From: owner-loud-fans-digest@smoe.org (loud-fans-digest) To: loud-fans-digest@smoe.org Subject: loud-fans-digest V1 #316 Reply-To: loud-fans@smoe.org Sender: owner-loud-fans-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-loud-fans-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk loud-fans-digest Friday, November 23 2001 Volume 01 : Number 316 Today's Subjects: ----------------- [loud-fans] art frahm's most slavish imitator! [dmw ] Re: [loud-fans] oh, for a Sharples (ns) ["Andrew Hamlin" Subject: [loud-fans] art frahm's most slavish imitator! i can only assume there's an alien saucer hovering above the top of the picture, with an anti-gravity ray. they've probably already got the celery. the painter is al brule, sometimes spelt with an accent acute on the terminal e. http://212.43.199.20/~erotixart/artistes/brule/images/brule018.jpg - -- d. - ------------------------------------------------- Mayo-Wells Media Workshop dmw@ http://www.mwmw.com mwmw.com Web Development * Multimedia Consulting * Hosting ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 22 Nov 2001 11:28:53 -0800 From: "Andrew Hamlin" Subject: Re: [loud-fans] oh, for a Sharples (ns) >As far as I know he >succeeded, since I've never seen a butcher cover that wasn't >uncovered by steaming. The late Nicholas Schaffner, in his book BEATLES FOREVER, did describe an alternate method of unmasking butcher covers. It involves smothering the outer cover in tape, then carefully peeling off the tape. Shaffner was, if I recall correctly, quoting from some other source. Said source preferred this method to steaming, which apparently tends to rip the picture underneath. I should point out though that I've never uncovered a butcher cover by any means, so I can't speak from experience. Clutching forks and knives, Andy "It's like any Beatles song, I could pick forty of them, but that's just such a beautiful song. Honestly, they all rate the same to me, so I don't know why that one came up, but they're all incredible. When I first started to write songs, there was this big white book called The Beatles Anthology that has all the tabs for every song they ever wrote. I think for musicians, it should be like the Bible, because it's just amazing to learn their songs, and see how they put chords and melody together. It's so pure and they were the inventors of a lot of those melodies. I mean, I love their music on a visceral level, and then all of a sudden you realize how they do it and you just fall in love with it even more..." - --Raine Maida, singer of Our Lady Peace, from an interview with Gail Worley at http://www.ink19.com/issues/november2001/inkSpots/ourLadyPeace.html ------------------------------ End of loud-fans-digest V1 #316 *******************************