From: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org (fegmaniax-digest) To: fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Subject: fegmaniax-digest V12 #313 Reply-To: fegmaniax@smoe.org Sender: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk fegmaniax-digest Wednesday, August 20 2003 Volume 12 : Number 313 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Re: Look what you've started [AidMerr@aol.com] 100% boob content ["Natalie Jane" ] Re: Eyeroll Induction Hour [Capuchin ] Paris in the 80s [grutness@surf4nix.com (James Dignan)] Eb's Top Forty Feet of the '80's (had to count two of them twent y times apiece) ["Rex.Broome" ] Re: Boy, I tell ya.... [Eb ] Re: Boy, I tell ya.... [Eb ] Re: Boy, I tell ya.... [Capuchin ] Re: Boy, I tell ya.... [Eb ] Re: 100% boob content ["Matt Sewell" ] Gonna have to be Roger now... for the rest of his life... oooh ["Matt Sew] Re: Look what you've started [Michael R Godwin ] RE: Argh [Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey ] Re: Eb's Fourteen Toes and the big fat ass [gshell@metronet.com] Re: Eb's Fourteen Toes and the big fat ass [Tom Clark ] RE: me and Bustin' 40 from the 80's ["Bachman, Michael" ] Re: Michael Bachman rules the Universe RH 50% [broadway jack ] Re: Eb's Fourteen Toes and the big fat ass [Eb ] Re: Paris in the 80s ["Jason R. Thornton" ] RE: Eb's Fourteen Toes and the big fat ass ["Bachman, Michael" > Nobody knows where Syd went... not even his mum. >> J. > >I may be wrong but I don't think that's quite true. >The Dolly Rocker faq states "Syd Barrett is at home in >Cambridgeshire, England." This one I can answer with some authority, as I lived around the corner from Syd for 20+ years; while they try to keep his address secret there always seem to be at least two Italian fans outside it waiting for autographs. I have no idea why they're always Italian. Finding out his (or anyone else in the UK's) address is not hard since addresses are public information - just go to the electoral register at 192.com and type in the name... But (as everyone should bear in mind) he wants to be left alone for a reason. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 19 Aug 2003 16:40:20 -0700 From: "Natalie Jane" Subject: 100% boob content >certainly makes sense, going by what the Milky Way liiks like and >representations of the goddess. I'm just amazed it took me until recently >to realise that the work "Galaxy" translates literally "Milky" (the moderny >Greek word for milky is "galacteros"). As the resident Greek myth expert at trivia night, I can explain... and provide boob content at the same time! The myth is that Zeus took the infant Herakles (his illegitimate son) and had him suckle at the breast of the sleeping or otherwise oblivious Hera. When she realized she was nursing her husband's love child, she angrily pulled Herakles away, and the milk from her breast spurted out across the sky and formed the Milky Way. so there. n. _________________________________________________________________ Get MSN 8 and enjoy automatic e-mail virus protection. http://join.msn.com/?page=features/virus ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 19 Aug 2003 17:14:22 -0700 (PDT) From: Capuchin Subject: Re: Eyeroll Induction Hour On Mon, 18 Aug 2003, Michael R Godwin wrote: > > I believe, for some reason, that in addition to being the zoo's > > first-born elephant, Packy is the first captivity-born elephant > > anywhere. > > No, it's not that rare, but it is unusual. Only 12 born in captivity > since 1978 are still living, according to: > Packy was born in 1962 and was the first elephant born in captivity in North America in 44 years. A fairly recent story in a local paper can be found here: I know (somewhat) the author of this story. Her more recent cover story "Endless Hummer" is totally worth reading. J. - -- _______________________________________________ Capuchin capuchin@bitmine.net Jeme A Brelin ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 12:19:01 +1200 From: grutness@surf4nix.com (James Dignan) Subject: Paris in the 80s >>My Paris 1991 story takes in sleeping rough, the late Jim Morrison, a >>nice lady from Palo Alto, a boule yard and a cast of hundreds if not >>thousands... how about you Rex? You could call it "Paris 1991: Down and out in Paris" and offend both John Cale fans and George Orwell ones in one fell swoop! (What exactly is a fell swoop? Is it what kestrels do when hunting in the Yorkshire countryside?) - --- >> Easily on my Top 40 "80's" albums list... ;) >> >> As is Interpol. > >Yeah, the Postal Service is on mine. Is it a new Lightning Seeds project? > >:) > >=jbj= > >------------------------------ > >Date: Tue, 19 Aug 2003 16:08:45 -0700 (PDT) >From: Mike Swedene >Subject: Re: okay you started it... > >My friend Brian used to always state that the "best >year" for music was 1983-84 with the release of the >Smiths, Police (Synchronicity), REM and a few others. Okay, we've got Interpol, "the Postal Service", the Police, and an album released on released on IRS. Definitely spotting a trend here! Okay - what were the rules last time? Top 40, limited to one per artist? Here we go...(approximately alphabetically) Laurie Anderson Mister Heartbreak Bats Daddy's Highway David Bowie Scary Monsters Billy Bragg Life's a riot with Spy vs Spy Harold Budd The White Arcades Kate Bush Hounds of Love Byrne & Eno My Life in the Bush of Ghosts Church The Blurred Crusade Leonard Cohen Various Positions Lloyd Cole Rattlesnakes Elvis Costello Imperial Bedroom Bob Dylan Oh Mercy Steve Earle Copperhead Road Echo & the Bunnymen Ocean Rain Peter Gabriel Peter Gabriel IV (Security) RH Element of Light Hunters & Collectors Human Frailty H|sker D| Candy Apple Grey King Crimson Beat Daniel Lanois Acadie Jock'n'Yono Double Fantasy Midnight Oil Diesel and Dust Prince 1999 Rain Parade Emergency Third Rail Power Trip Lou Reed The Blue Mask REM Fables of the Reconstruction Pete Shelley Homosapien Shriekback Oil and Gold Paul Simon Hearts and Bones Soft Boys Underwater Moonlight Split Enz Waiata Stone Roses The Stone Roses Stranglers Aural Sculpture Sugarcubes Life's Too Good Talking Heads Remain in Light Pete Townshend Empty Glass Triffids Born Sandy Devotional U2 The Joshua Tree XTC English Settlement Frank Zappa You Are What You Is bubbling under: World shut your mouth (Julian Cope); Love over gold (Dire Straits); Tallulah (GoBetweens); Psychocandy (Jesus & Mary Chain); Strange boutique (Monochrome Set); Hatful of hollow (Smiths); Send you (Sneaky Feelings); Suzanne Vega (Suzanne Vega); Hallelujah all the way home (Verlaines); Arc of a diver (Steve Winwood); Translate slowly (Zeitgeist); The envoy (Warren Zevon). Oh, and Songs for swinging yuppies (The Moomins ;) James 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: Tue, 19 Aug 2003 18:01:52 -0700 From: "Rex.Broome" Subject: Eb's Top Forty Feet of the '80's (had to count two of them twent y times apiece) Natalie: >>I've only been into alt-country since I bought that $10 copy of "Anodyne" >>in December of last year. I didn't even leaf through a copy of "No Depression" >>till a few months ago. Really??? That's... well... really? Wow, you don't go into anything halfway, huh? So... previous to this epiphany, what did you think of the non-alt kind of country? And what do you make of it now? I'm fascinated by this whole idea... ____ James: >>I'm just amazed it took me until recently to realise that the work "Galaxy" >>translates literally "Milky" (the moderny Greek word for milky is "galacteros"). Wow, cool. New one on me, although obvious in hindsight. Also makes the names of mighty SF/Comic Book characters like Galactus (et. al.) seem even sillier. Although it makes sense for Galaxina (if I'm remembering correctly and that was a softcore porn SF thing...) ________ gSg: >>And I don't think volume has anything to do with a "nice" set of tits. I don't recall anyone here saying they were fan of enormous breasts. Just breasts. And in reality I'm hardly obsessed with them or anything, but it is kind of biologically hardwired into the straight male psyche to notice them, so I do. However, I've never really known what's meant by the term "nice ass"... I guess it's similar in that to some the "nice" means "huge" and to others it doesn't. But I guess I'm just not an ass-man. I'm also not into feet, so I'll politely decline Eb's offer of discussing his. And, although I'll be interested in the lists and results, I don't think I can really put a Top 40 '80's List together. Firstly I have too many '80's records, and secondly it's probably the only loosely-defined era for which I have enough nostalgia to cloud my judgement (inasmuch as some of my favorites wouldn't necessarily be what I judge to be "the best"). Well, the '60's would be a bitch, too, but the '70's and '90's are both to me so filled with musical badness that ferreting out the good stuff is, if not easy, at least possible given the one-album-per-artist rule. So I think I'll just sit back and say "ooh, good one" and "Duran Duran isn't a real band" and shit like that. Something for you all to look forward to. - -Rex ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 19 Aug 2003 19:21:56 -0700 (PDT) From: Capuchin Subject: RE: Argh On Tue, 19 Aug 2003, Iosso, Ken wrote: > Does it just mean that people like us work at advertising firms? In my experience working in and with advertising firms, I'd say that "people like us" doesn't really apply unless you mean that "we" are shallow, vain, self-conscious, and preoccupied with money, fame, and appearances. > If these songs are catchy enough for commercials, why aren't they catchy > enough to sell as music? It's not that they're not catchy enough to sell as music. They are. Hell, you bought them. And they're in print. What they're NOT is exploitable as commodities. Are you making the mistake of assuming that big hits are necessarily the best available music? We had a great discussion on this very list that sort of explained the capitalist myth about profit-making and quality and showed how it is absolutely false and music (indeed, all art) is a fine counter-example. I believe one person wrote "The creme-de-la-creme is nothing but the thickest clots that rise to the top." (or words to that effect) J. - -- _______________________________________________ Capuchin capuchin@bitmine.net Jeme A Brelin ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 19 Aug 2003 21:01:34 -0700 From: Eb Subject: Re: Boy, I tell ya.... >Whew. 47:19 today. 20 seconds slower than two days ago. I figured that dip is due to a) taking a day off b) running with a flapping shoelace for the last 2.5 miles. I should be able to beat 46:59 tomorrow. I also started too late today...too many laps in the dark. Days keep getting shorter...seems like I need to start leaving before 7:30pm now. When do you start PMSing? Eb ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 19 Aug 2003 21:09:26 -0700 From: Eb Subject: Re: Boy, I tell ya.... Ummm....that wasn't meant to go to the list. Eb ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 19 Aug 2003 23:53:58 -0700 (PDT) From: Capuchin Subject: Re: Boy, I tell ya.... On Tue, 19 Aug 2003, Eb wrote: > >Whew. > > 47:19 today. 20 seconds slower than two days ago. I figured that dip is > due to a) taking a day off b) running with a flapping shoelace for the > last 2.5 miles. I should be able to beat 46:59 tomorrow. Well, keep your chin up, kid. I know it sounds crazy now, but in a year or two you might be able to do TWO miles in that time. J. - -- _______________________________________________ Capuchin capuchin@bitmine.net Jeme A Brelin ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 00:07:49 -0700 From: Eb Subject: Re: Boy, I tell ya.... > > 47:19 today. 20 seconds slower than two days ago. I figured that dip is >> due to a) taking a day off b) running with a flapping shoelace for the >> last 2.5 miles. I should be able to beat 46:59 tomorrow. > >Well, keep your chin up, kid. > >I know it sounds crazy now, but in a year or two you might be able to do >TWO miles in that time. Just for the sake of clarity amidst this snafu, be advised that the 47:19/46:59 times were for a 5.5-mile run. Eb ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 10:08:42 +0100 From: "Matt Sewell" Subject: Re: 100% boob content A little bit of Greek myth, a *lot* of boob - post of the year! Nat, I salute ye! Cheers Matt >From: "Natalie Jane" > >>certainly makes sense, going by what the Milky Way liiks like and >>representations of the goddess. I'm just amazed it took me until >>recently >>to realise that the work "Galaxy" translates literally "Milky" (the >>moderny >>Greek word for milky is "galacteros"). > >As the resident Greek myth expert at trivia night, I can explain... >and provide boob content at the same time! The myth is that Zeus >took the infant Herakles (his illegitimate son) and had him suckle >at the breast of the sleeping or otherwise oblivious Hera. When she >realized she was nursing her husband's love child, she angrily >pulled Herakles away, and the milk from her breast spurted out >across the sky and formed the Milky Way. > >so there. > >n. > >_________________________________________________________________ >Get MSN 8 and enjoy automatic e-mail virus protection. >http://join.msn.com/?page=features/virus - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Buy and sell almost anything online with Ebay Auctions on MSN. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 10:25:33 +0100 From: "Matt Sewell" Subject: Gonna have to be Roger now... for the rest of his life... oooh I recently read an extract from an incredibly pisspoor book on Syd, where the author actually doorsteps him - gets quite a frosty reception, which underlines the fact that he just wants to be left alone. Actually I've heard that Syd has quite serious diabetes and isn't very well at all, though I don't know how true that is (not a very verifiable source). I've always hoped Syd would reach a stage where he felt he could return to music, like Peter Green who's illness seems to have levelled out to a point where he could cope with returning, releasing albums and even touring, but it's wishful thinking regarding Barrett - Robyn's (very sadly) probably right (see the title of this post). Cheers Matt >From: AidMerr@aol.com >This one I can answer with some authority, as I lived around the corner from >Syd for 20+ years; while they try to keep his address secret there always seem >to be at least two Italian fans outside it waiting for autographs. I have no >idea why they're always Italian. Finding out his (or anyone else in the UK's) >address is not hard since addresses are public information - just go to the >electoral register at 192.com and type in the name... But (as everyone should >bear in mind) he wants to be left alone for a reason. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Get a free connection, half-price modem and one month FREE, when you sign up for BT Broadband today! ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 12:32:20 +0100 (BST) From: Michael R Godwin Subject: Re: Look what you've started On Tue, 19 Aug 2003 AidMerr@aol.com wrote: > This one I can answer with some authority, as I lived around the corner from > Syd for 20+ years; while they try to keep his address secret there always seem > to be at least two Italian fans outside it waiting for autographs. I have no > idea why they're always Italian. Maybe they bought that peculiar Italian mini-CD/booklet which had the interview with Syd's sister in Italian, and then translated _back_ into English from Italian, plus pictures of some of Syd's paintings. I think the CD had 'Lucy Leave' and 'King Bee' on it. So there must be a market for this stuff in Italy. Doesn't RH play there quite often? - - MRG n.p. Jimi Hendrix - Dolly Dagger ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 07:02:46 -0500 From: Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey Subject: RE: Argh Quoting "Iosso, Ken" : > in a Kohl's commercial and I'm struck by the larger pattern of using > weird > underground music in mainstream commercials - i.e. Pink Moon, Da Da Da, > Lust > for Life. Does it just mean that people like us work at advertising > firms? > If these songs are catchy enough for commercials, why aren't they catchy > enough to sell as music? a) Yes b) Because the record industry is full of greedy tin-eared weasels who know more about 16-year-olds' midriffs than they do about guitarists' riffs. ..Jeff J e f f r e y N o r m a n The Architectural Dance Society www.uwm.edu/~jenor/ADS.html :: Some days, you just can't get rid of a bomb :: --Batman ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 08:53:23 -0500 (CDT) From: gshell@metronet.com Subject: Re: Eb's Fourteen Toes and the big fat ass On Tue, 19 Aug 2003, Rex.Broome wrote: > gSg: > >>And I don't think volume has anything to do with a "nice" set of tits. > I don't recall anyone here saying they were fan of enormous breasts. and my statement didn't say that anyone here was a fan of enormous breasts. but it seems like the majority of males worldwide are. do you think most fegmen are on the apparently small list of men who do not favor large breasts? > And in reality I'm hardly obsessed with them or anything, but it > is kind of biologically hardwired into the straight male psyche to > notice them, so I do. hardwired for some, but not all. like i said, the ass is were it's at. > However, I've never really known what's meant by the term > "nice ass"... I guess it's similar in that to some the "nice" means "huge" > and to others it doesn't. i have yet to see anything physically huge on a woman that is attractive. i think any guy who says he likes a rippling, gargantuan, multi-folding ass is a liar or has a queer obsession and probably a phobia or two. > I'm also not into feet, so I'll politely decline Eb's offer of discussing > his. feet are cool. get yer old lady to wash and then massage your feet. Or better yet do it for her first. and then have oral sex. it is a great combination. but of course oral sex goes well with lots of things. gSs ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 08:19:13 -0700 From: Tom Clark Subject: Re: Eb's Fourteen Toes and the big fat ass on 8/20/03 6:53 AM, gshell@metronet.com at gshell@metronet.com wrote: > On Tue, 19 Aug 2003, Rex.Broome wrote: >> gSg: >>>> And I don't think volume has anything to do with a "nice" set of tits. >> I don't recall anyone here saying they were fan of enormous breasts. > > and my statement didn't say that anyone here was a fan of enormous > breasts. but it seems like the majority of males worldwide are. do you > think most fegmen are on the apparently small list of men who do not > favor large breasts? I've always said that guys just like tits, and that's all there is to it. Big, small, whatever, as long as they're in our face. - -tc, who's a "complete package" guy ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 11:31:59 -0400 From: "Bachman, Michael" Subject: RE: me and Bustin' 40 from the 80's Nuppy wrote: >Well he does ya know. He may be 50, but he barely looks 40. I got the >Let's Active Afoot reissue. Damn good stuff. Not looking my age had some drawbacks when I was in my teens though! First pass at Bustin' 40 from the 80's. The Clash London Calling Peter Gabriel III( Melting Face) Young Marble Giants Collasal Youth Talking Heads Remain In Light B-52's Wild Planet Prince Dirty Mind The Pretenders The Pretenders X Wild Gift Dire Straits Making Movies Black Uhuru Red Elvis Costello Imperial Bedroom Bruse Springsteen Nebraska Kate Bush Dreamtime REM Murmur Richard and Linda Thompson Shoot Out The Lights Gang Of Four Songs of the Free Lou Reed The Blue Mask Au Pairs Sense and Sensuality Roxy Music Avalon Marshall Crenshaw Marshall Crenshaw Thomas Dolby The Golden Age of Wireless The Replacements Let It Be The Bangles All Over the Place Couteau Twins Treasure This Mortal Coil It'll End In Tears Emmylou Harris The Ballad of Sally Rose RH&TE Fegmania!(My intro to Robyn in 1985!) The Waterboys This Is The Sea Steve Earle Guitar Town Dwight Yoakam Guitars, Cadillacs, etc. XTC Skylarking Pixies Come On Pilgrim/Surfer Rosa (1988 cd) Throwing Muses Throwing Muses Everything But The Girl Idlewild The Go-Betweens 16 Lovers Lane Til Tuesday Everything's Different Now Wire A Bell Is A Cup...Until It Is Struck Cowboy Junkies Trinity Sessions Let's Active Afoot/Cypress (reissue 1989 cd) My Bloody Valentine Isn't Anything Michael Bachman ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 11:56:42 -0400 From: mary Subject: Big Favor - Mac folks (0%RH) I'm looking to buy a used Mac for work - mostly testing websites although I may be doing some video work on it as well. Unfortunately it's been many years since I've had a Mac in my possession so I'm not sure what is a good deal. Here's some links to used ones locally for sale. If any of you Mac folks have a moment, can you take a look at these links and tell me if any of these are a good deal? http://newyork.craigslist.org/brk/sys/15135406.html http://newyork.craigslist.org/brk/sys/15045981.html http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=2747601729&category=14912 http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=2747662947&category=14912 I really do appreciate your help. Thanks, s.Mary np - Djam Karat "Suspension and Displacement" ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 12:03:57 -0400 From: broadway jack Subject: Re: Michael Bachman rules the Universe RH 50% one time at band camp, Tom Clark (tclark@mac.com) said: >on 8/19/03 1:48 PM, Brian at nightshadecat@mailbolt.com wrote: >> I might have missed this, but it's on the museum's site. Anyone hear >> this?: >> Robyn, Guest DJ! >> >> Friday the 15th of August Robyn doing a guest DJ show on Resonance Radio, >> for their Clear Spot program. It will be a live broadcast from 7pm to >> 8.30pm and goes out live. They are at Resonance 104.4 FM and online at >> http://www.resonancefm.com >Dammit Woj! I could've ripped this had I known! yeah, yeah, yeah, so could have i! anyone manage to get it? +w ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 12:04:14 -0400 From: "ross taylor" Subject: Re: okay you started it... Since things seem slow-- Here's my 80s top 40, one title per act, just what I listened to on lp then, which keeps out Capt. Sensible, the Chills & Richard Thompson. I certainly heard lots of U2 & Cure, but didn't want to include Hits compilations, so no Staring at the Sea (or hits by Ian Drury & the Blockheads). Almost but not quite any Stranglers. Very geared to the early part of the decade, when I was still rediscovering pop & it was all more of an adventure. Really very predictable, & I guess this has kinda been covered by other recent threads. clash - london calling joy division - still pil - 2nd edition bowie - scary monsters xtc - black sea laurie anderson - mr. heartbreak thomas dolby - golden age of wireless (2nd version) talking heads - remain in light elvis costello - get happy eno/byrne - my life in the bush of ghosts rem - murmur gang of four - songs of the free tom verlaine - dreamtime psychedelic furs - talk talk talk magazine - magic, murder & the weather jonathan richman - jonathan sings feelies - crazy rhythms b-52s - wild planet shriekback - care polyrock - changing hearts db's - repercussion dream syndicate - days of wine & roses lyres - on fyre x - under the big black sun prince - 1999 new order - low life john cale - carribean sunset rh - element of light verlaines - hallelulia all the way home big audio dynamite - tighten up vol. 88 julian cope - st. julian smiths - louder than bombs john hiatt - bring the family band of susans - love agenda replacements - tim vulgar boatmen - you and your sister dinosaur jr. - you're living all over me sonic youth - daydream nation public enemy - it takes a nation of millions to hold us back lou reed - new york Ross Taylor "hit me with your rhythm stick! Hit me! Hit me! two fat nurses, click click click! Hit me! Hit me!" Need a new email address that people can remember Check out the new EudoraMail at http://www.eudoramail.com ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 09:30:58 -0700 From: Eb Subject: Re: Eb's Fourteen Toes and the big fat ass >but of course oral sex goes well with lots of things. Not sky-diving, though. >Kate Bush Dreamtime Oops...is the title or the artist a mistake? Eb ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 09:34:31 -0700 From: "Jason R. Thornton" Subject: Re: Paris in the 80s At 12:19 PM 8/20/2003 +1200, James Dignan wrote: >Okay, we've got Interpol, "the Postal Service", the Police, and an album >released on released on IRS. Definitely spotting a trend here! Huh. I wonder if it's because I'm dating a cop. >Okay - what were the rules last time? Top 40, limited to one per artist? >Here we go...(approximately alphabetically) Mine (same thing): 10,000 Maniacs - In My Tribe Bauhaus - Mask Bowie, David - Scary Monsters Budd, Harold - Lovely Thunder Chameleons, The - Strange Times Clash, The - Combat Rock (London Calling was Dec. 79, right?) Cocteau Twins - Head Over Heels Crowded House - Crowded House Cure, The - Pornography Duran Duran - Rio Echo & The Bunnymen - Ocean Rain Elvis Costello - Get Happy!! Eno, Brian - Apollo: Atmospheres & Soundtracks Gabriel, Peter - Security Hassell, Jon/Eno, Brian - Fourth World, Vol. 1: Possible Musics Hitchcock, Robyn - Element of Light Japan - Tin Drum Jesus & Mary Chain, The - Darklands Joy Division - Closer King Crimson - Discipline Love & Rockets - Earth.Sun.Moon Morrissey - Viva Hate New Order - Low-Life Nine Inch Nails - Pretty Hate Machine NWA - Straight Outta Compton Pixies, The - Doolittle Police, The - Zenyatta Mondatta Prince - Sign O' the Times Public Enemy - It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back REM - Reckoning Roxy Music - Avalon Smiths, The - The Queen is Dead Soft Boys, The - Underwater Moonlight Stone Roses, The - Stone Roses Sylvian, David - Secrets of the Beehive Talk Talk - The Colour of Spring Talking Heads - Remain in Light U2 - The Unforgettable Fire Wall of Voodoo - Call of the West XTC - English Settlement Honorable mentions: Depeche Mode - 101 (cuz I was there), Eno/Byrne - My Life in the Bush of Ghosts, Daniel Lanois - Acadie, Prince - The Black Album, Pet Shop Boys - Actually, Brian Eno/Harold Budd - Ambient 2: The Plateaux of Mirror, Brian Eno - Ambient 4: On Land - --Jason "Only the few know the sweetness of the twisted apples." - Sherwood Anderson ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 12:40:17 -0400 From: "Bachman, Michael" Subject: RE: Eb's Fourteen Toes and the big fat ass >Kate Bush Dreamtime Oops...is the title or the artist a mistake? That is an oops on my part. I meant The Dreaming. Michael ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 10:32:43 -0700 From: "Jason Brown \(Echo Services Inc\)" Subject: RE: me and Bustin' 40 from the 80's David Bowie - Let's Dance Billy Bragg - Worker's Play Time The Clash - Sandinista=20 Lloyd Cole & the Commotions - Rattlesnakes Elvis Costello & the Attractions - Get Happy!! Crowded House - Temple of the Lowmen Dinosaur Jr. - You're Living All Over Me Fastbacks - ...And His Orchestra Peter Gabriel - Melt The Go-Betweens - Before Hollywood Go-Go's - Vacation =20 Robyn Hitchcock & the Egyptians - Fegmania! Husker Du - Flip Your Wig Micheal Jackson - Thriller The Jam - Sound Affects Lyle Lovett Pontiac Nick Lowe - Nick The Knife Magazine - The Correct Use of Soap Paul McCartney - McCartney II Morrissey - Viva Hate Randy Newman - Trouble in Paradise Pixies - Surfer Rosa The Pogues Rum Sodomy & The Lash Prefab Sprout - Steve McQueen Prince - Sign O' The Times Public Enemy - It Takes a Nation of Millions To Hold Us Back REM - Life's Rich Pageant RUN DMC - Raising Hell Todd Rundgren - A Capella The Smiths - The Queen is Dead Split Enz - Time and Tide The Soft Boys - Underwater Moonlight=20 Squeeze - Frank The Style Council - Our Favourite Shop=20 Talking Heads - Remain In Light They Might Be Giants - Lincoln Tom Waits - Frank's Wild Years X - Los Angeles XTC - Mummer Young Fresh Fellows - The Men Who Loved Music ------------------------------ End of fegmaniax-digest V12 #313 ********************************