From: owner-good-noise-digest@smoe.org (good-noise-digest) To: good-noise-digest@smoe.org Subject: good-noise-digest V4 #154 Reply-To: good-noise@smoe.org Sender: owner-good-noise-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-good-noise-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk good-noise-digest Wednesday, September 19 2001 Volume 04 : Number 154 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Gorka Trivia [ThePsyche@aol.com] Re: Gorka Trivia [SMOKEY596@aol.com] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2001 23:18:13 EDT From: ThePsyche@aol.com Subject: Gorka Trivia Hello friends. Since the attack last week I have been in a place best described as "the land of the bottom line." I start trying get up and get on and I am able to do that for a while, but then the images and the sadness come flooding back. I took a ride today, a beautiful, clear September day, put the top down and turned the music up. I was listening to Gorka and in the process, discovered something that made me smile. Scrapple. What made me smile was that John was able to use that processed food product in not one, but two songs. In the song People My Age he writes, Back in Pennsylvania, I'd eat scrapple on toast... The question is, in what other song did John also use the word Scrapple? I hope this quirky little email finds you and yours at peace. Namaste, Bryn, the music junkie ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2001 23:25:08 EDT From: SMOKEY596@aol.com Subject: Re: Gorka Trivia >>>The question is, in what other song did John also use the word Scrapple?<<< Ah, very appropriately in "Promnight in Pigtown". "They bobbed for apples, all knowing soon they all could be scrapple". :-) I listened to Gorka today too. SMOKEY Atlantic Canada's Artists and Artisans www.gathering-of-artists.ca ------------------------------ End of good-noise-digest V4 #154 ********************************