision anthology & liked the rare cuts on that so much I've contemplated getting the Bowie at the Beeb box just for "Bombers" but have heard that it's not such a great song after all. But his influence on Robyn seems pretty clear--on "Grooving on an Inner Plane," the "I don't know why I'm so alone" part, or the ending of "Dwarfbeat," it's the Bowie monster-mash voice. Lyrics-- I'm guessing Bayard's rightly busy w/ his b-day (cheers, Bayard) & hope it's not inappropriate to post this here, but these are my stabs at transcribing the lyrics to "Ring Them Bones" and "Take This in Remembrance" from the Sonic Book-- Ring Them Bones rubber dolly all dressed in black silver ornaments all down her back uncle benny said light my fuse she made an offer that you can't refuse beep beep baby baby baby it's the bones oh they said beep beep baby baby baby it's the bones oh uncle jacob with his sunday wing [thing?] he had to take off his bloody ring uncle benny said well hi there jake let's you and me just fondle some steak beep beep baby baby baby it's the bones oh they said beep beep you go up you go down then you split like a log someones gonna to kill you for this you go up you go down then you swim like a frog someone's gonna to kiss you-oo leather jenny she was on a raft she began to sing the theme from shaft all her fingertips burst into flames all she could say was oh extinguish them james you go back you go front then you sway with the ghouls someone's gonna saw you in half you're so full that you pop then your seeds blow away nothing's gonna touch you-oo-oo-ah yeah I wait downstairs til it's over don't want to see no one hurt you are so tender and so rare but you still keep on your shirt (shirt)(skirt)(skirt)(shirt)(aahh) (yeah here she comes again)(fantastic) (oh here she comes) sister europe said to brother clive I sure am glad to see you alive in Clerkenwell[sp?] you had a pair of headphones now you appear to be ringin' them bones I said beep beep baby baby baby it's the bones oh they said beep beep beep beep beep beep roger roger roger roger roger roger over and out TAKE THIS IN REMEMBERANCE these are your properties and these are your things they can't go on without you when you have cleared up and all gone away they'll tell me all about you these are relationships and these are the strings they tie you up and feed you these are the soft blind fumbling souls and daddy-o they need you oh daddy-o they need you these are your failures, these your success as if they really mattered why grind your life away building up dreams for them all to be scattered for them all to be scattered here-- take this in rememberance take this in rememberance these are your properties and these are your rings they can't go on without you when you have cleared up and all gone away they'll tell me all about you they'll tell me all about you they'll tell me all about you >From: Michael R Godwin > A young person >attempted to freak out during AD but failed due to lack of the essential >floppy arm-waving and Arthur Brown-style head waggling. IMO it needs to also involve some sense of watching your hands produce after-images or freeze-frame effects in the strobe light. It's pretty silly to wave a handkerchief around if there's no strobe light & no after-images. Ross Taylor Join 18 million Eudora users by signing up for a free Eudora Web-Mail account at http://www.eudoramail.com ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 11:44:20 -0700 From: "Natalie Jacobs" Subject: I fergot to mention... Due to Jeme's sharp eyes, I finally located (and purchased) a copy of Peter Blegad's "The Book of Leviathan." Oh man is it good. Blegvad is a genius. I can't believe any newspaper actually ran a comic strip where the ghost of Hegel shows up to demonstrate the dialectical opposite of a stuffed rabbit. Another strip comes with its own clip-out indulgence so you can get out of hell free. Just what I needed! Or, as Leviathan would say, "Dep!" I want to track down Blegvad's e-mail address (if he has one) so I can tell him how great he is. I don't think I'll ever have the opportunity to do so in person, alas... n. _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 13:49:06 -0500 From: "Mike wells" Subject: Re: Floyd movies... > In the US, at least, the album is just called Obscured By Clouds. One > of my favorites, too. Now if someone would just release The Wall > soundtrack already, things would be beautiful. Agreed. I have a cassette copy which is at least two generations removed from an awful vinyl-tape recording...but I prefer the order of songs on the soundtrack, it's always made more sense to me than the regular commercial release. Plus you get "The Boy that Santa Forgot" as an appallingly depressing bonus. Not sure, but I think the original vinyl release was of a few thousand pieces, maybe someone here knows? Michael "Sally? A legend? Oh...that Sally..." ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 12:01:28 -0700 (PDT) From: Capuchin Subject: Indulgent eyes. On Mon, 30 Apr 2001, Natalie Jacobs wrote: > Due to Jeme's sharp eyes You know, I once poked out one of my eyes... with my other eye! > Another strip comes with its own clip-out indulgence so you can get > out of hell free. Isn't the ban on selling indulgences within the Catholic Church lifted? If I recall, it was like 500 years or something. I can't wait until they start selling those things again. I've been saving up. J. - -- _______________________________________________ Capuchin capuchin@bitmine.net Jeme A Brelin ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 11:54:41 -0700 From: Eb Subject: Re: Floyd movies... Mike Godwin: >In fact the Floyd recorded a whole soundtrack for the film, but >Antonionioni(oni) kept rejecting tunes, saying "Eet is too sad" or "Eet is >too 'appy" about each tune. In the end they only had a couple of things on >the soundtrack album - but presumably the other stuff that they recorded >exists somewhere. Incidentally, the film is a load of hippie tripe. Oh, but you gotta stick around for the surreal desert orgy, and the oooooh-trippy explosion montage at the end. ;) I can't be sure that it's still in print (Rhino takes stuff out of print quicker than any label on Earth), but Rhino Records released a two-disc version of the soundtrack a few years ago...including rare Floyd tracks. I used to have a copy, and I taped about a half-hour of the Pink Floyd material before trading it back. (None of the other contributing bands interested me, so it didn't pass the triage test.) >PS Last time I heard Astronomy Domine live was when the Floyd played it in >the back room of the Fishmongers' Arms, Wood Green in 1968, the only time >I saw them in a pub (they were going through a career low at the time). You only saw early Pink Floyd in a pub *once*? Jeez, can we kick this poseur off the list for that? ;) Eb PS Interesting indie-rock news of the day: I just found out my beloved Quasi has left Up Records, and signed with Touch & Go. New album in August! np: Beach Boys/Surfer Girl + Shut Down Volume 2 ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 15:07:16 -0400 From: Ken Weingold Subject: Re: Floyd movies... On Mon, Apr 30, 2001, Mike wells wrote: > Agreed. I have a cassette copy which is at least two generations removed > from an awful vinyl-tape recording...but I prefer the order of songs on the > soundtrack, it's always made more sense to me than the regular commercial > release. Plus you get "The Boy that Santa Forgot" as an appallingly > depressing bonus. > > Not sure, but I think the original vinyl release was of a few thousand > pieces, maybe someone here knows? The Wall soundtrack was actually released at one time? Or do you have a bootleg? To have access to When The Tigers Broke Free, What Shall We Do Now, and Geldof doing Waiting For The Worms would be too much. Sorry, Roger, Bob does it better. :) And if they would just release Pompeii on DVD. I should have picked up the laserdisc while I had the chance. Dumb dumb dumb. - -Ken, feeling demanding now ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 12:17:14 -0700 From: "da9ve stovall" Subject: Re: Beefheart,... >>Aiee! Did they show the Beefheart episode? >Those were some good performances... I saw it on comedy >central once, then got the mp3s from someplace on the web. Yep - Ashtray Heart and Hot Head, if I recall correctly. I've got all (I think) the MP3s and Mpeg video that Graham ever had up on the beefheart.com site - but really want to find copies that haven't gone through the MP3 compression process. Got a few other Beefheart boots, but they're rather hard to come by in general; I think a lot of Beefheart fans who have the material just aren't up with the state of the art with CD-R burning, etc. da9ve ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 19:25:38 -0000 From: "Lilac Doorway" Subject: Conversational Traffic Viv Wonderful for you for going back and taking another chance with Ursala Le Guin and having the sort of converstation you knew you had in you, Getting past ..."the fear of failing to live up to my own expectations- turning from suave witty me into bumbling, awkward me is so debilitating" is something I very much admire at the moment. Could you magically transfer a dose to me? And then magically make just the right time, circumstance and place for me to use it too? Thanks;-) Since the bike/ traffic thing is still going: While Ive never (so far, fingers crossed) had a bike mishap if it happens I know how it will happen. The main street where I live is paved with ... Belgian blocks, which are similar to cobblestones but twice as jarring. I try for back streets but sometimes theres no choice. You bump up and down so fast your teeth chatter and your glasses bounce up and down on your nose, which dosnt do much for your sight or sense of traffic. Sometimes I cant stand it and go on the sidewalk, only to be sworn at by little old ladies. Charm, as in ye olde quaint paving methods, has its price. I got half-hit by a taxi in NY in the 70s, but was so relaxed on ludes I just spun up in the air, came down in a roll, then got up and went and had a choclate mousse and cup of tea. Best choclate mousse and cup of tea Ive ever had. My friend was amazed, I was abit bruised, but nothing got broken or twisted. Poole wrote of The Man Who Invented Himself: >I always thought that was about Syd Barrett... Youre probobly right. I dont know how Bowie got in my mind. Maybe cause I can easily imagine him singing it. I wonder what his Robyn Hitchcock imitation would be like? Kay, except for Chris am I the only gardener on this list? _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 12:27:28 -0700 From: Traveling Riverside Blues Subject: Re: fegmaniax-digest V10 #167 >From: Ken Weingold >Subject: Re: Floyd movies... > >On Sun, Apr 29, 2001, Seth Frisby wrote: >> Now if anyone could point me in the direction of the Valley (or Le >> Valle),which was also soundtracked by the Floyd and directed by the same >> guy, my collection would be complete. Although they did soundtrack some >> racing movie in the early nineties that i'm less than interested in.... > I've seen "La Vallee"... it was on late-night TV, I think. OK movie. Notable mostly for the chills that went down my spine as "Obscured By Clouds" kicked in in the soundtrack. Also for the part where they open an aerial map and the a big part in the middle is blanked out and labelled "obscured by clouds". (By the way, I think Obscured By Clouds is a frequently overlooked gem... Darkside without all the production frills.) Sountrack miscellany... Let's be completist: - - "Music From The Body" by Roger Waters and Ron Geesin, which if memory serves is actually an experimental documentary soundtrack (!!). I find it unlistenable, except for the song "Sea Shell And Stone" and its variations, which are great, and one of which clearly features the entire Pink Floyd playing on it even thought they're uncredited. - - "Pompeii": the soundtrack to this friggin' mindblowing concert film is available on bootleg. An excellent quality bootleg and very professional package - I thought it was an authorized release when I got it. - - "The Film": Soundtrack to The Wall film, available on bootleg (Ken Weingold take note.) Identical to the album The Wall except for the deletion of "Hey You", the inclusion of "When The Tigers Broke Free", a snippet of "The Little Boy That Santa Claus Forgot" at the very beginning, the alternate movie version of "Mother", and the replacement of "Empty Spaces" with "What Shall We Do Now?" (which was included in the lyric sheet for the original Wall LP but not actually on the album.) Also has the song "We'll Meet Again" by Vera Lynn tacked on to the end. - - Also, there is a soundtrack album from the early '90s which has a few songs from Roger Waters and the Bleeding Heart Band (in addition to ones by Bowie and others) but I cannot for the life of me remember what it's called or what film it's from. I think it was an animated film. >Do you have Zabriskie Point as well? I never saw the entire movie, >but have the record. "The Pink Floyd" did some stuff on it, as well >as Grateful Dead and others. AFAIK it is in print. The ending sequence of Zabriskie Point makes it all worthwhile... things blowing up in slow motion to a soundtrack of "Careful With That Axe, Eugene". >From: "Jason R. Thornton" >Subject: Bowie on SNL > >For the record, according to my favorite Bowie website, yes, three songs >were performed... > >>December 15, 1979, Saturday Night Live, NBC, USA >> Bowie appears as the musical guest on Saturday Night Live shortly >> after the release of his Lodger album. In an >> amazingly inventive performance, Bowie is joined by the "operatic" >> Klaus Nomi and Joey Arias to recreate a >> "cabaret Voltaire" performance. Three songs were performed: The Man >> Who Sold The World, Boys Keep >> Swinging and TVC-15. I knew it! It's a real testament to those performances that a couple of us remember them so well despite being unfamiliar with Bowie at the time. Mike ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 12:53:04 -0700 From: "Jason R. Thornton" Subject: Waters' ST's At 12:27 PM 4/30/01 -0700, Traveling Riverside Blues wrote: >- Also, there is a soundtrack album from the early '90s which has a few >songs from Roger Waters and the Bleeding Heart Band (in addition to ones by >Bowie and others) but I cannot for the life of me remember what it's called >or what film it's from. I think it was an animated film. "When the Wind Blows." I've never seen the movie, nor heard the soundtrack beyond the Bowie title song, which ended up as a bonus track on the Virgin reissue of the ever-popular "Never Let Me Down." - --Jason "Only the few know the sweetness of the twisted apples." - Sherwood Anderson ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 15:29:39 -0500 From: Miles Goosens Subject: Re: frenzy / intro movie / new user application At 05:25 PM 4/29/2001 -0500, David Librik wrote: >quarter-century. Nearly everything you pick up will be worthwhile >(well, not _Groovy Dec*y_ or _You and Oblivion_, but there always has >to be something for the dedicated fan). And I'll emerge from lurkerdom to defend both of these albums - _Groovy DecAy_ contains several of my very favorite Hitchcock songs ("52 Stations" and "St. Petersburg" being two of 'em), and even the goofy stuff like "Grooving on an Inner Plane" always rocks me. _You and Oblivion_ isn't the first thing or even the fifth that I'd give to a Hitchcock neophyte, but I find this platefulla leftovers fairly tasty, an acousticy reverby chamber in which all manner of things wash up from the seaside. Of course, I'm demonstrating three things here: (1) Utter predictability, as I make defending these albums a semi-annual rite. (2) The old list truism that as soon as one person yells "that's utter crap," another will retort with "are your ears stuffed with paraffin? That stuff rules!" (3) That Brandon really needs to buy them all and judge for himself! later, Miles p.s.: ye Olde Miles Hitchcock short list: 1) I Often Dream of Trains 2) Underwater Moonlight (already owned by Brandon) 3) Globe of Frogs, which I always think captures Robyn's best qualities in relatively accessible form. 4) Black Snake Diamond Role ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 13:34:53 -0700 From: "Sirloin Stockade" Subject: Fwd: Re: Robyn/Soft Boys dates! thought y'all might get a kick out of this. One last thing, very important; Italian customs have become nasty and rigid with imports of CDr that may be illegal copy of official music cd or software for PC; so you must include a printed declaration inside the parcel (where outside you shall describe the contents as live music cd and declare a value of $5 only): "I declare that the all CDRs included in this packet contain only live music recorded privately and that no copyright is infringed as it is just live music for trades and specific friendly purposes." Then you have to sign it. Also I need you to print under the english declaration its translation in Italian: "Dichiaro che tutti i CD contenuti in questo pacchetto contengono solo musica registrata di concerti live e che nessun copyright di prodotti ufficiali h stato violato in quanto trattasi di musica dal vivo/concerti che si scambiano tra amici." I know you may think this is nonsense but this is what happens now in Italy. also, don't know how many of you are into doug henwood, but there's a quite good interview with him in the current Monthly Review. . _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 16:38:53 -0400 (EDT) From: Christopher Gross Subject: Re: Conversational Traffic On Mon, 30 Apr 2001, Lilac Doorway wrote: > Kay, except for Chris am I the only gardener on this list? Me? To be honest, I'm not really a gardener. I was just reading that gardening book while trying to grow illegal drugs in the back yard ... I mean, while trying to revive some dead patches of turf and a moribund tree in the back yard. But right now I don't have a back yard, so I don't do any gardening at all. - --Chris, who has now made drug references on two mailing lists today np: David Bowie, "TVC 15" ______________________________________________________________________ Christopher Gross On the Internet, nobody knows I'm a dog. chrisg@gwu.edu ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 15:57:10 -0700 From: "Bret" Subject: Re: Conversational Traffic > > Kay, except for Chris am I the only gardener on this list? I am a bigger lurker than gardener, but I do manage to keep enough tomato, potato, onion, cukes, squash, pepper, okra plants and something else I'm sure I cannot recall right now ( ah, and a few melons and fruit as well, but they are just for the wine, well, not the melon, bad idea there in case you were curious) around to keep myself stocked year 'round. Along with several herbs, and HOPS! weeeeeeeeeee I also keep a nice area of native plants (as garden type things) around each water garden (7 BTW, they chain nicely down a small trail/hill from my house to the brewhouse/storage) ok, back into the dark for me. and b, will be returning to Dallas this weekend, should I ship that hard drive to you? ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 17:08:21 -0400 (EDT) From: Jill Brand Subject: Urgh and compilations and Walden Pond Well, youngsters, ahem, I never saw Urgh on TV; I actually saw it in the movie theater when it came out. I thought I'd died and gone to misfits heaven. Especially memorable (mind you, this is about 18 years ago and I only ever saw it once) were UB40, Klaus Nomi, Gang of Four, and Pere Ubu. And I remember some problem with Magazine. Either Magazine was in the movie and not on the album or the other way 'round. My friend Steven, ultimate Mag fan, had a hissy over this. As for the "what album to buy first" question, I'm having this trouble with "what should I put on a single 90-minute tape to convince someone of RH's unquestionable genius" question. I've got everything commercially available, but, oy, where do I begin? I was thinking of grouping a few together in categories: commercially accessible Robyn kick-ass rock n roll Robyn hauntingly melodic and beautiful Robyn scares you when you turn the lights off Robyn sounds like John Lennon Robyn pulling everyone's chain Robyn Well, it doesn't leave you a lot of room for examples. Finally, a number of people asked about my Golden, oh, excuse me, Walden Pond walk. I walk there pretty frequently, but the other day I was in a pissy mood about the "let's keep Concord for the rich people" element. Part of the Save Walden movement problem is that it is a good cause with all the wrong backers. Vacuous vegheads like Don Henley come and try to save the place, but the people drooling behind him are the "we live in 2 million dollar houses and don't want to let in the riff-raff" types. The issue is moderate income housing. No one in Concord dares to say, "Please don't lower our property values" so they cover with "Save Walden Pond." I want to save Walden Pond, too, but I'd like to see something other than LaCoste shirts when I pass through that town. SO...I listened to Robyn for a giggle. Some things worked well (I Often Dream of Trains - the track is right near by) and some things were juxtaposed rather oddly (Rat's Prayer). Dwarfbeat seemed to get me going the most. Jill ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 14:11:19 -0700 From: "Jason R. Thornton" Subject: rebel bubble I found a couple of scans from the '79 Bowie SNL performance, if anyone is interested: http://www.algonet.se/~earflaps/bowie/tv800105.htm - --Jason "Only the few know the sweetness of the twisted apples." - Sherwood Anderson ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 16:11:29 -0500 From: "JH3" Subject: Ciao Italia >One last thing, very important; Italian customs have become >nasty and rigid with imports of CDr that may be illegal copy >of official music cd or software for PC... The interesting thing about Italy is that they're a signatory to just about all the international IP laws that are out there, but sitting right there in the northwest corner of the country (and completely enclosed by it) is San Marino, an "independent principality" that isn't signatory to anything. San Marino is one of the biggest sources of bootlegs in Europe, if not THE biggest - I've actually been there, and the shops are absolutely full of them. My guess is that if the Italians are "cracking down" it's to protect the interests of San Marino's bootleggers, not the interests of artists in the US other parts of the world, whom they probably couldn't care less about. I apologize profusely in advance if this is unfortunately used as a pretext for another copyright-law thread. John H. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 16:41:42 -0500 From: "Aaron L." Subject: Vinyl transfers / Soft Boys CDR trades / et cetera I've had very little (interest in)/(experience with) the booming Feg tape-trading subculture until recently, although I've been on this particular mailing list, off and on, since 1993. I think that perhaps that had something to do with my general dislike for the cassette tape format, along with some hesitation to get involved since I didn't have much to offer in the way of trades. Some of you may remember that, a year or so ago, I had promised many of you CD-R copies of some vinyl-only releases (Storefront LP, Mossy Liquor), and very few of you actually received such copies from me. Soon after making that offer, some dire medical problems within my family caused me to have to pack up all my belongings and move halfway across the country, and it was months before I was even back online and reading the Feg list again. So far, I've sent out sixteen copies of these two items on CD-R, in response to requests emailed to me in the past two weeks, when I responded on the list to someone's (David Librik's?) request for a CD-R copy of Mossy Liquor. Of those sixteen, I know some of them were among the original respondents to my request over a year ago, but I suspect that some of you are still out there, and I just wanted to renew my offer. [Aside: Bayard, just send me your address and they're both yours, if you are still interested -- I owe *you* from *waaaaaaaaay* back.] Now that CD-R trading is becoming more common, I've decided to (try and) leap into the fray with both feet. I have a very meager CD-R trading list on my website: http://aaron.hollowstreets.net/music.htm I'm very interested in trading with other CD-R-inclined Fegs in order to build up more of a collection of live and rare stuff. Perhaps a few of you who have already received copies of the aforementioned vinyl transfers could vouch for their quality? Thanks! * C. Aaron Lowe mailto:aaron@hollowstreets.net http://aaron.hollowstreets.net ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 14:56:16 -0700 From: Tom Clark Subject: Re: Urgh! on 4/28/01 7:23 AM, Russ Reynolds at rcreation@earthlink.net wrote: > Is the VHS still in print? I searched for it a few years back, > unsuccessfully. I've got it archived on my TiVO. I recorded it off of the Sundance Channel about a month ago. I noticed that Gary Numan's performance was cut out for some reason - weird. Maybe to keep it down to a certain time limit? I didn't think Sundance did this. I'm really hesitant to say this - but I could make a limited number of copies for those who are in desperate need to watch this again. I don't know too many people who can dub VHS, but if you're out there and would like to help share the load, let me know. - -tc ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 17:58:01 -0400 From: "Poole, R. Edward" Subject: RE: Urgh and compilations and Walden Pond I've been having a similar problem, exaccerbated by a desire (akin to good compilation releases) to mix in live/unreleased/rare tracks among the "chestnuts." Here are some thoughts... (top o' the head and thus incomplete) >I was thinking of grouping a few >together in categories: >commercially accessible Robyn Element of Light So You Think You're in Love (not a fave, but fits the category to a tee) Balloon Man Flesh #1 >kick-ass rock n roll Robyn Leppo Higsons Freeze I Wanna Destroy You Black Snake Diamond Rock I Watch the Cars (the fast version) Rock 'n' Roll Toilet >hauntingly melodic and beautiful Robyn Human Music Heaven Birdshead Chinese Bones >scares you when you turn the lights off Robyn >sounds like John Lennon Robyn Cold Turkey pulling everyone's chain Robyn My Wife & My Dead Wife Man w/ Lightbulb Head (see note to "So You Think...") Sandra's Having Her Brain Out ============================================================================This e-mail message and any attached files are confidential and are intended solely for the use of the addressee(s) named above. 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