From: owner-loud-fans-digest@smoe.org (loud-fans-digest) To: loud-fans-digest@smoe.org Subject: loud-fans-digest V7 #141 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 Saturday, June 16 2007 Volume 07 : Number 141 Today's Subjects: ----------------- [loud-fans] question on TuneCore ["Larry Kooper" ] [loud-fans] Nancy Drew [Scout82667@aol.com] [loud-fans] Nancy Drew tunes [Scout82667@aol.com] [loud-fans] our guy gets noticed [2fs ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 15 Jun 2007 09:29:58 -0400 From: "Larry Kooper" Subject: [loud-fans] question on TuneCore Does anyone on the list know of a web site called TuneCore (http://www.tunecorps.com/) and if so, what do you think of it? The site helps musicians get their music on iTunes/ eMusic etc. and promote themselves. They want to interview me for a job. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 15 Jun 2007 13:49:00 EDT From: Scout82667@aol.com Subject: [loud-fans] Nancy Drew Girls that are out of step with the times and solve mysteries sounds good to me. I'll pay to see this one. Linda Cardellini made Sara Michelle Gellar look almost homely in the Scooby Doo movies. I always thought Ethel was much prettier than Lucy--it was a contractual stipulation--Vivian Vance had to remain heavier than Lucy (insecure much?). But the question remains, will the Hardy Boys make a cameo, and will they still be behind the wheel of that Volkswagen "Thing"? - --Mark ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com. ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 16 Jun 2007 01:26:06 EDT From: Scout82667@aol.com Subject: [loud-fans] Nancy Drew tunes Although not a fan of The Donnas (the movie ended with their cover of Kim Wilde's "Kids in America" (blasphemy), the movie had a really good cover of New Order's "Blue Monday" by a group called Flunk. Matthew Sweet (Suzanna Hoffs is also singing on the track, but not credited) does the song "Come to California"--the first song played in the film. I'm afraid this movie is going to be DOA. My friend and I were the only ones in the theater. I don't think teenagers are going to see this film, simply for the fact that teenaged guys will think it's a chick flick, and it is cursed with a PG rating, so teenaged girls will think it has no sex, which it doesn't. Greenville's market is pretty indicative of John and Jane Q. Public. We had one of the only theaters in the country when the last Star Wars installment played that had an all-digital theater. The best scene in the film is the party scene, where, standing in front of a vintage Marantz blue-dialed beauty of a receiver (the object of many analog purists' desire, including me), Nancy puts on a record and says, "Downloading is cool, but nothing sounds like vinyl." Plus, you have to love any teenage girl with a vintage blue Nash Metropolitan (like *that's* gonna happen--I think Johnny Slash had the very last one in existence), that she calls her "roadster." It's doomed. - --Mark ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com. ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 16 Jun 2007 01:27:23 -0500 From: 2fs Subject: [loud-fans] our guy gets noticed Pretty basic stuff... - -- ...Jeff Norman The Architectural Dance Society http://spanghew.blogspot.com ------------------------------ End of loud-fans-digest V7 #141 *******************************