From: les@jmdl.com (onlyJMDL Digest) To: onlyjoni-digest@smoe.org Subject: onlyJMDL Digest V2004 #26 Reply-To: joni@smoe.org Sender: les@jmdl.com Errors-To: les@jmdl.com Precedence: bulk Archives: http://www.smoe.org/lists/onlyjoni Websites: http://www.jmdl.com http://www.jonimitchell.com Unsubscribe: mailto:onlyjoni-digest-request@smoe.org?body=unsubscribe onlyJMDL Digest Wednesday, January 28 2004 Volume 2004 : Number 026 ========== TOPICS and authors in this Digest: -------- Sad News [Michael Paz ] Re: Sad News ["Donna Binkley" ] Re: Joni's birthday ["Lori Fye" ] RE: Welcome Fellow Republicans ["anon anon" ] Re: Joni's birthday ["Kate Bennett" ] Reminder: JMDL Poll still in progress ["Lori Fye" ] Cath's Surresonant Self-Introduction [Magic ] Re: JMDL Digest V2004 #48 - Joni pic [BRYAN8847@aol.com] Presidential match [BRYAN8847@aol.com] Today in History: January 28 [ljirvin@jmdl.com] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2004 09:18:46 -0600 From: Michael Paz Subject: Sad News It is with great sadness that I inform you all that Kakki's father passed on. He had been in poor health over the past couple of years and was quite ill when I was out in LA for NAMM. I just thought you guys should know. My prayers and love are with you and your mom Kakki in this very sad time. I hope you are able to heal quickly as well as your mom cause it is so hard to lose someone you have been with and caring for for so long I am sure she will be very lost for awhile, but hopefully she will heal quickly and go on with her own life. A big old bear hug from your old pal Paz. Hope to talk to you soon. Love Paz ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2004 10:01:20 -0600 From: "Donna Binkley" Subject: Re: Sad News Dear Kakki, My thoughts and prayers are with you and your family during this difficult time. Take care. Love Donna >>> Michael Paz 1/27/2004 9:18:46 AM >>> It is with great sadness that I inform you all that Kakki's father passed on. He had been in poor health over the past couple of years and was quite ill when I was out in LA for NAMM. I just thought you guys should know. My prayers and love are with you and your mom Kakki in this very sad time. I hope you are able to heal quickly as well as your mom cause it is so hard to lose someone you have been with and caring for for so long I am sure she will be very lost for awhile, but hopefully she will heal quickly and go on with her own life. A big old bear hug from your old pal Paz. Hope to talk to you soon. Love Paz This message has been scanned by the E250. This message has been scanned by the E250. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2004 08:05:50 -0800 From: "Lori Fye" Subject: Re: Joni's birthday > http://www.thebluevoodoo.com/index.html > > There are two photos (the first two) on the photo page, and > a short item on the front page in the "News" section. There > are three samples of their music in the "Music" section. That is SO cool, Hell! Thanks! Has anyone else noticed that Joni and Loretta Swit have a similar smile? Lori ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2004 12:57:29 -0500 From: "anon anon" Subject: RE: Welcome Fellow Republicans I think that's an EXTEMLY,EXTREMLY EXTREMLY one sided,simplistic story that does no justice to ANY political party,much less the democratic party... >From: "Norman Pennington" >Reply-To: "Norman Pennington" >To: "_JMDL" >Subject: Welcome Fellow Republicans >Date: Mon, 26 Jan 2004 15:39:44 -0700 > >My Navy son sent me this... > >Begin quote: > >A young woman was about to finish her first year of college. Like so many >others her age she considered herself to be a very liberal Democrat and was >for distribution of all wealth. She felt deeply ashamed that her father >was >a rather staunch Republican which she expressed openly. > >One day she was challenging her father on his beliefs and his opposition to >higher taxes on the rich & more welfare programs. In the middle of her >heartfelt diatribe based upon the lectures she had from her far left >professors at her school, he stopped her and asked her point blank, how she >was doing in school. > >She answered rather haughtily that she had a 4.0 GPA, and let him know that >it was tough to maintain. That she had to study all the time, never had >time >to go out and party like other people she knew. She didn't even have time >for a boyfriend and didn't really have many college friends because of >spending all her time studying. That she was taking a more difficult >curriculum. > >Her father listened and then asked, "How is your friend Mary?" > >She replied, "Mary is barely getting by", she continued, "all she has is >barely a 2.0 GPA" adding, "and all she takes are easy classes and she never >studies." But to explain further she continued emotionally, "But Mary is >so >very popular on campus, college for her is a blast, she goes to all the >parties all the time and very often doesn't even show up for classes >because >she is too hung over." > >Her father then asked his daughter, "Why don't you go to the Dean's office >and ask him to deduct a 1.0 off your 4.0 GPA and give it to her friend who >only had a 2.0." He continued, "That way you will both have a 3.0 GPA and >certainly that would be a fair equal distribution of GPA." > >The daughter visibly shocked by the fathers suggestion angrily fired back, >"That wouldn't be fair! I worked really hard for mine, I did without and >Mary has done little or nothing, she played while I worked real hard!" > >The father slowly smiled and said, "Welcome to the Republican Party." > >End quote _________________________________________________________________ Check out the coupons and bargains on MSN Offers! http://shopping.msn.com/softcontent/softcontent.aspx?scmId=1418 ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2004 09:59:57 -0800 From: "Kate Bennett" Subject: Re: Joni's birthday How cool you found these photos Hell! Joni looks so fabulous & very happy! Kate www.katebennett.com "bringing the melancholy world of twilight to life almost like magic" The All Music Guide ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2004 10:04:39 -0800 From: "Lori Fye" Subject: Reminder: JMDL Poll still in progress You can access it here (requires sign in and/or registration): http://groups.yahoo.com/group/piss-n-moan/polls Or, if you prefer not to sign in or register, you can view the poll at http://lrfye.lunarpages.com/JMDL-poll.doc and then send me your preferences via private email to JMDL-poll@lrfye.lunarpages.com Lori ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2004 14:06:18 -0500 From: "Janine Sherman" Subject: unreleased Joni/ Elvis C. book on Amazon April 2004 Came across this on Amazon today: Elvis Costello, Joni Mitchell, and the Torch Song Tradition by Larry David Smith The torch song has long been a vehicle for expression-perhaps American song's most sheerly visceral one. Two artists in particular have built upon this tradition to express their own unique outlooks on their lives and the world around them. Joni Mitchell, Elvis Costello, and the Torch Song Tradition combines biographical material, artist commentary, critical interpretation, and selected exemplars of the writers' work to reveal the power of authorship and the creative drive necessary to negotiate an artistic vision in the complicated mechanisms of the commercial music industry. Author Larry David Smith, as in his Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, and American Song, considers the complicated intersection of biography, creative philosophy, artistic imperative, and stylistic tendencies in the work of both Joni Mitchell and Elvis Costello-two songwriters with seemingly nothing in common, yet, as Smith shows so incisively, two personalities that prove fascinatingly complementary. Both have made historic contributions to the singer-songwriter model, two rebellious responses to the creative and commercial compromises associated with their chosen field, and two distinct thematic responses to the torch song tradition. Smith examines these responses, offering a unique and invaluable exploration of the craft of two of the last century's most towering musical figures. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2004 18:45:08 -0500 From: vince Subject: Fred Holstein Joni Content vince wrote: >>>I was stunned today to learn that on 13 January Fred Holstein died. >>> Vince repeats Fred's post because Fred Holstein was a real part of my musical development, through him I met Ed Holstein, Bob Gibson, Steve Goodman, Bonnie Koloc all at the Earl - and Ebert describes something not just personal but what the semi underground counter culture of folk music was in Old Town, counter culture heaven, Earl of Old Town and 2nd City, across the street, marked the limits on the end of Old Town. And there we met Gilda Radner, John Belushi, Bill Murray, Dan Ackroyd, all when they were no one. The Ebert article that Fred Simon shares also recalls N Lincoln Avenue, home of Folk and Blues after Old Town went yup, and all the great memories there - this is the part of the Chicago that I treasured so much. I remember a friend Mark Liljedahl, a good friend I loved, graduated college together, worked in the Lincoln park music scene and was going to get a bar with a stage when he suddenly died in 1998 and I never got a chance to say good-bye -- Belushi, Radner, Steve Goodman, Mark Liljedahl, Fred Holstein, all dead and all too soon This gets Joni content in that in 97 or 98 was it she did the fundraising concert, for the Old Town School of Folk Music that was for the (an) heir of the Earl of Old Town, and Fred and Ed Holstein and Bonnie Koloc performed that night if I recall correct;y - all interconnected, it is one piece of cloth. And Joni did because she knew what this whole scene had meant/ So again, Fred Simon's post of what Roger Ebert said on this same thing, because something maybe so little known yet so very meaningful to a few of us... >Yeah, this was a big bummer for me, too. Plus, he was a fellow Fred. >Roger Ebert wrote a lovely remembrance; I've pasted it below. >-Fred >********************* >'He was the kind of guy who always had time to talk' >January 20, 2004 >BY ROGER EBERT >I can think of three times when I cried while listening to the radio. The first was when the death of John F. Kennedy was announced. The other two were during the WFMT "Midnight Special" tributes to Steve Goodman and, last Saturday night, Fred Holstein. I know myself well enough to know on those last two occasions I was moved not only by their loss, but by my own. > > >Old Town and Lincoln Avenue in the 1960s and 1970s were where Chicago went to be young, to drink and sing all night, to live forever. We were a shifting population of people who knew one another, sometimes well, sometimes barely, and saw one another night after night in the same places. For me the anchor was O'Rourke's Pub at 319 W. North, and no night was complete without touching base there. But many nights a crowd would gather and move down the street, maybe to the Old Town Ale House, maybe to the Quiet Knight, very often to the Earl of Old Town. Even later we might work our way up Lincoln to Sterch's or Orphan's or Oxford's. > > >The Earl, across the street from Second City, was the holy ground of the Chicago folk music renaissance, and there I heard for the first time Steve Goodman and Fred Holstein -- and Bonnie Koloc, Michael Smith, Jim Post, Bob Gibson, Ginny Clemons, and the remarkable string band Martin, Bogan and the Armstrongs. I was there after hours one night when Goodman sang a song he said he had just composed called "City of New Orleans," and John Prine was there, too. John was a mailman in Maywood when he started singing at the Fifth Peg, on Armitage, and I knew from the moment I heard him how good he was. I wasn't a music critic, but I wrote about him in the Sun-Times because after hearing him sing "Old Folks" and "Sam Stone," how could I not? > > >Fred and his brothers Ed and Alan were everywhere during those years -- Fred and Ed onstage, Alan working the room at the two clubs they co-owned, Somebody Else's Troubles and Holstein's. They had good taste and good friends, and on their stages I heard such wonders as Doc Watson and Queen Ida. Fred sometimes was the headliner, sometimes was the opening act, sometimes was on the road. The thing was, he loved to sing. Loved it. And his way with a song was like a lover's caress. > > >On "The Midnight Special," Rich Warren played Fred's arrangement of "Mr. Bojangles," and I felt as if nobody else had ever quite understood it. And his other signature songs: "The Streets of London" and "All the Good People." And "Hush, Little Baby, Don't You Cry." Who else could have sung that one in a saloon at midnight? Warren played the songs from a recording he made at the Earl on June 29, 1969, and you could hear the glasses clinking in the background and waitresses shouting orders to Jimmy the cook, and then Fred's voice would quiet the room, and you wouldn't hear a thing except the music. > > >Those were wonderful days to be young and alive and in Chicago. I didn't know Fred well, but let's say I knew him frequently. We both drank, but I drank more than he did, because he usually had to sing until 2 a.m. One Saturday afternoon I was doing my laundry at the launderette across from Fred's club, and while the clothes were in the dryer I went over there. The club was closed but Fred was inside, let me in, poured me a drink. I told him I was hung over, and we talked about drinking, which was a condition of life for the regulars on the Old Town and Lincoln Avenue circuit. What did we say? I don't know; maybe we were trying to figure out the secret. Our hero was Jay Kovar, who ran O'Rourke's and seemed to be able to drink all evening and be calm and wise and steady. What I remember from Fred was his sympathy. He was the kind of guy who always had time to talk, always had time to listen. So did Jay, for that matter. The Old Town and Lincoln Avenue scene wasn't exactly based on retail; it was more like a nightly reunion of friends > > >At the time of his death, Fred was bartending and singing at Sterch's, one of the surviving bars from the golden age. Last summer in Grant Park I ran into proprietor Bob Smerch and his famous grin and his young daughter, and we talked a little about the old days, but so much went unsaid. We knew. We had been there. Some lasted longer than others. I bailed out in 1979. If I hadn't, I'd be dead. But I won't say it wasn't a wonderful time > > >When Rich Warren played "All the Good People" Saturday night, the lyrics by Ken Hicks sounded more poignant to me than they ever had before. He closed with them, and so will I: >This is a song for all the good travelers >Who passed through my life as they moved along. >The ramblers, the thinkers, the just-one-more drinkers >Each took the time to sing me a song. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2004 15:59:20 -0800 From: Magic Subject: Cath's Surresonant Self-Introduction Hi everyone! Allow me to introduce myself, point by painful painted pint: 01) I can still play "Cocaine (Blues)", as per Van Ronk, since I learned to fingerpick starting in the summer after 6th grade, when I also started smoking tobacco and weed. The year was 1966. So I guess I'm one of those "blue, blue windows behind the stars", per recent threads. Joni was collected by my first lover, who had several other older lovers. I tried to learn John Fahey but got frustrated, and Julian Bream, whose "20th Century Guitar" LP is a real gem, if you like classical guitar taking on flamenco and avant-garde in ]he same work, eg. Villa-Lobos. Joni is sacred to me and I do no] play her music anymore, just listen ..;. I just listen, and hum. I also hum Bach and flamenco, when nudged by certaine formations of Clouds. 02) You've guessed by now that I'm depressive! Hah! If only! I'm a Republican so my dilemma is very much worse!! ;-) I love Presiden] Bitch and VP Lon Chaney (Wolfman). I don't believe in elec]ing vic]ims, so I won't be voting for Hilarity this time. I did vote for Bull instead of Bush in '92; I thought he had ]he better wonks. I vo]e for the team, not the party. I guess I believe that Saddam had a woodchipper for his enemies and Bitch does not, but then again, both Bitch and Kerry belong ]o Yale's Skull & Bones. But then again, Bucky Fuller described how the world has been ruled by the navies and pirates for quite some time now -- if you're into Systems Theory. I enjoy Math, Programming, Painting, Poetry and communication (mediums) that aren't One-To-Many systems, eg. radio, TV, films, concerts, etc. I make exceptions tho, like Art Bell = Coast To Coast each night. I grew up on Alan Watts on Pacifica Radio so my Republic inclues taoists and calligraphers, if I can't read Plato in Greek but I do read Mandarin at the museum some. 03) My depression stems from the realization that Life feeds on Life but Math and Chemistry equal Humor in my world, so I laugh it all away. I suspect that Judeo-Christian principles are based on delusions, to which I ascribe also hyper-logics and sur-logics -- all language and symbols I also hold ]o be delusional yet useful handles on reality and absurdity. Jesus adjured the demons and piglets and I believe the Catholic Church erased the verse where He states he hates lima beans as much as I do. ALL the above is a joke and I am a tautological liar, for if God=Possibility, then what describes the area ABOVE the famed Probability Curve?? I believe in FIT and ANGLES more ]han in EQUALITY and RIGHTS, but my Physics are self-taught and a bit abreal. BTW, Possibility includes Delusion includes God imho. "BUT" and "OR" and "NOT" are AND-states in ]erms of logical derivatives, because Affirmation includes Negation, "but" "not" the other way 'round. When Satan yelled "NO!" at Yahweh and Milareypa devoided his demons, they both in fact FIRST affirmed that which they sought to deny ]he authority of, much as Navajo rugs leave a place for evil spirits to escape -- all negation begins with acknowledgement of what Rimbaud termed The Other. So absurdity and Dennis Miller ]end to quiet the Hegelians in the crowd. I consider *that* ]o be the point at which I lost my virginity, "not"="and" ]he pseudological sexual event. 04) I believe in RESONANCE moreso than FEELINGS, esp as the source of creativity and naoveti. I am the first and last woman on this planet, "et"ymologically speaking. That "et-" and po+"et" are the it, I, id and idiom that Jungian poetry has left us. NativITy is a cognate in the sense that humans believe their own energy/ies are intelligent, "but" "not" the Sun's energy/ies. I do (not) care how many fewer chromosomes a sea slug has than I have so much as IT can bring chaos out of order by swimming slowly and ever so curiously and ever so musically. The way "IT" resonates in your oral cavity, even when seemingly only thought (though the tongue yet quivers it) is different ]han how it "FEELS" ]o consider ]he difference in fret-lengths between a guitar, mandolin, hammer dulcimer, and lap dulcimer. "But" "it" and fretted angles are related problems the ear knows how to solve, love, and resolve. Joni sang of hearing "you" in the wires in the walls, of hearing melodies in rain concatentations, etc. That is cognate at the level of perception, rather ]han cognition. If your sensory systems comprehended all wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum(s), I'd consider you an authority ... 'I am a lonely witness, I live in a box of testimonies'. Thus, I share your pain, your pleasure, if "not" your mood(s). 05) In the Joni Glossary of jmdl.com is an entry on "friend of spirit" and a couple on "blue". Question: Did Joni awake ]he Rinpoche's "I" when he responded "I did?!"? It is in that sense ]hat I am also first and last and mean average of us all, and believe you are also the Probability Curve and its Surround. The formula for that curve is y=P=e^x^2 or e^x^n = 1 = 100% where "^" denotes exponentiation. When pi * diame]er d = circumerference c of length=1, then P = pi*d. Then c is asymptotic. To define a circle via its Surround is pret]y difficult. The paranoid madman who helped create the Oxford English Dic]ionary (and so the Evasive English Dictionary), per ]he recent book I recommend, "The Madman and the Professor" (or v.v.), was delusional and devoted. Bear in mind ]hat Shakespeare had no dictionary/ies / thesaurii. But Willy the Shake went down to the beads of guile, right? Thus, when we define "Blue" by singing along and resonating to it, we are her awakened brushes = fangs, right? Definitionally, I "mean". So, please forgive me if I drank and womanized, Mr. Clinton. He was rich in disgrace. And Joni proclaimed herself to be a (curvaceous) Temptress too. What I mean is, it is difficut to define a thing by its Surround, as a brush is to a hue, as a sound box is to the inner ear. So Joni is sacred because she is a tatoo sailing away, a symbol on ]he waves, like ]he rigging is a weak net of percep]ion whose songs she admired none]heless. Perhaps she heard voices that blamed her for sun on her wings? Allow me an algorithm, by way of explanation: a + b = a * b ..... ) cathection@sbcglobal.net, 1996. a = ba - b a =b(a - 1) a/(a-1)=b When b=12, a=12/(12-1)=12/11 12/11 + 12 = 12/11 * 12 12/11 + 132/11 = 144/11; Proved. The solution set contains all numbers other than Unity or 1, for if a=1 and 1-1=0 in the denominator is undefined, then a=1 is undefined. As "+" and "*" are verbs, morphs, operators, operations, and AND-states ... then [a=b = a*b] means the Universe is operator-neutral whenever b=a/(a-1) and a=b/(b-1). So e = mc^2 has a solu]ion e = m + c^2. And pi * d has a solution pi + d = c. And a^2 + b^2 = c^2 (so important to Pythagorean Scales and Western Music) has the condi]ion a^2 * b^2 = c^2 .. when a^2 = b^2 / (b^2 - 1). And f(x) + g(x) = f(x) * g(x). In other words, I have discovered in ]he Universe a Truth missed by Pythagoras, Archimedes, Newton and Einstein -- no] ]o mention Joni and Rinpoche. Ergo(t), the above is extremely profound, if quite simple to follow algebraically. BTW, a-b = a/b and a-b = a*b also have solution-sets, often multi-asymptotically. Next, imagine another operator, between and including "+" and "*" ... let's use ";". So, for 3+4 = 7 and 3*4 = 12, then 3;4 = {7,8,9,10,11,12} if ]he operator ":" is valid for mere in]egers. ";" is morphing and=or tweening. At this point, fret-lengths become pretty arbitrary, and Joni's new harmonies can be denoted and interpolated. Not being one to destroy ]he sacred, I leave that up to your genius/jonious. So, all those Physics formulas are operator-modifiable, right? Reading the musical notes on the page is reading angles, joined angles as are curves, in a Surround of Space. Etymology is all down to hums, humming along, since every vocalic has consonantals and vice versa. Wind instruments are lung-percussives. Distinctions and definitions are brush-blurrable and Krishna-knife abscissable. I don'] know what that means either! Math=Humor. 06) I expect some of you to ignore the math, others the logic, others the perceptilogical-etymological humming-alongs, still others my mood, which has improved by sharing my pain. I'd prefer you laugh at them instead, but Oh Well?! Equating all operators pretty much destroys the fundamental logics of math; Oh Well! I guess I'm deep and muddy!! All the easier to light a lotus! When my own father passed away not long ago I emersed anew and immersed old. 07) I originated ]he word "cathection" -- please see "cathexis" / "cathect" / "catholic" / "concatenate" AND go sailing from there -- I only want to be wind and waves to your rigging of eleatic elec]ions!?! Shakespeare got by w/o a dictionary -- why should I begrudge you the same privilege?? But here's what "cathexis" is, in the opinion of professors/madmen: "The concentration of emotional energy upon some object or idea." From the Greek for 'a holding, retention ... kata-, down + ekhein, to have and to hold.' I've heard that the difference between rape and great sex is salesmenship -- I hope you haven't been violated or invalidated or violeted or violined? I hold, fretlessly and fretfully, that all sensory systems evolved from pain and eventually evolved THRESH+HOLDs. By that, you may've guessed me out. We met here and have lived together 6 years, plus. I hope that you find uses for the words "cathexis" and "cathection" in your idiomatic logics, since they may mean "love", en fin. Christ loved his disciples and I seek to love all disciplines. Joni did not violate His spirit, even as she sacrificed her Blues ... is my answer to my own question, and I welcome your responses. I do hope my in+throw+duct+tape of an introduction will tease your tongues, "not" terrorize your Tereus-blue windows (or whatever the lovely color of your sand and sea eyes!) ... sea-age our eye is ... Love, and Cathec]ion, Heart and Humor, and Humility ... "AND" = "LOVE"; Proved; Cath Postscript Question for Discussion? - ----------------------------------- "Must MIND exist as an extant possibility in order for man=kind to develop=evolve mind?" If that infers or posits God for you, let "IT" be? I am a Possybilitist, philosophically and religiously: "SIQUOMB, isn't she?"; and she's headed towards Sybil for sure? ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2004 21:41:53 EST From: BRYAN8847@aol.com Subject: Re: JMDL Digest V2004 #48 - Joni pic Subject: Re: Joni's birthday >http://www.thebluevoodoo.com/index.html > >There are two photos (the first two) on the photo page, and >a short item on the front page in the "News" section. There >are three samples of their music in the "Music" section. Yes, nice pic. Darn, I hate it when I find out Joni's been hangin out in BC, just up the road from me...maybe she'll warn me next time. Bryan ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2004 22:04:26 EST From: BRYAN8847@aol.com Subject: Presidential match Click here: AOL Presidential Match Main Fascinating....I matched with Kucinich 100%, a surprise to me (am I a working class ultra liberal?). Kerry at 95%. Bush at 19% (no surprise). Bryan ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 28 Jan 2004 02:00:36 -0500 From: ljirvin@jmdl.com Subject: Today in History: January 28 1974: The album "Court and Spark" was released and Joni celebrated by attending a Bob Dylan concert at the County Coliseum in Nassau, New York. At the concert, she sits between Cher and Lou Kemp, a childhood friend of Dylan's. - ---- For a comprehensive reference to Joni's appearances, consult Joni Mitchell ~ A Chronology of Appearances: http://www.jonimitchell.com/appearances.html ------------------------------ End of onlyJMDL Digest V2004 #26 ******************************** ------- Post messages to the list by clicking here: mailto:joni@smoe.org Unsubscribe by clicking here: mailto:onlyjoni-digest-request@smoe.org?body=unsubscribe ------- Siquomb, isn't she? (http://www.siquomb.com/siquomb.cfm)