From: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org (fegmaniax-digest) To: fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Subject: fegmaniax-digest V16 #787 Reply-To: fegmaniax@smoe.org Sender: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk fegmaniax-digest Tuesday, November 25 2008 Volume 16 : Number 787 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Re: Meanwhile, on some other planet (NR) [Jeff Dwarf ] Re: Winchester Threat [Rex ] Re: Philly show ["C. Huff" ] Re: Meanwhile, on some other planet (NR) ["kevin studyvin" ] Re: Bovine! Spongiform! Encephalopathy! ["(0% rh)" ] Re: Philly show [Carrie Galbraith ] Re: Philly show ["Stewart C. Russell" ] Re: Philly show [2fs ] Re: Philly show [craigie* ] Re: Philly show ["Stewart C. Russell" ] Re: Philly show ["edwardofsim@tiscali.co.uk" ] Re: Philly show ["kevin studyvin" ] Re: Philly show ["kevin studyvin" ] Re: Philly show ["Jeremy Osner" ] Re: Philly show [craigie* ] Re: Philly show [HwyCDRrev@aol.com] Re: Meanwhile, on some other planet (NR) [Tom Clark ] RE: Bovine! Spongiform! Encephalopathy! ["Nectar At Any Cost!" ] Re: Philly show [2fs ] Re: Philly show [The Great Quail ] RE: Philly show ["Bachman, Michael" ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 24 Nov 2008 20:33:29 -0800 (PST) From: Jeff Dwarf Subject: Re: Meanwhile, on some other planet (NR) Steve Schiavo wrote: > You owe me a new keyboard, I just projectile vomited blood all over mine. "I love how (coffee) makes me feel. It's like my heart is trying to hug my brain!" -- Kenneth Parcell ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Nov 2008 21:39:39 -0800 From: Rex Subject: Re: Philly show On Sun, Nov 23, 2008 at 5:04 PM, C. Huff wrote: > Next show I am unashamedly wearing a name tag! Tried to scout for you and > Lauren..but I was late and wolfing down my bourgeois asparagus lol > Wholeheartedly agree with your assesment of the night...I had a great time. > Wrote a little blog about it - http://blog.myspace.com/huffrock - > > Was spending the whole night wondering what Rex meant by "Greedo shoots > first" > and then I realized - he was mocking me! lol naughty Rex. Actually, not mocking you... I was just kind of riffing your use of the phrase "revisionist history", which I thought was pretty funny, and adding the George Lucas reference. I admit that I was so intrigued by the fact that you had a theory about what that meant in relation to the song that I just... kinda wanted to see what happened! Like if Robyn did just happen to change the song in a way that related to green bug-eyed bounty hunters on Tatooine, and you reported that back to us, then that would prove that there was a god or something. Which would be good to know, right? Rex... doesn't bite, wittily or otherwise! ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Nov 2008 21:48:32 -0800 From: Rex Subject: Re: Winchester Threat On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 6:05 AM, Jeremy Osner wrote: > ("Element of Light" is older than many people who are currently in > college!) > > Think about the line "I don't want to hurt you, but I will" -- I have > generally heard this as a threat, i.e. followed by an implicit "if I > have to..." But in moments of delirium (like e.g. this morning driving > to work), I hear it as a cri de coeur -- "I will" because I am > powerless to avert my fate kinda thing. I think Robyn's persona in > that song is more compatible with the first interpretation, but > interesting to think about both and how they intersect/overlap. It's a great line, one of those things that sounds offhand but turns out to be lyrical origami. I hear it going even a little bit further... the character is not just fated to hurt you, he knows he's prone to that kind of thing, and probably could do something to prevent it but is unlikely to bother. It's kind of like you're looking at the character from seven or eight perspectives in that line alone. I've had the line about Paul stuck in my head for a few weeks now, for some reason. It follows me around the vaults when I'm looking for old videotapes and stuff. Dunno why. - -Rex > > > Something interesting about Element of Light -- I think of IODOT as a > concept album, although I'm not able to identify the "concept" -- I > know there is a narrative/thematic thread linking the songs, if I were > only capable of teasing it out. But EOL is emphatically not such a > record; each song is very distinctly itself and the only connection > between them is the sound. If I were asked to name the > "characteristic" track of EOL, chances are fairly even I would say "If > You Were a Priest", "Winchester", "Somewhere Apart", "Raymond Chandler > Evening", "Bass", or "Lady Waters and the Hooded One." (Note about > "Somewhere Apart" for those of you who were talking recently about > John Lennon tunes not written by John Lennon: We were listening to EOL > the other night and Ellen, who is a Beatlemaniac but not familiar with > Robyn's oeuvre, said "Wow, this sounds just like John Lennon" when > "Somewhere Apart" came on.) > > J > > If we do not say all words, however absurd, we will never say the > essential words. -- Josi Saramago > http://www.readin.com/blog/ ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Nov 2008 21:59:45 -0800 (PST) From: "C. Huff" Subject: Re: Philly show hahaha! no worries...there was indeed a god that surfaced at the show during Sounds Great When You're Dead, and I believe his name was Lou Reed. Though not there in the flesh, certainly in spirit... it was funny b/c when they played the song you had mentioned (This Could Be The Day) it sounded letter perfect like the album. My theory was that you were tipping me off that it was going to be completely different...a re-make re-model if you will. So no revisionist history there...he did "skip" F.G.Atom Bowl and did that little cassette thing with Pretty Girl...but besides that I would have to say that Greedo was killed, the Millenium Falcon saved Luke from Vader, and the Death Star did indeed destroy Alderaan. If there had been a Star Wars ref in one of the song intros though...that would have been great lol - sad to say it did not happen.... - --- On Tue, 11/25/08, Rex wrote: From: Rex Subject: Re: Philly show To: "C. Huff" Cc: djini@voicenet.com, fegmaniax@smoe.org Date: Tuesday, November 25, 2008, 12:39 AM On Sun, Nov 23, 2008 at 5:04 PM, C. Huff wrote: Next show I am unashamedly wearing a name tag! Tried to scout for you and Lauren..but I was late and wolfing down my bourgeois asparagus lol Wholeheartedly agree with your assesment of the night...I had a great time. Wrote a little blog about it - http://blog.myspace.com/huffrock - Was spending the whole night wondering what Rex meant by "Greedo shoots first" and then I realized - he was mocking me! lol naughty Rex. Actually, not mocking you... I was just kind of riffing your use of the phrase "revisionist history", which I thought was pretty funny, and adding the George Lucas reference. I admit that I was so intrigued by the fact that you had a theory about what that meant in relation to the song that I just... kinda wanted to see what happened! Like if Robyn did just happen to change the song in a way that related to green bug-eyed bounty hunters on Tatooine, and you reported that back to us, then that would prove that there was a god or something. Which would be good to know, right? Rex... doesn't bite, wittily or otherwise! ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Nov 2008 22:27:29 -0800 From: "kevin studyvin" Subject: Re: Meanwhile, on some other planet (NR) Jeez, I kept waiting for the punchline. Then I realized it's the 2012 election. On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 7:04 PM, Steve Schiavo wrote: > > > > > - Steve > __________ > I can't resist an anime that includes a small, cute, violence prone girl > with a scythe. - John > > ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Nov 2008 22:34:44 -0800 From: "kevin studyvin" Subject: Re: Winchester Threat On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 9:48 PM, Rex wrote: > > > Think about the line "I don't want to hurt you, but I will" -- I have > > generally heard this as a threat, i.e. followed by an implicit "if I > > have to..." But in moments of delirium (like e.g. this morning driving > > to work), I hear it as a cri de coeur -- "I will" because I am > > powerless to avert my fate kinda thing. I think Robyn's persona in > > that song is more compatible with the first interpretation, but > > interesting to think about both and how they intersect/overlap. > > > It's a great line, one of those things that sounds offhand but turns out to > be lyrical origami. I hear it going even a little bit further... the > character is not just fated to hurt you, he knows he's prone to that kind > of > thing, and probably could do something to prevent it but is unlikely to > bother. It's kind of like you're looking at the character from seven or > eight perspectives in that line alone. > > Or, the narrator is speaking to you in present time about things that happened in the past, so the inevitability lies in the fact that the events have already happened and when he says "I don't wanna hurt you, but I will" the implication is "because I did." The way the song creates an atmosphere of way-late-at-night stillness has always impressed me. Big Element Of Light fan. Your Airscape, your Raymond Chandler Evening, don't get me started about The President... ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 03:46:48 -0500 From: "(0% rh)" Subject: Re: Bovine! Spongiform! Encephalopathy! Nectar At Any Cost! says: > tempted to say this conversation could be taken offlist at this point. > but, what the hell: ever'body enjoys a good cinema back-and-forth, right? (well, why should i start heeding the "OFFLIST!" calls *now*?) > their walk in union square, i.e. i never really thought about the walk and > caul's recording of it as being a set up by the willams' character and the > guy she was having the affair with (i just took it to be this way - i don't > know that it couldn't be argued to be the case.)> > > huhn. my reading is that it was the latter (specifically, that they hired > harrison ford to hire somebody to "spy" on them) -- otherwise, how would > they have known that robert duvall would show up at the hotel room? i definitely took the harrison ford character to be in on the setup, but that the couple didn't know they had been recorded until after the fact, and that was when the specific plan (i.e. where the murder would take place) was set. i would have to watch it to check, but i know there's a point where they discuss the hotel room, and, at the time of the conversation, i thought they were just planning to meet there for more loving and more scheming. > strong movie ("the conversation" i see very much as a character study.)> > > fair enough. i kind of take it on a case-by-case basis. > > like, on the *Miller's Crossing* laserdisc jacket, great pains are taken to > explain how intricately perfect the plot is (even that the coens developed > such a horrible case of writers' block during the writing of the screenplay > that they shelved it to write *Barton Fink*, and then came back to it) -- > even though it's far from the case. so, boo on them. i still haven't made it through my planned second viewing of "miller's crossing" - way too much plot for me (i tend to like movies where nothing much happens, or at least it doesn't much matter what happens.) (N.B. perhaps this is explained somewhat by my most-recent myers-briggs test: my "N" vs. "S" answers were 100% "N".) > egoyan's that i've heard, i'm curious whether you find that particular one > annoying.> (did he just un-[sic] my "sweet hereafter"?!) > can't recall. possibly not. what i find particularly annoying, in > general, is when he spells out the symbolism and subtext and whatnot, as > though the viewer were three months old and hadn't been able to grasp the > profundities. and, hey, i'm not saying he doesn't walk the talk. just > that i don't need to be condescended to, even by a masterful director. i'll have to pay attention to your comments next time i listen to it. i had differed with egoyan in interpretations of several of the events in the movie, so i found his comments interesting in offering some other views. also, i liked hearing his comments on the pied piper thread (which i don't believe was in the book) - it was one of the few aspects of the movie that i felt was somewhat of a misfire. as ever, lauren - -- "people with opinions just go around bothering one another." -- the buddha ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 04:00:40 -0500 From: "(0% rh)" Subject: Re: Winchester Threat Jeremy says: > Think about the line "I don't want to hurt you, but I will" -- I have > generally heard this as a threat, i.e. followed by an implicit "if I > have to..." But in moments of delirium (like e.g. this morning driving > to work), I hear it as a cri de coeur -- "I will" because I am > powerless to avert my fate kinda thing. i always took it the latter. i've always loved how the sentiment in that line rises again in "raymond chandler evening": "i'd like to reassure you / but i'm not that kind of guy." i do find the "winchester" line much more sinister, but that's probably because i find the "raymond chandler evening" line so funny that it (i.e. the line) loses its potential for darkness. as ever, lauren - -- "people with opinions just go around bothering one another." -- the buddha ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 01:36:19 -0800 From: Carrie Galbraith Subject: Re: Philly show On Nov 24, 2008, at 9:59 PM, C. Huff wrote: > hahaha! no worries...there was indeed a god that surfaced at the > show during > Sounds Great When You're Dead, and I believe his name was Lou > Reed. Though > not there in the flesh, certainly in spirit... > > it was funny b/c when they played the song you had mentioned (This > Could Be > The Day) it sounded letter perfect like the album. My theory was > that you > were tipping me off that it was going to be completely > different...a re-make > re-model if you will. > > So no revisionist history there...he did "skip" F.G.Atom Bowl and > did that > little cassette thing with Pretty Girl...but besides that I would > have to say > that Greedo was killed, the Millenium Falcon saved Luke from Vader, > and the > Death Star did indeed destroy Alderaan. > > If there had been a Star Wars ref in one of the song intros > though...that > would have been great lol - sad to say it did not happen.... > So am I the only person in the world to have never seen Star Wars or any of the other affiliate movies? Because aside from causing my friends to have extreme anxiety over my dismissal of these movies, I realize I have missed decades of cultural references. Of course the same holds true for anything Indiana Jones or Jurassic Park or SNL or Simpsons or... - - carrie, who can't explain how she became the Buffy fan, the carriester ps: So any explanation in any interview why FGAB was excluded from the tour? ************************************** Questions are a burden for others. Answers are a prison for oneself. ************************************** ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 07:33:38 -0500 From: "Stewart C. Russell" Subject: Re: Philly show Carrie Galbraith wrote: > > So am I the only person in the world to have never seen Star Wars or > any of the other affiliate movies? Nope; I thought *I* was. > ps: So any explanation in any interview why FGAB was excluded from > the tour? There was (likely still is) a Scottish fan who hollers for FGAB at every show. Most times Robyn ignores him. A couple of times he's quite pointedly said that he doesn't play it any more. Stewart ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 06:55:37 -0600 From: 2fs Subject: Re: Philly show On 11/25/08, Stewart C. Russell wrote: > > > > There was (likely still is) a Scottish fan who hollers for FGAB at every > show. Most times Robyn ignores him. A couple of times he's quite > pointedly said that he doesn't play it any more. See, this is the sort of thing that, if a Simpsons writer were a feg, would be a little one-second gag...some sort of concert scene or something vaguely appropriate (or not), Groundskeeper Willie would call out at one point, "Play 'Furry Green Atom Bowl'!"... I think this should be a new all-purpose pointless thing: yelling about FGAB in a faux-Scots accent. - -- ...Jeff Norman The Architectural Dance Society http://spanghew.blogspot.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 13:13:58 +0000 From: craigie* Subject: Re: Philly show but surely, the point with performing an album 'in its entirety' is just that - you don't just miss some songs out because you don't like them any more. I magine if he started that with the records... "Oh, yes this CD is two songs shorter because I don't like those songs anymore..." Revisionism is what it is! c* (pointedly ignoring the fact that he himself has made edited versions of some albums for his own benefit. Well, no one likes Revolution 9 *really* do they?) On 25/11/2008, Stewart C. Russell wrote: > > Carrie Galbraith wrote: > > > > So am I the only person in the world to have never seen Star Wars or > > any of the other affiliate movies? > > Nope; I thought *I* was. > > > ps: So any explanation in any interview why FGAB was excluded from > > the tour? > > There was (likely still is) a Scottish fan who hollers for FGAB at every > show. Most times Robyn ignores him. A couple of times he's quite > pointedly said that he doesn't play it any more. > > Stewart > - -- first things first, but not necessarily in that order... I like my girls to be the same as my records - independent, attractively packaged and in black vinyl (if at all possible)... Sic gorgiamus allos subjectatos nunc (the motto of the Addams Family: "We gladly feast on those who would subdue us") ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 08:26:15 -0500 From: "Stewart C. Russell" Subject: Re: Philly show 2fs wrote: > > I think this should be a new all-purpose pointless thing: yelling about > FGAB in a faux-Scots accent. how about a real one? There are enough of us around. cheers, Stewart ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 14:28:55 +0100 (GMT+01:00) From: "edwardofsim@tiscali.co.uk" Subject: Re: Philly show craigie@gmail.com said: >(pointedly ignoring the fact that he himself has made edited versions of >some albums for his own benefit. Well, no one likes Revolution 9 *really* >do they?) I guess I'll have to hold my hand up to adoring Rev 9. So many things in it are so memorable, and quotable, for one thing. "The Watusi. The Twist." "El Dorado." And "Everyone knew that as time went by they'd get a little bit older and a little bit slower." That sort of thing. Plus, there are some moments of almost King-Crimsonesque genuine intensity bordering on dread. Love Revolution 9. Although I grant it's difficult to hum. I've never wished the Beatles had made a whole album of stuff like this, but I wouldn't be without it! peace, Edward Tiscali House and Garden, Food and Drink and Dating tips and services - http://www.tiscali.co.uk/lifestyle/ __________________________________________________________ ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 05:48:26 -0800 From: "kevin studyvin" Subject: Re: Philly show On Tue, Nov 25, 2008 at 5:28 AM, edwardofsim@tiscali.co.uk < edwardofsim@tiscali.co.uk> wrote: > craigie@gmail.com said: > >(pointedly ignoring the fact that he himself has made edited versions > of > >some albums for his own benefit. Well, no one likes Revolution 9 > *really* > >do they?) > > I guess I'll have to hold my hand up to adoring Rev 9. So many things > in it are so memorable, and quotable, for one thing. "The Watusi. The > Twist." "El Dorado." And "Everyone knew that as time went by they'd > get a little bit older and a little bit slower." That sort of thing. > Plus, there are some moments of almost King-Crimsonesque genuine > intensity bordering on dread. Love Revolution 9. Although I grant it's > difficult to hum. I've never wished the Beatles had made a whole album > of stuff like this, but I wouldn't be without it! > Uh huh, Ich auch. Love the old fifties-school musique concrete kind of stuff. Particularly charming example here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bEShy2QIj4U "wireless fantasy" by vladimir ussachevsky, founder of the columbia-princeton electronic music lab back in the last century... ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 05:57:59 -0800 From: "kevin studyvin" Subject: Re: Philly show > See, this is the sort of thing that, if a Simpsons writer were a feg, would > be a little one-second gag...some sort of concert scene or something > vaguely > appropriate (or not), Groundskeeper Willie would call out at one point, > "Play 'Furry Green Atom Bowl'!"... > > I think this should be a new all-purpose pointless thing: yelling about > FGAB > in a faux-Scots accent. > Mindless, pointless musical heckling is an honored tradition in rock'n'roll history. Before the Lord gave us "Free Bird" there was always some nitwit at every concert in the world hollering out "Whipping Post" from the back of the hall - as documented in Zappa's Helsinki Concert set (that's Finland, y'all), which prompted him to make his bands learn it so they could whip it out at will. I'll occasionally amuse myself by requesting "Louie Louie" (hey, it's our unofficial state song); I earned a nasty glare from John Fahey that way once. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 09:09:43 -0500 From: "Jeremy Osner" Subject: Re: Philly show On Tue, Nov 25, 2008 at 8:57 AM, kevin studyvin wrote: >> appropriate (or not), Groundskeeper Willie would call out at one point, >> "Play 'Furry Green Atom Bowl'!"... This has me laughing and laughing. > Mindless, pointless musical heckling is an honored tradition in rock'n'roll > history. It has a place certainly; the story about a woman calling out "Vegetable Something!" at the Chicago (?) show made me smile. But I hate to this day the jerk who kept calling out "Play Embryonic Fuckin Journey!" at the Jorma Kaukonen show I went to several years back. A real buzz-killer. If we do not say all words, however absurd, we will never say the essential words. -- Josi Saramago http://www.readin.com/blog/ ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 14:45:27 +0000 From: craigie* Subject: Re: Philly show And - for any who attended Manchester (UK) shows in the 70's - may I say just one thing. WALLY!!!!! c* On 25/11/2008, Jeremy Osner wrote: > > On Tue, Nov 25, 2008 at 8:57 AM, kevin studyvin > wrote: > >> appropriate (or not), Groundskeeper Willie would call out at one point, > >> "Play 'Furry Green Atom Bowl'!"... > > This has me laughing and laughing. > > > Mindless, pointless musical heckling is an honored tradition in > rock'n'roll > > history. > > It has a place certainly; the story about a woman calling out > "Vegetable Something!" at the Chicago (?) show made me smile. But I > hate to this day the jerk who kept calling out "Play Embryonic Fuckin > Journey!" at the Jorma Kaukonen show I went to several years back. A > real buzz-killer. > > If we do not say all words, however absurd, we will never say the > essential words. -- Josi Saramago > http://www.readin.com/blog/ > - -- first things first, but not necessarily in that order... I like my girls to be the same as my records - independent, attractively packaged and in black vinyl (if at all possible)... Sic gorgiamus allos subjectatos nunc (the motto of the Addams Family: "We gladly feast on those who would subdue us") ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 10:32:15 EST From: HwyCDRrev@aol.com Subject: Re: Philly show me too ! "you get naked" "hold that line, block that kick" "aaaalllllllll rrrriiiiiiigggggggghhhhhttttt" the best of it's ilk . . RH did a great version (with laptops, i believe) when he performed the entire WHITE ALBUM my blog is "Yer Blog" http://fab4yerblog.blogspot.com/ http://robotsarestealingmyluggage.blogspot.com/ In a message dated 11/25/2008 8:38:52 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, edwardofsim@tiscali.co.uk writes: I guess I'll have to hold my hand up to adoring Rev 9. So many things in it are so memorable, and quotable, for one thing. "The Watusi. The Twist." "El Dorado." And "Everyone knew that as time went by they'd get a little bit older and a little bit slower." **************One site has it all. Your email accounts, your social networks, and the things you love. Try the new AOL.com today!(http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100000075x1212962939x1200825291/aol?redir=http://www.aol.com/?optin=new-dp %26icid=aolcom40vanity%26ncid=emlcntaolcom00000001) ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 08:24:14 -0800 From: Tom Clark Subject: Re: Meanwhile, on some other planet (NR) On Nov 24, 2008, at 7:04 PM, Steve Schiavo wrote: > I'm just waiting for the video rebuttals. Headless turkeys maybe? - -tc ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 10:44:28 -0800 From: "Nectar At Any Cost!" Subject: RE: Bovine! Spongiform! Encephalopathy! more or less. but let me watch it again, and then get back to you. might be a few, as the library just sent me the best thanksgivin' gift a lad ever did see: vol. 6 of the *Family Guy*. can i get a "fuck yeah!"? fuck yeah! just picked this up from the library as well, on your recommendation. the movie is on the first disc, the bonus materials are on the second disc. so, no choppage. theoretically, quality *is* compromised by putting more than two hours on a single dual-layer disc. but it's not really noticeable until you get up to around four hours -- and even *then* it's still not bad (worse, though, the larger your screen is). most commercial DVDs use far less that the maximum possible bitrate; though you'll note that many criterion titles bear a little notice stating that the film was encoded at the maximum possible bitrate *for the quantity of material included*. in other words, they filled the DVD all the way up; but the actual bitrate used was dependent upon the length of the feature, and the amount of bonus material, and the various audio streams (or what). ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 12:37:02 -0800 (PST) From: Jeff Dwarf Subject: Re: Philly show edwardofsim@tiscali.co.uk wrote: > craigie@gmail.com said: >> (pointedly ignoring the fact that he himself has made edited versions >> of some albums for his own benefit. Well, no one likes Revolution 9 >> *really* do they?) > > I guess I'll have to hold my hand up to adoring Rev 9. So many things > in it are so memorable, and quotable, for one thing. "The Watusi. The > Twist." "El Dorado." And "Everyone knew that as time went by they'd > get a little bit older and a little bit slower." That sort of thing. > Plus, there are some moments of almost King-Crimsonesque genuine > intensity bordering on dread. Love Revolution 9. Although I grant it's > difficult to hum. I've never wished the Beatles had made a whole album > of stuff like this, but I wouldn't be without it! Well, it's better than "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da." Not much better, but better. "I love how (coffee) makes me feel. It's like my heart is trying to hug my brain!" -- Kenneth Parcell ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 15:23:43 -0600 From: 2fs Subject: Re: Philly show On 11/25/08, Stewart C. Russell wrote: > > 2fs wrote: > > > > I think this should be a new all-purpose pointless thing: yelling about > > FGAB in a faux-Scots accent. > > > how about a real one? There are enough of us around. > You heard it here first, folks. Scots are everywhere! Why, there may be one living next door to you, working down the hall from you, fixing your car...creeping around your rosebushes...hiding under your bed and poisoning your meatballs! Scots! The new menace. - -- ...Jeff Norman The Architectural Dance Society http://spanghew.blogspot.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 15:47:44 -0500 From: The Great Quail Subject: Re: Philly show > (pointedly ignoring the fact that he himself has made edited versions of > some albums for his own benefit. Well, no one likes Revolution 9 *really* > do they?) Well... Yes! Let me add a "I like it too" post. - --Q ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 16:53:50 -0500 From: "Bachman, Michael" Subject: RE: Philly show - -----Original Message----- From: owner-fegmaniax@smoe.org [mailto:owner-fegmaniax@smoe.org] On Behalf Of The Great Quail Sent: Tuesday, November 25, 2008 3:48 PM To: Fegmaniax! Subject: Re: Philly show >> (pointedly ignoring the fact that he himself has made edited versions >> of some albums for his own benefit. Well, no one likes Revolution 9 >> *really* do they?) >Well... Yes! Let me add a "I like it too" post. I remember spinning my older sisters vinyl copy of the White Album backwards in 1970 trying to catch all the "Paul is dead" references in Revolution 9! Michael B. ------------------------------ End of fegmaniax-digest V16 #787 ********************************