From: owner-idealcopy-digest@smoe.org (idealcopy-digest) To: idealcopy-digest@smoe.org Subject: idealcopy-digest V5 #311 Reply-To: idealcopy@smoe.org Sender: owner-idealcopy-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-idealcopy-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk idealcopy-digest Sunday, September 15 2002 Volume 05 : Number 311 Today's Subjects: ----------------- RE: [idealcopy] R&B Poll ["Andrew Lumbard" ] Re: [idealcopy] R&B Poll ["Keith Knight" ] [idealcopy] Fw: BBC glam discovery ["Keith Knight" ] Re: [idealcopy] Re: idealcopy-digest V5 #308 [] [idealcopy] chicago now! and toronto tomorrow [Rain19c@aol.com] Re: [idealcopy] chicago now! and toronto tomorrow [rayographique ] Re: [idealcopy] Re: idealcopy-digest V5 #308 ["Steve Loubert" ] [idealcopy] ExITS ["Bill Hick" ] [idealcopy] Heavy Rotation ["Bill Hick" ] Re: [idealcopy] Heavy Rotation ["dan bailey" ] Re: [idealcopy] Heavy Rotation ["dan bailey" ] Re: [idealcopy] Heavy Rotation [rayographique ] Re: [idealcopy] Section(ed) ["Gary Owens" ] [idealcopy] R&B02 Review ["Keith Astbury" ] Re: [idealcopy] R&B02 Review [Andrew Walkingshaw ] Re: [idealcopy] ExITS [Andrew Walkingshaw ] Re: [idealcopy] Section(ed) [rayographique ] Re: [idealcopy] Section(ed) [MarkBursa@aol.com] [idealcopy] Chicago - if you leave here now ["Keith Astbury" ] Re: [idealcopy] R&B02 Review [Bart van Damme ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 10:27:43 +0100 From: "Andrew Lumbard" Subject: RE: [idealcopy] R&B Poll >> Personally speaking, I'd be quite happy if Wire just kept releasing >> 20-minute R&Bs every 6 months ;-) >> >> Mark ....with the occasional gig every couple of months dotted around the country. Just Perfect. AndyL ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 10:31:13 +0100 From: "Keith Knight" Subject: Re: [idealcopy] R&B Poll Absolutely agree Bart - Comet has to be there. another the Keith - ----- Original Message ----- From: Bart van Damme To: wire-news Sent: Friday, September 13, 2002 9:39 PM Subject: Re: [idealcopy] R&B Poll > Aaaaw c'mon Mark... No Comet? > > I'd say they make it a double cd and put all R&B's on it. > > Bart [freaking out on Spent as I type] > > PS I haven't heard Mr Marx's Table yet > > > > > So it looks like this .... > > > > 1 99.9 > > 2 I don't understand > > 3 > > 4 > > 5 Germ Ship > > 6 > > 7 Agfers of Kodack > > > > 8 Spent > > 9 Mr Marx's Table > > 10 Trash/Treasure > > 11 > > 12 > > 13 > > 14 In the art of stopping ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 10:38:58 +0100 From: "Keith Knight" Subject: [idealcopy] Fw: BBC glam discovery The BBC have found old Top of the Pops tapes from the early 70s - info here: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/music/2251425.stm Should make Mr Astbury happy at least. And talking of AWOL listers, where's Bill gone? another the Keith ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 03:48:14 -0700 (PDT) From: rayographique Subject: RE: [idealcopy] R&B Poll - --- Andrew Lumbard wrote: > >> Personally speaking, I'd be quite happy if Wire > just kept releasing > >> 20-minute R&Bs every 6 months ;-) > >> > >> Mark > ....with the occasional gig every couple of months > dotted around the world (thank you) > country. > Just Perfect. > > AndyL Yahoo! News - Today's headlines http://news.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 08:04:36 -0400 From: Subject: Re: [idealcopy] Re: idealcopy-digest V5 #308 On Fri, 13 Sep 2002 20:22:22 -0700 Thom Heileson wrote: > Hey, I wonder if I was that guy in the beverage > queue..? Sounds like I fit > the description... Anyway the last song in > question was a beautiful bracing > version of "Reuters" track 1 side 2 off the > Pink Flag LP I believe. "Reuters" is track one side one, and if it was "Reuters" instead of its first cousin "Pink Flag," it'd be a Wire Mk. III first. If you're mistaken, you can take solace in that no less a personage than Griel Marcus made the same misidentification in his review of the 2000 Great American Music Hall show, where he also imagined he heard "Dot Dash" and went on to namecheck a third song that wasn't played. :-) later, Miles ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 11:16:32 EDT From: Rain19c@aol.com Subject: [idealcopy] chicago now! and toronto tomorrow i'll be there - can't wait! i'll be the yongg one in black, i guess ~michael ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 09:16:21 -0700 (PDT) From: rayographique Subject: Re: [idealcopy] chicago now! and toronto tomorrow - --- Rain19c@aol.com wrote: > i'll be there - can't wait! > i'll be the yongg one in black, i guess thanks - that will simplify matters ^)^ > ~michael Yahoo! News - Today's headlines http://news.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 10:06:24 -0700 (PDT) From: Ari Britt Subject: Re: [idealcopy] Big Takeover 51 taking shape etc/pt.1.759 And for those interested in the 2 yr Wire interview,they often have back copies available..Ari MarkBursa@aol.com wrote:To keep Ari's helpful post on topic (if you couldn't be arsed to read about Jack Rabid's various musical enterprises....) >>Here9s the roster of scheduled interviews for the issue so far, in addition to Westerberg: WIRE, Flaming Lips, Nuggets stars Barry & the Remains, Midnight Oil, Kim Salmon of The Scientists, Promise Ring, Piebald, Interpol, Saddle Creek Records, Superdrag, Pere Ubu, Savage Republic returns, Swevedriver9s Adam Franklin, Hot Snakes, , Ken Stringfellow (solo and Posies), Sleater-Kinney, Hot Hot Heat, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Mary Timony (ex-Helium), Jim O9Rourke, Warlocks, 16 Horsepower, TV Smith of The Adverts, Gillian Welch, Sarah Shannon (ex-Velocity Girl), Mission of Burma part two, Social Distortion9s Mike Ness, part two, Mike Watt part two, Australia9s Citadel Records, producer Brad Jones, and more. Should be another 300-page blockbuster! [for more info: www.bigtakeover.com]<< The last Wire interview 2 years ago was a good one, so should be worth hunting down the mag. Mark Shriek at the world and the world shrieksback http://www.shriekback.com Yahoo! News - Today's headlines ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 12:19:47 -0500 From: "Steve Loubert" Subject: [idealcopy] Minneapolis Show My notes from the show last night: The opening act was TVBC, who I had never heard before. They are an instrumental three-piece playing music that plowed the ground between experimental rock and noodly jazz music. I liked the more rock-type stuff, whereas the noodles . . . The Wire show was pretty much as previous show reviewers have described it, same setlist as everywhere else - encore 1 advantage & lowdown, encore 2 a long version of pink flag. Colin came out for 99.9 waving the lyrics sheet around, and obviously reading them. I wonder why, since there aren't really too many lyrics in that song. Is he making some kind of statement? It implies that they aren't really prepared to play, an implication that is blown away by the force of the rest of the show. Maybe it's to tweak the people who expect some kind of geezer reunion, where the first song is some old guy reading lyrics while a tape plays in the background. Is it maybe some kind of postmodern artistic thing? Or am I trying too hard to create deeper meaning where none exists? Colin's guitar strap came off a couple of times while he was jumping around. Graham at first seemed in a trance, powerful repetitive rhythms and all, then later (especially on spent) became the scary intense character we know and love. His singing on Agfers was very strong. He was plagued by amp problems - high frequency feedback came shrieking out of his setup several times. Bruce, facing Robert the whole time, was wrenching amazing sounds from his guitar. Spent - Colin was less obviously reading lyrics on the floor in front of him. This is one of my less favorite songs on R&B02, but in concert it made me want to run away screaming, and that's a GOOD thing. Amazing, intense, scary. R&B02 ($10) and t-shirts ($12) on sale. I bought a t-shirt. I actually like the simple design. Overall, it was as good as I expected. Colin seemed to be more animated than I remember from the Metro show two years ago. The new songs are just flat-out monsters live. The band looks more comfortable onstage. And I didn't have to fly to Chicago to see them! Of course, if I left right now, I could probably get there in time . . . ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 12:32:20 -0500 From: "Steve Loubert" Subject: Re: [idealcopy] Re: idealcopy-digest V5 #308 Miles wrote: > On Fri, 13 Sep 2002 20:22:22 -0700 Thom Heileson wrote: > > Hey, I wonder if I was that guy in the beverage > > queue..? Sounds like I fit > > the description... Anyway the last song in > > question was a beautiful bracing > > version of "Reuters" track 1 side 2 off the > > Pink Flag LP I believe. > > "Reuters" is track one side one, and if it was "Reuters" instead of its first > cousin "Pink Flag," it'd be a Wire Mk. III first. If you're mistaken, you can > take solace in that no less a personage than Griel Marcus made the same > misidentification in his review of the 2000 Great American Music Hall show, > where he also imagined he heard "Dot Dash" and went on to namecheck a third > song that wasn't played. :-) Reuters for Pink Flag I can see. But how could anyone confuse anything else with Dot Dash? Although now that I've said that, the new Wire will probably start playing a version that completely omits the signature two-note riff. ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 10:39:38 -0700 From: "Paul Pietromonaco" Subject: Last Song in Seattle (was Re: [idealcopy] Re: idealcopy-digest V5 #308) > Drillingly bracing, enough so to make me state afterward that Reuters is the > new Drill. Well, in Seattle and Portlandia, anyway. Brilliant shows both! > (Kudos and thanks to the boys in the band if they are lookening in) > Hiya! I was at the Seattle show and Wire did not play Reuters that night. The final song was Pink Flag - but with the "The Third Day/It's All In The Brochure" arrangement. It is drillingly bracing, though (^_^) Cheers, Paul ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 10:47:59 -0700 From: "Paul Pietromonaco" Subject: Re: [idealcopy] the ideal copy > I think > that is why they cancelled the show with Erasure. I ended up going to the Erasure show in Seattle because our local radio station still thought Wire was opening. The show was sold out, but I went to the ticket window, and they had just opened up some seats at the very front of the Coliseum (now called the Key Arena). I had never been so excited in my life. As you can imagine, my joy turned to despair quite rapidly when they opening act walked out. It was a former back-up dancer of Madonna who was pushing a single called "The Cowboy Dance". Then I had to sit through the entire Erasure show (which was actually okay - - nice props!) stuck next to an amplifier array. I was pretty much deaf in my left ear for the rest of the night. Oh the horror! Cheers, Paul ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 18:41:05 +0100 From: "Bill Hick" Subject: [idealcopy] ExITS Witnessed in performance last Thursday in Glasgow: Texan band Explosions in the Sky www.explosionsinthesky.com 2 gtr, bs, drums, no vox They play dynamic and highly emotive instrumental rock, rising from pin drop calm to climactic tornado crescendos. They will very likely appeal to fans of Godspeed and Mogwai. Much of the set was new material in a similar vein to their second album. On a happy day on which I found out shiteband Blur split up, it was good to spot that Mogwai guitarist in a duffle coat out at a gig. Apparently he writes a column for Glasgow's listings mag. About 40 people were present, and at the end it seemed like almost everyone bought an album. This seems to indicate that everyone enjoyed Explosions a lot. On Friday they went off to Ireland and return to the UK on Monday to play the Star and Garter in Manchester, and then on to London. For more information on Explosions in the Sky follow the links on the front page of my website. If you can't make the gig but would like to get a copy of their album, try ordering from www.normanrecords.com Cracked Machine Highly Irregular Cyberzine http://www.webinfo.co.uk/crackedmachine ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 18:50:44 +0100 From: "Bill Hick" Subject: [idealcopy] Heavy Rotation WIRE ~ Read and Burn 02 Godspeed You Black Emperor! - Yanqui U.X.O. Xinlisupreme - Murder Licence Faust - I can, u 2? Noxagt - Noxagt Dalek - Spiritual Healing Phantomsmasher - Phantomsmasher Empty House Co-Operative - Live on Pipeline Empty House Co-Operative - Full Length For Fancy Flaming Lips - Finally the punk rockers are taking acid Flaming Lips - The Day they shot a hole in the Jesus Egg Philip Jeck & Jacob Kirkegaard - Soaked Fly Pan Am - Ceux Qui... Anton Nikkila - White Nights Coh - Mask of Birth Komet & Bovine Life - Reciprocess 01 Giddy Motors - Make It Pop Windsor For The Derby - The Emotional Rescue LP Strewth compilation Jonathan Coleclough - Cake Sonic Youth - Murray Street Breeders - Title TK Cracked Machine Highly Irregular Cyberzine http://www.webinfo.co.uk/crackedmachine "So the other day I was talking to Michael Stipe..." ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 13:13:16 -0500 From: "dan bailey" Subject: Re: [idealcopy] Heavy Rotation >WIRE ~ Read and Burn 02 a week & waiting for my copy ... damned postal service. >Flaming Lips - Finally the punk rockers are taking acid >Flaming Lips - The Day they shot a hole in the Jesus Egg any thoughts on their new one, which i looked over yesterday before passing? mind you, i finally picked up soft bulletin a couple of months ago & still haven't gotten around to playing it. only song of theirs that's ever blown me out the window was jesus shooting heroin, but perhaps i can't get over the memory of them playing the hole-in-the-wall club back home every few months (not that, as a permanent night-shift worker back then, i ever caught them). >Sonic Youth - Murray Street made no real impression on me. was hoping for at least a re-evocation of the likes of jet set (which come to think of it didn't do a whole lot for me during my recent automotive marathon ... i was much more taken, jaded old elo/afos-loving punk than i am, with the tape i'd cobbled together years ago from ancient scottish anarchos political asylum's fresh hate, walls have ears & valium for the masses). >Breeders - Title TK picked it up used back home about 9 days ago, but again haven't had a chance to listen. otherwise, bipolar, schmipolar. i think i'm dealing with schizophrenia here. was delighted a couple of nights ago to find at the used shop across town not only 3 cd's by xian synthpopsters joy electric's & moby's i like to score (which i've played 3 times this morning, mainly because i'm too lazy to put on something else, while sorting through & shelving my thousands of books) but also eminem's first 2. *sigh* dan > >Cracked Machine >Highly Irregular Cyberzine >http://www.webinfo.co.uk/crackedmachine > >"So the other day I was talking to Michael Stipe..." ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 13:28:06 -0500 From: "dan bailey" Subject: Re: [idealcopy] Heavy Rotation - - >>WIRE ~ Read and Burn 02 > >a week & waiting for my copy ... damned postal service. worked like a charm -- even as the above was popping up on my screen, probably, the postman brought it while i was dog-walking. will report fully later, but the opening moments of the first track certainly sound great. finally, something to dislodge damned moby from the ghetto blaster ... dan ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 12:21:55 -0700 (PDT) From: rayographique Subject: Re: [idealcopy] Heavy Rotation - --- dan bailey wrote: > >Flaming Lips...any thoughts on their new one rather swell IMO > haven't gotten around to playing it. only song of > theirs that's ever blown > me out the window was jesus shooting heroin, ... and now she's got helecopters... but on the rockin front - try to find j-girls Love Psychedelico Orchestra or spain's Vaccaciones for fun ... on the electronic tip - i recommend almost anything from Tijuanna's Nortec Collective including Murcof's Martes former Sad Rocket Andrew Peckler has a nice spin on On The Corner era Miles as well i am looking forward to picking up RnB02 tonite at metro cheers d Yahoo! News - Today's headlines http://news.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 15 Sep 2002 19:24:05 +0100 From: "Gary Owens" Subject: Re: [idealcopy] Section(ed) - ----- Original Message ----- From: ian.s. jackson To: Sent: Tuesday, September 10, 2002 11:25 PM Subject: Re: [idealcopy] Section(ed) > Gary Owens... > >memorable gig for me was Section 25 with all of the re-surgent interest in Section 25..... (!!!!!) has anyone noticed how much 'Go Ahead' sounds very similar to 'Always Now' era Section 25..... Actually, now I think of it, people probably noticed this in 1981... Whilst listening to Mark & Lard on Radio 1 the other day, I nearly totalled the car in shock, listening to a version of 'Nag, Nag, Nag' by new electro popster 'Tigon,, something or other'... not a patch on the original of course, but I can't wait to see it performed on Top of the Pops.. ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 21:54:09 +0100 From: "Keith Astbury" Subject: [idealcopy] R&B02 Review And now for my two old pence worth...yep, another readers positive response to Read & Burn 02... Wire albums are almost like that crap old joke about things being like buses. You wait ages for one and then two come along at once... When those nice Wire chaps announced earlier this year that they were to release their first all new material for more than ten years, there should have been a certain amount of trepidation - particularly for those of us who were less than enamoured with their last two albums (Manscape and The First Letter). And yet...after witnessing their fine performance at the RFH and hearing the rehearsal and live CD's, somehow there didn't seem much to worry about. And so it proved...Read & Burn (vol. 1 of a planned series) contained lots of short sharp thrills and, in I Don't Understand, one track that was worthy of inclusion any Wire Best of. Wire really were back. And so, just a matter of months later (and just as R&B 01 is finally getting reviewed in the mainstream press), Read & Burn 02 pops it's head round the corner, wearing a fetching red variation of its predecessors rather drab grey cover. And boy, does this record burn! Echoing 01's fine glam-like entry (with The Art of Stopping), 02 opens with the insistent Read & Burn itself, another distorted variation on a Ballroom Blitz-like riff - complete with what reminds me of the opening T.R.E.X. chant of The Groover. I don't what Colin is actually chanting (how I'd have loved it if it had just been W.I.R.E.!) , but R&B rocks and throbs and is just about the perfect opener. But that's nothing. Spent absolutely DEMANDS your attention. Starting with the most basic of guitar riffs and what sounds like a single hi-hat, it builds and builds. And although the bass makes an unobtrusive initial entry, you just know what at some point the whole thing is going to kick in on an altogether more apocalyptic scale. But...Wire being Wire, make us wait until 1.30 into the track, and then...Phew! This is colossal. And when things scale down again, I was thinking I know they won't do this, but hey wouldn't it be great if they picked the whole thing up again and went for the jugular once more. And what do you know....Whoosh. They do as they're told (for once!) That's right. It's back again in it's full glory. Brilliant track. After Spent we get the calm *after* the storm, Trash/Treasure. Great tune, great singing and the best use of falsetto since Leo Sayer on You Make Me Feel Like Dancing! Some readers have compared this track with Kidney Bingos, but whilst it has similar feel to much of A Bell Is A Cup, melodically speaking it actually reminds me more of Silk Skin Paws. And I have to say, personally I think it's nice to hear that side of Wire again. As with the initial R&B, things tale off here a little at this point. Nice Streets Above is an interesting, if perhaps inessential cut, with it's repetitive riff sounding like some weird subverted early 80's electronica. And as much as I like Raft Ants, it's little more than a pretty basic punk rant that would probably have sounded dated by the time Pink Flag was released, EXCEPT (of course) that Wire mutate matters, with distorted guitars and various noodles dropping out here, and the drum pattern changing there. But then we're back to the verge of greatness with the closing 99.9. A lonely yet insistent Rocket USA meets Kolly Kibbers Birthday beat provides a perfect backdrop to a Feed Me-like dirge, where a worried Colin repeatedly voices his concern over the uncertainty of the road ahead. And once again on this latest R&B, Wire have allowed themselves time to breath and time to build, leaving us with the chance to wallow in a track that positions itself somewhere between the fierce attacks of much of Wire MK3, and some of the more esoteric moments of their past. A favourite in the making methinks? So...in short, four essential Wire tracks, and two very good ones. Something of a speeding juggernaut of an album (and one that sounds like it could veer out of control any moment), R&B02 is - as we approach the final bend of 2002 - already closing in on the nifty little motor that was volume one. Don't wait until they release the highlights onto one album. Catch this bus while you can. And there'll be another one along this uncertain road soon enough. Hopefully... Keith ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 21:58:04 +0100 From: Andrew Walkingshaw Subject: Re: [idealcopy] R&B02 Review On Sat, Sep 14, 2002 at 09:54:09PM +0100, Keith Astbury wrote: > as much as I like Raft Ants, it's little more than a pretty basic punk rant > that would probably have sounded dated by the time Pink Flag was released, I seem to be isolated here. Raft Ants is my favourite track on R+B02. :) - - Andrew - -- "Withdrawal in disgust is not the same as apathy." - R.E.M., "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?" ('Monster') adw27@cam.ac.uk (academic) | http://www.lexical.org.uk ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 17:04:39 EDT From: MarkBursa@aol.com Subject: Re: [idealcopy] ExITS >>On a happy day on which I found out shiteband Blur split up, << Ah, but there's where you're wrong. They haven't split up. Their reason for being interesting has left. They will continue to make records, but you will enjoy them even less.... However, it is a happy day. A very happy day. A very, very happy day. Oh yes.* Mark * The IC football massive know what I mean... ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 22:56:56 +0100 From: "Keith Astbury" Subject: Re: [idealcopy] ExITS > However, it is a happy day. A very happy day. A very, very happy day. Oh > yes.* > > Mark > > * The IC football massive know what I mean... is it the Wrexham / Swansea result ; ) ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 23:24:40 +0100 From: Andrew Walkingshaw Subject: Re: [idealcopy] ExITS On Sat, Sep 14, 2002 at 10:56:56PM +0100, Keith Astbury wrote: > > However, it is a happy day. A very happy day. A very, very happy day. Oh > > yes.* > > > > Mark > > > > * The IC football massive know what I mean... > > is it the Wrexham / Swansea result ; ) Dunfermline Athletic / Dundee United, *obviously*. (2-1 to the Pars :) ) - - Andrew - -- "It's too close to home and too near the bone; too close to home and too near the bone, more than you'll ever know..." - The Smiths, "That Joke Isn't Funny Anymore" ('Meat is Murder') adw27@cam.ac.uk (academic) | http://www.lexical.org.uk ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 16:36:12 -0700 (PDT) From: rayographique Subject: Re: [idealcopy] Section(ed) > has anyone noticed how much 'Go Ahead' sounds very > similar to 'Always Now' > era Section 25..... no Yahoo! News - Today's headlines http://news.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 19:42:36 EDT From: MarkBursa@aol.com Subject: Re: [idealcopy] Section(ed) >> > has anyone noticed how much 'Go Ahead' sounds very similar to 'Always > Now' > era Section 25.....<< Not at all to these ears.... > >>Actually, now I think of it, people probably noticed this in 1981...<< > > I certainly didn't! > > Mark ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 15 Sep 2002 01:11:49 +0100 From: "Keith Astbury" Subject: [idealcopy] Chicago - if you leave here now So come on Robert, spill the beans. Did you go or not? I know I speak on behalf of all the UK listers when I say we will be very disappointed if the 'common cold' stopped you from seeing the boys! Keith NP 3rd Day ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 21:11:02 EDT From: Eardrumbuz@aol.com Subject: Re: [idealcopy] Heavy Rotation In a message dated 9/14/02 1:57:41 PM, umur_ot@hotmail.com writes: << Godspeed You Black Emperor! - Yanqui U.X.O. what's this? new? Faust - I can, u 2? when is this from? i think i heard the title, but don't think i've ever heard the music. Windsor For The Derby - The Emotional Rescue LP >> great title! how's this? i like what i've heard by them. - -paul (if i send this in three hours i could say i'm seeing wire on the third day) c.d. ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Sep 2002 21:13:48 EDT From: Eardrumbuz@aol.com Subject: Re: [idealcopy] Heavy Rotation In a message dated 9/14/02 2:14:16 PM, dpbailey@worldnet.att.net writes: << >Flaming Lips - Finally the punk rockers are taking acid >Flaming Lips - The Day they shot a hole in the Jesus Egg any thoughts on their new one, which i looked over yesterday before passing? >> goto flaminglips.com and you can hear the entire album, see animation, videos, and a whole lot...well, no, that's about it. :o) another the paul ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 15 Sep 2002 00:31:24 -0700 (PDT) From: rayographique Subject: Re: [idealcopy] Chicago - if you leave here now well - i don't know if robert made it or not - but we looked for him of course it would have been better had anyone had a clue what anyone else looked like however present and accounted for were myself, listmaster (supreme) miles, another the keith, charles/wmo, various and sundry spouses and a cast of thousands - well at least 2 i think the show was wonderful - the setlist matched pretty closely to those previously reported (i am not the best at attention to detail and had my first listen to RnB02 on the way home just now all in all a wonderful evening robert - were you there? - --- Keith Astbury wrote: > So come on Robert, spill the beans. Did you go or > not? > > I know I speak on behalf of all the UK listers when > I say we will be very > disappointed if the 'common cold' stopped you from > seeing the boys! > > Keith > > NP 3rd Day Yahoo! News - Today's headlines http://news.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 15 Sep 2002 09:45:07 +0200 From: Bart van Damme Subject: Re: [idealcopy] Section(ed) > I nearly totalled the car in shock, listening to a version of 'Nag, Nag, Nag' > by new electro popster 'Tigon Always was my fave CV tune... Bart ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 15 Sep 2002 09:59:37 +0200 From: Bart van Damme Subject: Re: [idealcopy] R&B02 Review On the R&B comp-album it definitly could have a similar function as Bank Holiday on Blur's Parklife or Serpentine Pad on Pavement's Wowee Zowee... Love those tracks... Bart >> as much as I like Raft Ants, it's little more than a pretty basic punk rant >> that would probably have sounded dated by the time Pink Flag was released, > > I seem to be isolated here. Raft Ants is my favourite track on R+B02. :) > > - Andrew ------------------------------ End of idealcopy-digest V5 #311 *******************************