From: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org (fegmaniax-digest) To: fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Subject: fegmaniax-digest V12 #38 Reply-To: fegmaniax@smoe.org Sender: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk fegmaniax-digest Friday, January 31 2003 Volume 12 : Number 038 Today's Subjects: ----------------- The return of Blatzman and Jeme... [crowbar.joe@btopenworld.com] Hart will go on/bat out of Hell [grutness@surf4nix.com (James Dignan)] Re: Replying to an old post about old bands ["Maximilian Lang" ] Hypocrasy ["Maurer Rose, Inverse Nome" ] adaptation, anime ["melissa" ] Only the stones remain [Michael R Godwin ] Playtime for Bucky AND Mucky ["Maurer Rose, Inverse Nome" ] Re: There's one for you, nineteen for me [Sebastian Hagedorn ] Doonesbury [Tom Clark ] Re: movies etc. [steve ] year 2002 [Ken Ostrander ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 12:14:40 +0000 (GMT) From: crowbar.joe@btopenworld.com Subject: The return of Blatzman and Jeme... Welcome back Jeme........ ............................. Crowbar Joe ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 1 Feb 2003 01:41:39 +1300 From: grutness@surf4nix.com (James Dignan) Subject: Hart will go on/bat out of Hell >>>But I think my favourite number title is probably Grant Hart's "2541". > >James, are you really going to let that lie there without mentioning Robert >Forster's cover of the same song? Yeah - it's a very good cover, but I still prefer Grant's original (especially the single, which has a substantially different mix). In fact, I'd say the GH album "Intolerance" is possibly one of the most consistently underrated albums I know. >PS-- the 7th wing is a "wing" in name only; it's a straight-up dorsal >fin-like projection from the bat-spine. Used as a sort of rudder for >additional control. I always saw it as a membrane connecting the back legs, a bit like the webbing between a duck's toes. Gives added lift and protects the crinkly bits while flying. >> That combination nmeans that it is hot, stuffy, and the sky is *bright >> orange*. It's eleven o'clock in the morning, 30 degrees celsius, 25% >> humidity, and I've got the lights on. > >Wow, sounds like Hell. Is there a Celine Dion record playing? no. That *would* be Hell. The orange had cleared by mid morning, but after that the temperature went up and the humidity got down to the mid teens percent. It's now 1 am and still 26 degrees. Weird, weird day. James PS - wake me when everyone stops talking about taxation James Dignan, Dunedin, New Zealand. =-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-= .-=-.-=-.-=-.- .-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-. -.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-= You talk to me as if from a distance =-.-=-. And I reply with impressions chosen from another time -=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=- (Brian Eno - "By this River") ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 08:06:07 -0500 From: "Maximilian Lang" Subject: Re: Replying to an old post about old bands >From: "matt sewell" >Love on the other hand - blimey. A gig I'll remember forever, >exquisite, >beautiful, amazing. Matt Agreed, I saw them in August, probably my show of the year. Max _________________________________________________________________ The new MSN 8: advanced junk mail protection and 2 months FREE* http://join.msn.com/?page=features/junkmail ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 09:11:22 -0600 From: steve Subject: Re: Batmento On Thursday, January 30, 2003, at 09:21 PM, Eb wrote: > Speaking of animated stuff, I tried again to watch some of Akira last > night and once more couldn't stick with it. Heaven knows why this > silly film is so well-known. It's overrated, but it was something different at the time. The film is just a small part of a much longer comic series, but I can't comment as I've never looked at it. The Studio Ghibli films are much superior to almost all other anime. Disney will be releasing DVDs of the three Miyazaki films for which they have done English dubs on April 15. They'll be two disc sets with the original Japanese, subtitles, etc. - - Ghibli Otaku Steve __________ Shortly after becoming Attorney General, John Ashcroft was headed abroad. An advance team showed up at the American embassy in the Hague to check out the digs, saw cats in residence, and got nervous. They were worried there might be a calico cat. No, they were told, no calicos. Visible relief. Their boss, they explained, believes calico cats are signs of the devil. - Andrew Tobias, 11/20/01 ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 16:29:18 +0000 From: "Maurer Rose, Inverse Nome" Subject: Hypocrasy Jeme: >Instead, I say that we embrace hypocrisy >as a necessary part of the disconnect between reality and the ideal. >The fact that I don't seem to display the traits that I value most >merely >shows that my behavior is flawed but reflects nothing on my >values >themselves. Jeme, Im not a very logical person so Im not going to dispute your logic. The above sounds true, but when I think of actual human experience and history I have some problems with it. You statements in support of fraternity sometimes seem to run counter to your behavior. To use the above as a reason not to at least -try- to live up to what reason and consience desire is, I think, on a practical level, one that dosn't work. Heres why. At work Ive noticed that the best leaders, the ones that bring out the best in others(and themselves), are those who lead by example. To preach one thing and practice it is far more convincing than any mere preaching. And to not practice it, at least here in my work reality, is to pretty much doom whatever it is you preach. Look at Nader. Its not that he preaches honesty that makes him exemplory. Its that, as far as we can see, he appears to practice it. So that when he talks his behavior gives weight to his words and they have a meaning, a worth greater than their logic. There is life in his speech, it is not mere rhetoric. And life touches and moves people more than rhetoric. Now Im pretty sure Nader is not perfectly honest. In fact, Ive seen examples where he spins things in such a way as to give his viewpoint a clear, and unfairish advantage, so Im sure he's not. He dosn't reach any absolute. Nor do I or most expect him to. He remains very human and flawed. But that dosnt seem to stop his attempting to hold himself to a higher standard than we normally expect in politicians. And that attempt is what people respond to. That attempt is what wins people to his cause. That attempt is what keeps him from being a hypocrite. Jeme, it is human nature to despise major hypocrites, those who think it is not worth their effort to try to live what they preach to others. The 20th century media machine has done much to weaken this in us, but it has not eradicated it. This bit of human nature was true long before Christianity, and if Christianity were to disappear tommorrow, major, unapologetic hypocrites would still, once unmasked, be considered scum. People arent logic machines. Aint ever been, wouldnt ever be. And their hearts work in certain ways. A love of virtue has existed and exists in civilizations that couldn't care less about Christ. In fact, I can easily imagine a Thor-worshiping Viking, a Confusian Chinese women, a Shinto Japanese man and a contempory ethical aithiest who would all tell you that what you've said is no excuse for bad behavior. And if you tried to say what youve said to someone like Cato the Elder(censorious as he was,) I would be amused to see such an honrable pagan's reaction. You'd probobly get boxed in the ears. Well, I hope this Kay(minus a toe;-) is gentler, since gentelness is a virtue I value. I loose it sometimes thou. I'd never deny that. All of you here have seen me loose it, and as Quail did, perhaps thought it below me. Whether it was or not I wouldnt argue here. But I have no problem with being held to at least attempting to hold to a standard of behavior I preach. Anything less insults my, your and everyone else's humanity. - ------------- Matt, get well and whatever you do, dont read Marc's review of the Rolling Stones Concert. It's so funny you'll burst your stitches. - --------------- James, Jeez, that sounds aweful. Like a John Martin painting come to life. Wern't there some bad fires last year as well? Is it a drought thats causing all this? I hope theyre getting people out of the way, but even so, I can think of few things worse than to have your home, or your enviroment, go up in flames. Kay _________________________________________________________________ STOP MORE SPAM with the new MSN 8 and get 2 months FREE* http://join.msn.com/?page=features/junkmail ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 16:38:24 -0000 From: "melissa" Subject: adaptation, anime I enjoyed Adaptation but it can drive people crazy. The person I was with had to leave the theater a couple of times though later they say they liked it ok. Basically you're inside the head of a very neurotic character for about two hours. It's extremely claustrophobic and at times it reminded me of the felling of being stuck in the car with a friend of mine who can't deal with parking in the city. It's a lot of fun though and the guy who plays the orchid collector is great. Do you all have any anime suggestions for a feg? since it's more than likely that I will be at Otakon again i think it would be more fun if I had seen more anime before then. So far the things that I have liked are jin-roh wolf brigade, hellsing and if you count it spirited away. i tried to watch lain and got kind of bored with it. part of it might be that the whole "oh it's so cute and weird and japanese" coolness thing works less for someone who grew up in hawaii surrounded by sanrio crap. any suggestions woudl be helpful. btw anyone read anything good lately? i think i've exhausted all of the terry pratchet books. melissa ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 17:15:11 +0000 (GMT) From: Michael R Godwin Subject: Only the stones remain All you fans of Julian Cope's excellent book "The Modern Antiquarian" may be interested in the website, discussion group, etc at: http://www.themodernantiquarian.com/home.php - - MRG ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 17:25:02 +0000 From: "Maurer Rose, Inverse Nome" Subject: Playtime for Bucky AND Mucky http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-558903,00.html Kay _________________________________________________________________ Help STOP SPAM with the new MSN 8 and get 2 months FREE* http://join.msn.com/?page=features/junkmail ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 13:27:06 EST From: MPys2626@aol.com Subject: Cambridge Waxings Rick, a pal from Cambridge, UK was in attendance the other evening ...the cuttings and pastings contain a few excepts from a note sent to a circle of his friends ... that of which I proudly consider mysef! BTW -- If anyone would like cyber copies of Nige's mentioned snaps or the coveted set-list containing a few nice 'Roboglyphics' just let me know, thanks ...m http://www.mitchworldusa.net/ > > Apologies for the delay in this. Had an early start the following morning > so went straight to bed. Fair play to certain for getting those pics over > to you so soon. Well the snow finally hit here with a vengeance, with chaos > on the roads and school cancelled today, but it makes for a nice view out > of the window. Just thankful it started the day after the Soft Boy's show. > I got caught in a blizzard on the way back home during the afternoon, but > there were people doing a similar journey to me yesterday that left it a > little later and are still sitting on those blocked motorways - 17 hours in > your car with no food !!! > > So everyone should have the setlist and pics by now. By the way, as Nige > pointed out to some that was Robyn's encore shirt. The first one was indeed > very floral. If any of you have seen those bold Victorian wallpaper designs > with aspidistra's and the such like all over them, you'll get the picture. > Robyn did apologise on his return for the crayon shirt. He commented on it > being a very old one that he hadn't worn before, so I got the impression he > was a little embarrassed about it too (I guess at 50 you gotta tone it down > a little). But it does get hot up on that stage and RH seemed to suffer the > most. If you look closely at Morris's t-shirt, it reads I Love Lucy. One > guy gave Nige the eyeball, confusing his digital camera for a minidisc > recorder. However, if anyone hears of a recording of the show, I'd love to > get my hands on a copy. > > During the support band's slot - who are definitely NOT the Violent Femmes' > younger brothers as someone suggested recently - we were up at the bar for > some of the time, and I noticed a small elfish little guy with grey puddng > bowl hair wander up with a female companion, and was gradually joined by > some other friends (one assumes long term friends from Cambridge) and > Morris.A little while later we were standing next to each other waiting to > buy drinks, and I asked him if there were any plans to do any Syd/Pink > Floyd songs tonight due to the Cambridge connection. He replied to say that > they were planning to do Vegetable Man and would take it from there. > Another guy waiting at the bar then asked about Astronomy Domine but > unfortunately it wasn't to materialise. I also asked how the UK tour was > going and he said it was going well. At this point I was about to be served > and I offered to buy him a beer, but he politely declined, answering that > he was buying quite a big round anyway. So that was about it, and all in > English, Mark. No gnomish or elfish to be heard. Someone else also > mentioned to him that they'd heard the recent radio sesh (I assume the WFMU > one) and that they were very impressed. > > This is only my second SB show - the first during the 2001 comeback tour > also in Cambridge - and Nige's first. Glad you decided to come along, Nige. > It was good to meet up after all this time. Second time I managed to snag a > setlist too. I was standing right in front of RH, with a couple of guys > just in front of me, and the one setlist was just in front of the monitor. > The Boat Race is quite a small venue - basically a pub with the bar at one > end, the stage at the other, and floor space in between. A nice little > intimate setting. So after the encore I had to lean forward past the guys > in front to reach it, and the guy to my left also decided to make a grab. > Apologies for the little shove, but Mark did ask me to get it ;) Honestly, > I felt a little guilty for a little while because he looked a little put > out, and it was definitely out of character for me. But the choice of songs > was good, and a little different from the previous UK date setlists I saw. > > Main set - > > I Love Lucy > I Got The Hots - RH said it was written about a Cambridge guy who they > called Hots, so of it wasn't for him there wouldn't have been the song.... > Bells Of Rhymney - I was personally pleased they played this, and it was a > good rendition including those harmonies > Kingdom Of Love > Queen Of Eyes > My Mind Is Connected To Your Deams > Insanely Jealous > Vegetable Man - RH did a shout for Syd, asking if he was still around. > Someone said they'd seen him in the park recently, but he wasn't around > tonght > The Man With The Lightbulb Head - RH said about this song "Written by me in > a Syd Barret stylee", and at the end he quipped "if it wasn't for the Soft > Boys there would be no Syd Barret" to laughter from the audience. You know, > I'd not linked this song to being Barret-esque. I'd have said something > like Hots or Face Of Death would be more so. > Mr.Kennedy - the main reason Nige, and my mate Chris, came along was the > mp3 they got to hear of this song. And to these ears it sounded note > perfect. This was the first of the new songs I got to hear at the 2001 show > too. > Sudden Town - not owning NDL yet I didn't know this one, but I like it a > lot. RH said it was written about how places can change, and likened it to > the area of Cambridge we were in, where the whole area behind the pub had > been flattened to build a new mall (The Grafton Centre), and the pub we > were in had previously been called something different too. > Anglepoise Lamp - RH mentioned this song was now known as "Seven Winged > Bat" but that we all might have known it as something else. He did sing > Anglepoise right at the end. Would the squiggle on the setlist next to > Anglepoise be his depiiction of this bat ? > Underwater Moonlight - RH had made some comments during the show about how > we were living again in trying time, and this song was the one that allowed > him to vent his feelings a little more directly. You know how he uses the > end of the song to go off on a vocal meander, well this was (as close as I > can remember) the content of those meanders tonight:- > > "George Walker Bush, you have been summoned to this court to face charges > of crimes against the environment. How do you plead ? > George Walker Bush, you have been summoned to this court to face charges of > crimes against the economy. How do you plead ? > George Walker Bush, you have been summoned to this court to face charges of > crimes against humanity. > George Walker Bush. You're a fucking wanker !!" > > and with that they exited stage left. There was also reference during the > set about another part of Cambridge called Mitchum's Corner, and how > Alistair Sims used to sit there alone with a torch under his chin scaring > himself. But I can't remember which song. He also asked if anyone hadn't > heard of this place. I didn't own up, but my bro-in-law who was also there > knew of the place. > > Now this is where somebody may be able to correct me. The bottom of the > setlist contains a list of songs from which to choose from for the encore. > They did six in total (including one not on the list), but I'm struggling > to remember the correct order, so here's my guess.... > > Om - Didn't know this one either, but RH introduced it as a "tantric yogic > meditation" or something like that, performed in the style of Madness. Sure > it enough it had a type of ska feel to it. > Hear My Brane - RH mentioned this song came from their first EP. > He's A Reptile > Pulse Of My Heart > Rock'N'Roll Toilet > Face Of Death - RH mentioned it was written about one of the old characters > of Cambridge who used to roam the streets. Not Harold, but The Face as he > was known. > > That was about it. Oh, besides the tussle for the setlist. I also got my > first official SB CDs tonight - both for a bargain fiver each. So I'm now > the proud owner of A Can Of Bees and Invisible Hits. They still had a vinyl > copy of UM on sale tonight (also a fiver). Anyway, after an after gig doner > kebab (a bit of an institution of late for me) it was home to bed. > > If anyone has anything to fill in, send it on. > Talk soon, > Rick F ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 10:38:07 -0800 From: "Rex.Broome" Subject: Tighening the knit Jeff: >>Well, I at least never said anything about "tight-knit" communities. I'm >>thinking more of cities, where you have to learn to deal with others >>because you have to live with them. Sorry about that... I was actually going off on a tangent there which was not so much a response to anything you said as the general subtext bubbling under a number of people's posts. Ended up being about something almost the opposite of what you were saying. My bad. Wow, the "active" names on the list have shifted radically over the last week, huh? ___________ Just came into possession of the posthumous George Harrison record, oddly specifically titled not so much "George Harrison/Brainwashed" as, according to the spine, "Brainwashed by George Harrison". Anyhow, there's a little sketch on the last page of the booklet that is, to my eyes, very Robyn-esque. And the title "Pisces Fish" could conceivably show up on a Robyn album a la "Devil's Radio". Anyhow... Rex ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 19:47:05 +0100 From: Sebastian Hagedorn Subject: Re: There's one for you, nineteen for me - -- Michael R Godwin is rumored to have mumbled on Donnerstag, 30. Januar 2003 18:17 Uhr +0000 regarding There's one for you, nineteen for me: > I won't go into the barmy theories of the optimal tax crew, who claim that > you should tax skis, table tennis bats and other sports goods more than > 'ordinary' goods. Mail me separately if you really want to know about > this. Germany has this to some degree. There's a lower sales tax for "essentials", such as food and books and some other items and a tax more than twice as high for everything else. There used to be "luxury taxes" on items like champagne etc., but those are long gone AFAIK. - -- Sebastian Hagedorn Ehrenfeldg|rtel 156, 50823 Kvln, Germany http://www.spinfo.uni-koeln.de/~hgd/ "Being just contaminates the void" - Robyn Hitchcock ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 13:59:57 -0500 From: "ross taylor" Subject: movies etc. Get yer war song on -- I'm surprised Robyn hasn't found some way to release "If You Know Time" yet. Pretty soon its warning nature will be dated, & meanwhile it could add to the antiwar energy. Man, yesterday & today we've been having the dark limos w/ police escorts all over the place, shutting down circles etc. in N.W. DC. Something's hungry again & I can hear its wings beating. Incidentally, I missed the State of the Union address, but the next morning one of my co-workers noted something he just couldn't believe in the speech was when Bush said "We will not let any government that has not been elected by the people tell us what to do." We all had a good laugh over that one. - ---- >At 12:33 PM 1/30/2003 -0800, Eb wrote: >>Have folks heard that *Christopher Nolan* is supposedly directing the new >>Batman movie? >No, but I have heard that Ang Lee is directing the Incredible Hulk >movie. Yikes. >Maybe Scorsese will do a Shazam! film next.. Somehow this seems to go along w/ Tarantino's next being a kung fu movie. Or that Peter Weir's next (with his biggest budget) is a costume drama sea movie set in the early 1800s. I dunno, I guess it's a return to realism after Truman. Not sharing my interest in Weir, my wife has just started blasting thru all the Patric O'Brian sea novels (the movie is taken from one). She enjoys them, but she is having major job worries & wants Escape. I've looked at a couple & they do seem to have a nice pretend-19th-century style. My guess is they are frothy, but I could be wrong. And great movies can come from frothy books. - --- James-- >That combination nmeans that it is hot, stuffy, and the sky is *bright >orange*. It's eleven o'clock in the morning, 30 degrees celsius, 25% >humidity, and I've got the lights on. Paging Bruce Sterling ... Has anybody read Gibson's "Pattern Recognition" yet? It looks fun. - --- Seven-winged bit-- and the eigth wing is for checksum, right? It's been a long time since I thought about that... Ross Taylor "When I heard him say that I wanted to slap him until my hand hurt then slap him for hurting my hand." Need a new email address that people can remember Check out the new EudoraMail at http://www.eudoramail.com ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 11:44:14 -0800 From: Tom Clark Subject: Doonesbury Have folks been reading this week's Doonesbury? While I'm not really a proponent of "free music", I actually do share Jimmy Thudpucker's opinion on where the music industry should be going. Here's a link to Monday's strip. Move on from there: http://www.uclick.com/client/mwy/db/2003/01/27/index.html - -tc ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 14:16:45 -0600 From: steve Subject: Re: movies etc. On Friday, January 31, 2003, at 12:59 PM, ross taylor wrote: > Has anybody read Gibson's "Pattern Recognition" yet? It looks fun. The street date isn't until next week. - - Steve __________ It's something new to see crises  especially a crisis as shocking as the terrorist attack  consistently addressed with legislation that does almost nothing to address the actual problem, and is almost entirely aimed at advancing a pre-existing agenda. - Paul Krugman, on Republican strategy ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 15:33:12 -0500 From: Ken Ostrander Subject: year 2002 alright. i'm just making my personal deadline to get this out there. it was a tumultuous year; but there was some fantastic music that helped get me through. albums: bruce springsteen / the rising may your hope give us hope, may your faith give us faith, may your hope give us hope, may your love give us love sleater-kinney / one beat were all equal in the face of what were most afraid of roots / phrenology sometimes before you smile you got to cry soft boys / nextdoorland you can set the clock back...so can i joey ramone / dont worry about me i felt like a million dollars, something that money just can't bring wilco / yankee hotel foxtrot turning your orbit around prince / rainbow children* without god it wasnt there, now i feel it everywhere peter gabriel / up  i cry until i laugh beck / sea change its nothing that i havent seen before; but it still kills me like it did before neko case / blacklisted the worlds gonna pay badly drawn boy / have you fed the fish? i'm ready to tell you whats wrong with me elvis costello / when i was cruel every elvis has his army trey anatasio the sun always comes up much too soon bright eyes / lifted or the story is in the soil so keep your ear to the ground i think im cured david bowie / heathen its the beginning of an end and nothing has changed midnight oil / capricornia i got the cure for compassion fatigue tom waits / alice i'll always pretend youre mine sonic youth / murray street these are the words; but not the truth muta baruka / life squared we refuse to be what they want us to be vines / highly evolved you and me are never free until were cast away damn personals / standing still in the usa were on our way to better living coldplay / a rush of blood to the head how long must you wait for it? remy shand / the way i feel who are we to fall to pieces baby? spoon / kill the moonlight sometimes telling the truth is the best way out mekons / out of our heads the seed of the devil lives on in man tom waits / blood money id sell your heart to the junkman baby for a buck interpol / turn on the bright lights yours is the only version of my desertion that i could ever subscribe to cody chesnutt / the headphone masterpiece i know my breakdown is on the way george harrison / brainwashed if you dont know where youre going, any road will take you there pine valley cosmonauts / executioners last songs get out your idiot whistle and blow red hot chili peppers / by the way give it up and i got what i came for flaming lips / yoshimi battles the pink robots happiness makes you cry billy bragg / england, half english the natives are hostile whatever i say the streets / original pirate material this ain't a track it's a movement sahara hotnights / jennie bomb were not making any handshake deals cornershop / handcream for a generation disco is the halfway to a full discontent chumbawamba / readymades peace won't come by words alone new pornographers / mass romantic* visualize success but dont believe your eyes superfurryanimals / rings around the world you've got to tolerate all those people that you hate dave matthews band / busted stuff so much space to believe don lennon / downtown nobody can take my dream away joseph arthur / junkyard hearts i iv life is a terminal condition sarah dougher / the bluff when you tell me all those lies, i know that theyre not true neil finn / one all theres a smile between us and its going on tenacious d dont know what its about, but its good to go clinic / walking with thee fill yourself with dreams doves / last broadcast insides a heart of summer grandpa boy / mono you're fragile and you're difficult hives / vini vidi vicious* got my way of doing things and its bound to gain your attraction yeah yeah yeahs* i need the real thing tonight shins / oh, inverted world* your fables are falling tonight van morrison / down the road man is in conflict with his natural self breeders / title tk hold what youve got neil young / are you passionate? are you livin like you talk? tanya donelly / beautysleep this world is a fickle young girl lauryn hill / mtv unplugged 2.0 while today is still today, choose well *released before 2002 pending purchase/download/altruism: sigur ros / ( ) ladytron / light and magic hot hot heat / make up the breakdown johnny dowd / pawnbrokerss wife mary timony / the golden dove joseph arthur / redemptions son wire - read and burn 1&2 the residents - demons dance alone weezer - maladroit peter murphy - dust mediaeval baebes - the rose guided by voices - universal truths and cycles bryan ferry frantic missy elliot / under construction queens of the stone age / songs for the deaf and you will know them by their trail of dead / source tags and codes shows: spearhead/saul williams, paradise 3/27 peter gabriel, fleet center 11/25 nick cave, orpheum 5/1 mekons, middle east 9/18 ozomatli, paradise 11/12 billy bragg, somerville theatre 10/18 mission of burma/black helicopters, paradise 1/19 oxycontinentals/tugboat resin/zaggnut, o'brians 1/18 oxycontinentals/anchormen/tracy husky, obrians 4/25 movies: in no particular order gosford park monsters ball briget jones diary the panic room spiderman signs attack of the clones high crimes shallow hal hearts in atlantis storytelling goldmember insomnia minority report pay it forward shipping news jesus son waking the dead divine secrets of the ya ya sisterhood adaptation lord of the rings: the two towers ------------------------------ End of fegmaniax-digest V12 #38 *******************************