From: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org (fegmaniax-digest) To: fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Subject: fegmaniax-digest V11 #427 Reply-To: fegmaniax@smoe.org Sender: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk fegmaniax-digest Friday, December 20 2002 Volume 11 : Number 427 Today's Subjects: ----------------- ELIXIRS & REMEDIES [brian@lazerlove5.com] chinese bones remix ["Stewart C. Russell" ] Re: Back for Hack [Johnathan Vail ] Troubadorks & Tolkien Hotties ["Rex.Broome" ] interruptions [drew ] soft people [Ken Ostrander ] OT - Help me set up some FTP space, please! [rosso@videotron.ca] Re: interruptions [Aaron Mandel ] Re: more flaggy stuff (5% Whistling Jack Smith content) ["Michael E. Kupi] Re: interruptions [drew@stormgreen.com] Re: ELIXIRS & REMEDIES ["Marc Holden" ] Re: interruptions ["matt sewell" ] archive rock festival updates [minister of misinformation ] Everybody sing along! ["matt sewell" ] queen elizabeth hall solo show [dances with virgos ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 11:14:04 +0000 (GMT) From: brian@lazerlove5.com Subject: ELIXIRS & REMEDIES I received my copy of Elixers and Remedies yesterday. For $25 you'd expect more than just generic black packaging, but being the devoted fan I am I would've paid $35 just to give Robyn my support. If the packaging wasn't anything to write home about the insides definately are. This is a spectaclar performance and I now see the $25 spent as a permanate concert ticket for a concert I can revisit anytime I like. I swear Grant is high during the performance, or maybe just incredibly happy to be playing with Robyn. Is he always this energenic and emotional? He trully is incredible. I haven't quite finished the show, but 2 really strong performances worth mentioning: 1. Gene Hackman, with Grant adding all sorts of noises from a piano. I never appreciated this song so much. And 2. Are You Experienced? Simply awesome. Oh and I can see why this may be liked over Storefront. There is some great camera trickery, like snycronizing between 3 different camera angles all aimed on Robyn's face as he spells out G E N E H A C K M A N. I probably like this better than Storefront Hitchcock, although Robyn sometimes seems slow or intimidated compared to Grants quickness and hyperness. Nuppy ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 10:17:52 -0500 From: "Stewart C. Russell" Subject: chinese bones remix On the way to a Windshare meeting (we built the turbine yesterday! yay! whee!) I walked past a bar with an outside PA system. I thought I recognised the voice -- it was definitely Robyn singing Chinese Bones, but the remix was very trip-hop. Anyone know of this remix? I liked it. Stewart ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 11:22:34 -0500 From: Johnathan Vail Subject: Re: Back for Hack Date: Wed, 18 Dec 2002 17:15:24 +0000 From: "Maurer Rose, Inverse Nome" Subject: Back for Hack Back from paradise revitalized. Aeons ago, these were Feg topics-- What show(past or present, besides Dr Who, Monty Python, etc) should Robyn play wandering troubador on? That's easy. X Files. Can't you just see Mulder smirking at Scully saying "you heard the man, Scully: the universe is based on sullen entropy". jv <-- nah, maybe the Osbournes. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 10:25:35 -0800 From: "Rex.Broome" Subject: Troubadorks & Tolkien Hotties S'Mary: >>I saw The Two Towers last night with some Feggy friends. For me, the three >>best things in the movie - terrific battle scenes, wonderful Golum scenes, >>and Legolas (he still so hot!) Yeah, Wifey's love of Legolas was undiminished by all the Dwarf-Love. Orlando Bloom's name got the biggest cheer in the end credits. Wife and Mom-in-Law counted Eomer as the "new hottie" of the film. As for m'self... well, they did manage to cram Cate Blanchett in there again. Whatever with Liv Tyler, though. Would like to see Elrond sing "Dude Looks Like a Lady", though, just for the sheer hell of it. Amazingly, my wife, who can identify commercial voiceovers and cartoon guest-voices almost instantly and unfailingly, hadn't registered that Gimli was Sallah after four viewings of Fellowship... she saw him being interviewed in the supplementary material for the DVD and freaked out. Noticed Rhys-Davies also did the voice for Treebeard. ______ Kay: >>What show(past or present, besides Dr Who, Monty Python, etc) should Robyn >>play wandering troubador on? Certainly a period piece. The wife and I were once playfully developing a TV series idea we called "Madrigal Boy"... it would've concerned a modern musician thrust back into the middle ages with no useful skills or options other than to become a travelling minstrel with an encyclopaedic knowledge of hundreds of years of "future music" (and poems and lit) at his command... he would influence great thinkers and artists and provide backward links between modern and ancient thought. (Sort of like Richard Thompson's current project filtered through Time Bandits.) Anyway, Robyn woulda been a terrific lead... at a younger age. Never decided what the overall arc was. I believe there was a parallel modern story with a historian trying to piece together who this guy had been-- possibly the sibling of the now-vanished Madrigal Boy himself, who had been a bit of a lost soul in his modern life. Closing in on the fact that his/her loser brother had somehow altered the trajectory of Western Civilization. Kind of a cheesy idea that hopefully would have developed some depth as it went along. Can't think of an good show for Robyn as things stand now, or are likely to on TV any time soon. Perhaps ideal would be a nature documentary/narrative fusion... David Attenborough walks you through the mechanics of crustacean sex, and then Robyn sings about it while you watch fiddler crabs get bizzy. He was great when he hosted "Postmodern MTV", anyhoo. What's that damn new show, where they have Usher come on and portray Marvin Gaye and shit? American Dream or whatever? They coulda had Robyn play Syd, but again he's already too old. I woulda liked to see, like, Steve Earle on Firefly, or maybe some elder statesmen of bluegrass or country. Alas. Oh, and Kay, what's Katie's "proper" name? We've got a Katherine on the way, although we're gonna call her Ridley. - -Rex ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 14:05:14 -0500 From: "Stewart C. Russell" Subject: Re: Troubadorks & Tolkien Hotties Rex.Broome wrote: > > TV series idea we called "Madrigal Boy"... How about "Amish Squad" -- bearded pacifist anabaptist crime fighters, with Robyn as the cynical desk sergeant? Stewart ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 13:35:19 -0600 (CST) From: Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey Subject: Re: Troubadorks & Tolkien Hotties On Thu, 19 Dec 2002, Rex.Broome wrote: > Oh, and Kay, what's Katie's "proper" name? We've got a Katherine on the > way, although we're gonna call her Ridley. Huh? If you're going to call her whatever, why not name her that? And of course, name her what you will - once she's old enough, she'll decide whether she's Katherine, Katie, Ridley, or K-tastico! (with mandatory exclamation mark). - --Jeff J e f f r e y N o r m a n The Architectural Dance Society www.uwm.edu/~jenor/ADS.html Today's Out of Context Quotation: ::"I mean, I castrated pigs and dipped snuff when I was younger":: ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 12:04:01 -0800 From: Tom Clark Subject: Re: Something to fill the void between TTT & ROTK on 12/18/02 8:52 PM, steve at steveschiavo@mac.com wrote: > You never know what you'll see on the DVDTalk upcoming release list. > > 2233464> > > Not for children, btw. > Look at the title for the other recommended purchases on that page: "Customers who wear clothes also shop for:" - -tc ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 12:07:44 -0800 (PST) From: drew Subject: this is pop culture > From: Eb > and Scrubs. Maybe Life With Bonnie and Less Than Perfect, though I keep meaning to catch Life With Bonnie. I love her. > worse. Right now, I'm partially through Timecode on tape, another > unusual film which has four simultaneous images throughout the movie > (sort of like The Brady Bunch's opening credits, if Mike and Carol > only had two kids ;)). My friend loves that film, but I never could get into it. I guess the gimmick is clever but to me the story was shallow and uninvolving and the acting sucked. > From: "Rex.Broome" > > Oh, you do discount or feel superior to all pop culture. Cool, go on with > your bad self. Hey, I read comic books, play video games, watch movies, and even watch DVDs of old TV shows, man, but if they pulled my cable TV tomorrow I wouldn't miss it. You don't have to hate pop culture to hate TV these days. > Honestly, I had not much desire to revisit the Tolkien books when the movies > were announced. Hadn't thought about them for years. I pretty much felt the same way. I was never a huge fan, though I did reread The Hobbit a bunch of times when I was young enough to have time to reread books. And I agree that they've been done very well as movies (except for Saruman's voiceovers). I don't think they're that much more juvenile than, say, Beowulf, and the tiresome efforts of people like David Brin to belittle them are just petty. - -- drew at stormgreen dot com http://www.stormgreen.com/~drew/ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 12:26:25 -0800 (PST) From: drew Subject: interruptions > From: "Maurer Rose, Inverse Nome" > > And in NY--interuption is a competative sport. I never understand when > people dont understand this. No ones going to wait for you to clear your > fucking throat, so just jump in, slash and burn. > > Why or how people might find this annoying I will never understand;-P I'm almost incapable of interrupting people, for the same reasons I don't haul off and punch people in the face who seem to deserve it. Waiting for people to clear their fucking throats is a way of signifying you are remotely interested in hearing their reaction to your monologue. I have almost no sense of humor regarding this topic; I can't stand people who interrupt and people who expect to be interrupted. But then I was raised in the South, where superficial courtesy is almost the only regional virtue. > From: brian@lazerlove5.com > > Any comments on the new Star Trek Movie? It was a steaming pile of shit as always, but at least it was more entertaining than the previous one. And I thought Shinzon was totally hot. (Orlando Bloom does nothing for me, by the way.) > From: "Rex.Broome" > > Oh, and sorry for the near-spoilers on Two Towers. I totally forget where > those films are concerned that not everybody knows the story. I'll be > better. Oh, I know the story, but I want to be surprised by the way it's been filmed. I'll just try to skim more carefully if I see it mentioned. > I'll see you most of those (and I own the Prisoner on DVD) and raise you > Doctor Who, of which I was a fanatic as a pre-teenager. Yeah, me too. I'll toss in Blake's 7, which despite horrible production values and uneven acting was top fucking notch science fiction. Doctor Who I loved because the Doctor himself was so admirable and likeable, in contrast to the protagonist of just about every other science fiction series I can think of. He embodied values and aspirations I actually believed in. The stories themselves were lots of fun; when I watch them now, they seem duller than I remember, but then it was aimed at kids, after all. - -- drew at stormgreen dot com http://www.stormgreen.com/~drew/ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 17:55:13 -0500 From: Ken Ostrander Subject: soft people >Jesus, this thread is pedantic. jesus wouldn't be arguing that point. i learned to play guitar using those (in)complete beatles songbooks; yet still cannot tune my guitar without one of those doo-hickeys. if only i'd started twenty years sooner... >>Decreasing the number of clocks by approximately one i always thought it was "products" being increased >>I had prayed never to be one of >>those smug motherfuckers who brag about not watching >>TV but I can feel myself becoming one since i moved into my current lovenest, i have not had cable...and it's been so liberating. occasionally, we want to just watch the telly and play with the rabbit ears; but otherwise, it's left us to other devices. it feels like a compensation for all of the hours i wasted bathing in the ultraviolet glow. i did have a tendency to play the stereo and have the tube on with the sound turned down while pretending to study. television remains a distraction. i so hate commercials. >Blah blah blah. Anyway, screw the pantheon, I vote we make them the >All-Time Kings of Rock and Roll. i think that they'd like the gender switch. >"Can we only know half of the truth?" hmmm...could it be that we can see the other half that we don't agree with, dislike, or makes us look bad; but can't 'know' it, unless we completely alter our perspective, adapt, or humble ourselves? it seems like the half 'n' half lobster has it all figured out. ken "i'm partial to the soft boys" the kenster (my wife says that i giggled this in my sleep last night) ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 18:30:27 -0500 From: rosso@videotron.ca Subject: OT - Help me set up some FTP space, please! I've been trying to get an FTP server online since October, and it's beginning to wear my patience. Maybe one of you can help me. On my side of my firewall, everything works. When I try to connect from the outside, that works, and I can change directories and stuff, but if I try to ls or to get or put a file, I get "425 Possible PASV port theft, cannot open data connection" or something very similar, and it hangs. Here's an URL to a site that looks like it has what I need, or something like what I need: http://www.landfield.com/wu-ftpd/mail-archive/wuftpd- questions/2001/Nov/0202.html ... but I need a bit of help digesting the second two lines to add to the config file. I'm running out of hair to pull out. Can anybody help me? Please respond offlist. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 20 Dec 2002 00:14:04 -0500 (EST) From: Aaron Mandel Subject: Re: interruptions On Thu, 19 Dec 2002, drew wrote: > Doctor Who I loved because the Doctor himself was so admirable and > likeable, in contrast to the protagonist of just about every other > science fiction series I can think of. He embodied values and > aspirations I actually believed in. The stories themselves were lots of > fun; when I watch them now, they seem duller than I remember, but then > it was aimed at kids, after all. The roomie and I had a minor nostalgia session the other day which ended with the disturbing realization that we'd both been totally freaked out by the same Doctor Who episode back in the day ("Image Of The Fendahl") but had both kept watching the show. http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/doctorwho/episode_guide/fendahl.shtml Just seeing the picture there gave me chills. There were enough creepy things about the episode that until we went to look it up online, we thought we were talking about two different stories. a ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 22:09:45 -0800 From: "Michael E. Kupietz, wearing a pointy hat" Subject: Re: more flaggy stuff (5% Whistling Jack Smith content) At 12:51 AM +1300 12/19/02, those funny voices I hear when no one else is around called themselves James Dignan and whispered: >>Be that as it may, here is a pic of the late great Ox wearing a Union >>Jacket: > English peeples correct me on this, but I believe it's only properly considered a "Union Jacket" if it's worn in the US - worn in the UK it's a "Union Blazer". >>Now no-one is seriously suggesting that the guy flies in hung on the back >>end of a ship, are they? (London-inflected rising tone at the end of the >>sentence) > >Ah, of course. I defer to the famed vexillologists Jagger and Richard! Bravo James! This is perhaps my favorite piece of sarcasm I have ever seen on this list. At 9:35 AM -0700 12/18/02, those funny voices I hear when no one else is around called themselves hamish_simpson@agilent.com and whispered: >np - American Hi-Fi (for some reason!!!) What does "np" stand for, anyway? Now Playing? At 11:22 AM -0500 12/19/02, those funny voices I hear when no one else is around called themselves Johnathan Vail and whispered: >>What show(past or present, besides Dr Who, Monty Python, etc) should Robyn >> play wandering troubador on? > >That's easy. X Files. Can't you just see Mulder smirking at Scully >saying "you heard the man, Scully: the universe is based on sullen >entropy". And another perfect answer! Apparently while I've been away from email for two days, the you guys have been polishing your act! I am so glad I decided to check my email instead of cleaning my room. Mike - -- ======== We need love, expression, and truth. We must not allow ourselves to believe that we can fill the round hole of our spirit with the square peg of objective rationale. - Paul Eppinger At non effugies meos iambos - Gaius Valerius Catallus ("...but you won't get away from my poems.") "Moderation in all things, except Wild Turkey." - Evel Knievel ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 23:18:07 -0800 (PST) From: drew@stormgreen.com Subject: Re: interruptions On Fri, 20 Dec 2002, Aaron Mandel wrote: > On Thu, 19 Dec 2002, drew wrote: > > The roomie and I had a minor nostalgia session the other day which ended > with the disturbing realization that we'd both been totally freaked out by > the same Doctor Who episode back in the day ("Image Of The Fendahl") but > had both kept watching the show. That one was a definite creeper, all right, but also one of my favorites. The two that freaked me out did so for two different reasons. "The Stones of Blood" was a little creepy for me because I saw it while I was spending the night at my grandmother's, and I was on the fold-out couch watching it in the dark on the ground floor. I kept thinking animate bloodsucking standing stones were going to crash through the windows and attack me. The other was the much-loved "Talons of Weng-Chiang," which had me checking cabinets and under beds for homicidal homunculi for weeks. What's funny about that was that it wasn't the episode itself that did that to me, but the novelisation! This was all when I was about 10 or 11. - -- drew at stormgreen dot com http://www.stormgreen.com/~drew/ ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 20 Dec 2002 01:52:51 -0700 From: "Marc Holden" Subject: Re: ELIXIRS & REMEDIES I got Elixirs & Remedies in the mail today. The packaging is generic--plain black cardboard sleeve with a window that shows the Xeroxed looking labels. Really low budget looking. I hope the video is better than the rest of the package. I probably won't have time to watch it until after Christmas, but I'm looking forward to seeing it. That was a good tour, and I heard the Seattle show was great. Later, Marc > http://www.scotopiapictures.com/Merchandise/merchandiseglh.html ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 20 Dec 2002 11:03:41 +0000 From: "matt sewell" Subject: Re: interruptions I've been really getting into Dr Who again recently - our pile of videos grows by the day. Many of the adventures were filmed around Oxfordshire - like the Stones of Blood - the stone circle there is actually the Rollright Stones in N. Oxfordshire, just about three-quarters of an hour away from here. Oddly, though, there are no cliffs and it's not by the sea (as it is in Dr Who...). And the other day I saw a Mummers play performed by the Headington Quarrymen - the same society that did the morris dancing in Dr Who and the Daemons. Cheers Matt >From: drew@stormgreen.com > >On Fri, 20 Dec 2002, Aaron Mandel wrote: > > > On Thu, 19 Dec 2002, drew wrote: > > > > The roomie and I had a minor nostalgia session the other day which ended > > with the disturbing realization that we'd both been totally freaked out by > > the same Doctor Who episode back in the day ("Image Of The Fendahl") but > > had both kept watching the show. > >That one was a definite creeper, all right, but also one of my favorites. >The two that freaked me out did so for two different reasons. "The Stones >of Blood" was a little creepy for me because I saw it while I was spending >the night at my grandmother's, and I was on the fold-out couch watching >it in the dark on the ground floor. I kept thinking animate bloodsucking >standing stones were going to crash through the windows and attack me. >The other was the much-loved "Talons of Weng-Chiang," which had me >checking cabinets and under beds for homicidal homunculi for weeks. >What's funny about that was that it wasn't the episode itself that did >that to me, but the novelisation! This was all when I was about 10 >or 11. > >-- >drew at stormgreen dot com >http://www.stormgreen.com/~drew/ - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ MSN 8 with e-mail virus protection service: 3 months FREE*. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 20 Dec 2002 22:48:00 +1030 From: minister of misinformation Subject: archive rock festival updates G'day fegs, a merrie xmas to you orl form oztralia its so long since I posted to this list that I expect most of you have forgotten my existence, ( or more likely , hoped I had gone away and died ) still , you have your own resident lang and there's not enough room for another one . so I will remain lurking in future never fear . However, now that EB has returned I can't see why I too cannot make a post at least once a year, and there's even a bit of robyn content in here too for new fegs to look at and wonder at , as my old feglist site the Abandoned Brain ( which has truly been abandoned, as I haven't updated it for years) still exists out there in the ether chock full of brilliant great quail and many other strange surreal posse postings the like of which you do not see nowadays on this list ....... http://tinpan.fortunecity.com/ebony/546/Robyn.html as for the rest of the site, well, this may be of interest to you if you like 60s , 70 , 80s rock music and rock related historical events Recent updates to The Archive- History of 60s and 70s British Rock festivals. 70-90 UK free festivals http://users.senet.com.au/~tortoise/index.html December updates Fairport convention - details of the 73/74 australian tour http://tinpan.fortunecity.com/ebony/546/fairportmelb74.html http://tinpan.fortunecity.com/ebony/546/fairport73.html Hollywood 1970-film details -the Grateful Dead dose the film crew ! http://tinpan.fortunecity.com/ebony/546/Hollyfilm.html 9th National jazz festival.- new photos and comments http://tinpan.fortunecity.com/ebony/546/nat-jazz-menu.html Grangemouth Festival-New feature http://tinpan.fortunecity.com/ebony/546/grangemouth-festival.html Spaulding Flower Festival.-New feature http://tinpan.fortunecity.com/ebony/546/spaulding-festival.html Krumlin Festival -new photos of crowd, Groundhogs and Pentangle http://tinpan.fortunecity.com/ebony/546/Krumlin-festival-1970.html Many new free festival entries and reports - Molesworth, Harlow, Cleeve, Rivington Pike, etc. http://festival-zone.0catch.com/free-festivals-menu.html Knebworth 75 recollections , photos and Floyd Info http://tinpan.fortunecity.com/ebony/546/75-Knebworth-festival.html Buxton Festival 73 photographs http://members.tripod.com/great_offwhite_dude/buxton.html phun city memories - -http://tinpan.fortunecity.com/ebony/546/phun-city-menu.html Windsor Free festival new photos http://tinpan.fortunecity.com/ebony/546/windsor-menu.html Nice Pink floyd photos of Hyde park 67 http://tinpan.fortunecity.com/ebony/546/Hyde-park-Festivals.html Seasalter free festival report- http://festival-zone.0catch.com/free-festivals-menu.html Free festival FWS reports , Glastonbury 77, Deeply Vale , Stonehenge, 77, 78, 79 http://festival-zone.0catch.com/free-festivals-menu.html National Jazz and Blues festival updates 62 ,66,68,.70 http://tinpan.fortunecity.com/ebony/546/nat-jazz-menu.html Weeley festival crowd photos and recollections http://tinpan.fortunecity.com/ebony/546/weeley-festival.html New material is always gratefully received . looking for any info on obscure festivals you may have attended . I could not have created this site without your help folks and your contributions are much appreciated and valued ALL THE BEST FOR XMAS FEGS and don't get too obsessed with making your xmas best of lists , after all its only rock and roll...... Feg x ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 20 Dec 2002 8:28:02 -0500 From: "Stewart C. Russell" Subject: Re: interruptions Aaron Mandel wrote: > > ... we'd both been totally freaked out by > the same Doctor Who episode back in the day > ("Image Of The Fendahl") Ooh ,yeah, that had me hiding behind the sofa for months afterwards. Doesn't it end with the house "burning down" backwards? Stewart ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 20 Dec 2002 15:00:00 +0000 From: "matt sewell" Subject: Everybody sing along! Fegs! It's the first political post for ages, and one that I hope will just bring festive cheer... rather than a long protracted argument! If You're Happy And You Know It Bomb Iraq by John Robbins If you cannot find Osama, bomb Iraq. If the markets are a drama, bomb Iraq. If the terrorists are Saudi, And your alibi is shoddy, And your tastes remain quite gaudy, Bomb Iraq. If you never were elected, bomb Iraq. If your mood is quite dejected, bomb Iraq. If you think that SUVs, Are the best thing since sliced cheese, And your father you must please, Bomb Iraq. If the globe is quickly warming, bomb Iraq. If the poor will soon be storming, bomb Iraq. We assert that might makes right, Burning oil is a delight, For the empire we will fight, Bomb Iraq. If we have no allies with us, bomb Iraq. If we think that someone's dissed us, bomb Iraq. So to hell with the inspections, Let's look tough for the elections, Close your mind and take directions, Bomb Iraq. If corporate fraud is growin', bomb Iraq. If your ties to it are showin', bomb Iraq. If your politics are sleazy, And hiding that ain't easy, And your manhood's getting queasy, Bomb Iraq. Fall in line and follow orders, bomb Iraq. For our might now knows no borders, bomb Iraq. Disagree? We'll call it treason, It's the make war not love season, Even if we have no reason, Bomb Iraq. John Robbins can be contacted through his website, www.foodrevolution.org - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ MSN 8: advanced junk mail protection and 3 months FREE*. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 20 Dec 2002 10:34:15 -0500 From: dances with virgos Subject: queen elizabeth hall solo show from the auditorium : Robyn solo London show March 2 plus new CD! On March 2nd, the eve of his 50th birthday, Robyn is playing a concert at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on the South Bank in London. Various friends will be joining him onstage. The show starts at 8pm, and there is no opening act. A limited edition CD of new solo, acoustic songs, LUXOR, will be given away free to ticket-holders (this will be made available on the webstie too). Tickets are 17.50 and 15 from the Queen Elizabeth Hall Box Office. ------------------------------ End of fegmaniax-digest V11 #427 ********************************