From: les@jmdl.com (onlyJMDL Digest) To: onlyjoni-digest@smoe.org Subject: onlyJMDL Digest V2005 #155 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 Sunday, May 29 2005 Volume 2005 : Number 155 ========== TOPICS and authors in this Digest: -------- what are you reading? ["Marianne Rizzo" ] New Member/ What Next Album To Choose? [Jo Lar ] Re: New Member/ What Next Album To Choose? ["Ric Robinson" ] re: Sheryl Crow [Garret ] Re: New Member/ What Next Album To Choose? [Deb Messling ] New Sheryl Crow Joni cover ["Kate Bennett" ] Re: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover ["Kate Bennett" ] RE: To the professor of Prepositions at the University of Conjunction ["A] Polio [jrmco1@aol.com] Re: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover [Parts of Yes ] Re: New Member/ What Next Album To Choose? [LCStanley7@aol.com] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sat, 28 May 2005 09:54:03 -0400 From: "Marianne Rizzo" Subject: what are you reading? What have you been reading recently? Can you give us a smigeon? Give us a quote or something? I have been meaning to read this book for the longest time. . and now I am: Rachel Carson's, "Silent Spring.". . It is the 40th anniversary edition. "The earth's vegetation is part of a web of life in which these are intimate and essential relations between plants and the earth, between plants and other plants, between plants and animals. . ." The book focuses on pesticides.. . and a lot on DDT. "Give me spots on apples but leave me the birds and the bees. . . " Wondering if Joni read this book .. I'm thinking, maybe. "Carson's concept of the ecology of the human body was a major departure in our thinking about the relationship between humans and the natural environment.. . . Silent Spring proved that our bodies are not boundaries. Chemical corruption of the globe affects us from conception to death. . we too are permeable. . " from the introduction by Linda Lear "There was once a town in the heart of America where all of life seemed to live in harmony with its surroundings. The town lay in the midst of a checkerboard of prosperous farms. . . " ". . .It is also an era dominated by industry, in which the right to make a dollar at whatever the costs seldom challenged." me: and I read in another book recently that 90% of all cancers are preventable.. . . and 99% of the money spent on cancer is spent on TREATMENT, with only a small portion spent on prevention. "For the first time in the history of the world, every human being is now subjected to contact with dangerous chemicals. . Residues of these chemicals linger in the soil to which they may have been applied a dozen years before. . " . ."manipulation of molecules. . . " "The people had done it to themselves." "These sprays, dusts, and aerosols are now applied almost universally to farms, gardens, forests and homes. . ." "the common salad bowl may easily present a combination of organic phosphate insecticides. . " ". . . ecology of the soil." "And No Birds Sing." from the town of Hinsdale Illinois a housewife wrote in 1958: "Here in our village the elm trees have been sprayed for several years. . . after several years of DDT spray, the town is almost devoid of robins and starlings; chickadees have not been on my shelf for two years, and this year the cardinals are gone too. . . . " Carson writes, " All of this is not to say that there is no insect problem and no need of control. I am saying , rather, that control must be geared to realities , . . and methods employed must be such that they do not destroy us along with the insects." " . . . the multimillion-dollar industrial chemical industry. . " "Carson was fighting a far more powerful enemy than corporate outrage: a rapidly metastasizing breast cancer. . " (Carson died at age 56 of breast cancer) "DDT is found in the livers of birds and fish on every oceanic island on the planet and in the breast milk of every mother. . . " The chemicals are also passed from the placenta to the child. "they should not be called 'insecticides but 'biocides'." well, I shall stop with this. . as this memo is getting rather long. XO Marianne _________________________________________________________________ Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! Download today - it's FREE! http://messenger.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200471ave/direct/01/ ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 May 2005 07:32:24 -0700 (PDT) From: Jo Lar Subject: New Member/ What Next Album To Choose? Hi everyone. I'ma new member at JMDL. I just got into Joni and I have 2 of her albums {C&S, FTR) and I love both of them, especially the former. I'm just glad to be apart of a place where I can talk about her. I, also, wanna know what next album should I get from her. :) Yahoo! Small Business - Try our new Resources site! ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 May 2005 15:49:05 +0100 From: "Ric Robinson" Subject: Re: New Member/ What Next Album To Choose? I would recommend HOSL and Hejira next, then Blue. Once you have these five albums, the world is your oyster! Miles of Aisles and S&L are both great live albums for more of an overview. HTH Ric p.s. you'll get plenty of suggestions I'm sure. - ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jo Lar" To: Sent: Saturday, May 28, 2005 3:32 PM Subject: New Member/ What Next Album To Choose? > Hi everyone. I'ma new member at JMDL. I just got into Joni and I have 2 of > her albums {C&S, FTR) and I love both of them, especially the former. I'm > just glad to be apart of a place where I can talk about her. I, also, > wanna know what next album should I get from her. :) > Yahoo! Small Business - Try our new Resources site! ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 May 2005 15:01:43 +0100 From: Garret Subject: Re: This year's Jonifest in France and I've got a job! That's such good news about the ad Jamie. Will you get lots of royalties for that? When i was living in London i was living with three struggling actors, one of whom is now getting some work. Gosh, it has been difficult for her, but she just kept trying. It is so much harder for actors to get work than i ever imagined. hell, i didn't knwo before that it is difficult to get auditions and agents!! So well done on this, it is quite an achievement! Well, I too am looking forward to he Jonifest in France. I am going, just havn't figured out the fine details about getting there etc. I really need to sort that out. GARRET NP- Loretta Lynn, Family Tree Date: Thu, 26 May 2005 22:14:54 +0100 (BST) From: Jamie Zubairi Subject: Re: This year's Jonifest in France and I've got a job! Hi Lieve and Laurent I'm so excited about this event, I can't wait to go... I'm waiting for Ryanair to give those silly offers to Carcassone/Perpignan before I book my tickets and I guess i'll just chance it when I get down there as to how to get to the fest... maybe I'll even hire a car... whoah... Good news is that this week I'VE BEEN FILMING AN AD!!!!Maltesers in the UK are sponsoring the new season of Will and Grace and I am doing the ad campaign that accompanies the series... YAYYY! SO watch will and Grace next Friday, you UK Jonilisters... It'll be me play very gay, very camp, very Jack... If anyone has seem me in anything (Azeem, I think has) this will be Very different to anythign that I've ever done... heheh. I'm trying to sneak in a Joni reference into the script during the improvs... I wonder... Much Joni Jamie Zoob - ---------------------------------------------------------------- This message was sent using IMP, the Internet Messaging Program. ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 May 2005 15:07:04 +0100 From: Garret Subject: Re: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover I hope it is for real this time (and for free would be nice;-) They have been teasing us with joni tribute albums for so long. The often mentioned Bjork doing Boho Dance and Janet Jackson Beat of Black Wings are both of great interest to me. GARRET From: Bob Muller That's news to me to, dude - and good news at that! I don't know if it's yet another false alarm, but I guess we'll be finding out soon enough. Thanks for posting about it. - ---------------------------------------------------------------- This message was sent using IMP, the Internet Messaging Program. ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 May 2005 15:16:33 +0100 From: Garret Subject: re: Sheryl Crow Strong Enough is a good song. The live versions with Sheryl and Stevie Nicks are particularly appealing. Not a huge crow fan either, but she does have a few decent songs spread across her first two albums mainly. Sheryl has a by-numbers live album featuring her big-name friends, but Chrissie Hynde and Sheryl Crow doing IF IT Makes You Happy makes me wonder why Hynde and Crow don't do a collaborative album (of course, if it's really that good one would imagine that i would have actually listened to that album at some point in the last two years) GARRET NP- Aimee Mann, Susan Date: Fri, 27 May 2005 13:10:09 -0400 From: jrmco1@aol.com Subject: Re: Oops - apologies, Julius njc Not to worry, Azeem. I had it coming. And sorry about the Seabiscuit thing. Did I say that? I feel better this morning. I'm going to download "Strong Enough," because I do in fact like that song. Thanks for the friendly reminder. - ---------------------------------------------------------------- This message was sent using IMP, the Internet Messaging Program. ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 May 2005 13:02:41 -0400 From: Deb Messling Subject: Re: New Member/ What Next Album To Choose? Hi, and welcome! What do you like about C&S and FTR? If you like the singing style and the light jazz musical arrangements (to be very reductive) you might want to dip into one of her most controversial albums, The Hissing of Summer Lawns (HOSL). This is the first studio album she made after C&S. If you like the direct and "confessional" style of the lyrics in C&S and FTR, you should probably buy Blue (nobody ever abbreviates this as B, do they?), At 10:32 AM 5/28/2005, you wrote: >Hi everyone. I'ma new member at JMDL. I just got into Joni and I have 2 of >her albums {C&S, FTR) and I love both of them, especially the former. I'm >just glad to be apart of a place where I can talk about her. I, also, >wanna know what next album should I get from her. :) > Yahoo! Small Business - Try our new Resources site! - ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Deb Messling -^..^- messling@enter.net - ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 May 2005 13:41:50 -0400 From: Reuben Bell Subject: Re: Real Good, For Free, 100% JC My favorite renditions of "Real Good" and "Sweet Bird" are from the "Refuge" video, too. Same goes for "Refuge of the Roads". I think the video itself is waaay dated (as S&L) is, but it was a great time in her performance career in terms of the sounds she was making. Make sense? "Banquet", from "Refuge" is, however, about as low as it gets. Cringingly so... Reuben On 5/27/05, Lama, Jim L'Hommedieu wrote: > > On the topic of "Real Good", I'll add this, in case there are some true > fans who don't have the "Refuge Of the Roads" video (DVD, VHS). My > favorite edition of this song (and "Sweet Bird") is in this video. Each > one has a visual context that is among Joni's many brilliant ideas. > There are some other surprises in this video too. > > As a whole, it has some highs and lows, (unlike S&L which is ALL > highs.) It costs less than S&L which seems fair to me. > > All the best, > Lama ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 May 2005 13:50:13 -0700 From: "Kate Bennett" Subject: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover I look forward to this cover. I've been a fan of Sheryl up until her most recent release which was absolutely awful IMO. I lost a lot of respect for her songwriting ability after that. However, I think she is a talented musician- guitar, piano, bass, vocals. She really blew me away when I heard her sing opera on some show with some of those famous tenors I think. She is quite versatile. That girl can really sing. ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 May 2005 14:04:20 -0700 From: "Kate Bennett" Subject: Re: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover Lama>>: The song "Real Good- For Free" isn't about the street musician. It's about a "famous", wealthy celebrity LOOKING at a street musician. It's about a "success story" pausing for a millisecond and muttering to herself, Wow. There, but for the grace of God, go I.> I agree with your interpretation Jim. I had 'For Free' moment yesterday. On my way to the post office, an older black blues guy singing on the sidewalk. Not the same scenario as Joni's beecause I am not a famous musician with anyone escorting me anywhere... but it struck me just the same as I was rushing around stressed out from deadlines from my decent paying day job. ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 May 2005 19:28:51 -0500 From: "Anne Sandstrom" Subject: RE: To the professor of Prepositions at the University of Conjunction Well, Walt and Patti, I guess we're triplets!!!! I loved languages from a very early age. French especially. My father used to bring home French coloring books about the Lapin family (rabbits, of course). And I used to listen to The Singing Nun record (except for that one silly song, it was really quite beautiful and in French, of course.) I watched the show Combat because I was enthralled with the character "Caje" who translated French for the American soldiers. And then there was Maurice, the third grader from Paris who came to my first grade class for reading. It was then that I decided the one day I had to go to Paris (even though I wasn't quite sure what Paris was.) Well, I finally got my wish last week. And I spoke French to everyone. And not a single person tried to speak English to me. What a thrill!!!! Oh, and I also took Spanish and Latin. Fellow students in college who were also majoring in languages used to put newspapers from around the world in front of me to see if I could translate. I usually did pretty well. Italian is pretty easy to understand (read anyway) after Latin, Spanish, and French. But I also translated Romanian regularly. I remember memorizing the Cyrillic alphabet one summer, in hopes of getting a particular co-op job at the Library of Congress. (I never did get the job.) And I've dabbled in some Arabic (after taking a special seminar in college). I love language. Always have. It's nice to know there are others who share the love of languages. lots of love, Anne ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 May 2005 20:46:06 -0400 From: jrmco1@aol.com Subject: Polio Survivors of polio call for research into bsecond waveb of symptoms From Judith Duffy, Health Correspondent, Sunday Herald May 28, 2005 SURVIVORS of polio are campaigning to raise awareness of a debilitating related condition which is striking decades after they first contracted the disease. Before the introduction of a vaccine 50 years ago, thousands of children in the United Kingdom caught polio, which can cause muscle paralysis, disability and death. Thanks to extensive rehabilitation, many of those who were affected recovered to lead active and independent lives. But years later, polio survivors are now facing a bsecond waveb of new symptoms related to the disease. Post-polio syndrome (PPS) is an umbrella term covering a range of symptoms, including fatigue, muscle weakness, pains in the joints, sensitivity to anaesthetics and respiratory difficulties. Campaigners say there is little awareness among doctors as polio was largely consigned to the medical textbooks in Britain following the success of the vaccination programme. Yet around 80,000 people in the UK have had polio and estimates of how many of them are at risk of PPS vary between 25% and 80%. Graham Ball, chief executive of the British Polio Fellowship, said: bIt has taken a long time for the medical profession to acknowledge that PPS is a real syndrome and not just part of the standard ageing process. bIt was recognised about 10 years ago, but it is still not widely known by the medical profession. That is one of the major issues. bOur members go to the doctor and it is sometimes just written off as byoubre getting old like the rest of usb. But it is not, it is more than normal ageing, and people who were able to lead quite active lives can no longer do so.b The condition, which is not life-threatening, involves the death of individual nerve endings, but it is not known exactly what triggers PPS or who is likely to get it. Symptoms can appear anywhere from 20 to 40 years after recovery from polio. Diagnosis is usually based on the patient previously having had polio and the elimination of other possible conditions. Despite the lack of knowledge, Ball said bno real researchb is being done to find out more about the condition. bOne problem is that people donbt know whether they are going to get it,b he said. bA lot of our younger members are living in fear of it, as they donbt know whether it is going to affect them and the degree of disablement. bPolio is a forgotten disease b the disease may have been eradicated [in the UK], but we havenbt eradicated the people who have got it.b The Scottish Post Polio Network, which has more than 150 members, is currently collecting signatures for a petition to the Scottish parliament. It states that there has been bcontinuing resistanceb to recognising PPS and calls for a review of neurological services in Scotland for sufferers. Agnes Walker, a founder member of the network who had polio as a child, said polio survivors had bdisappearedb off the medical map after the disease was successfully tackled through vaccination. She said: bIt is not really their fault, but a lot of the doctors in this country donbt recognise it at all. When the vaccine was introduced, polio became very rare and as a consequence of that the medical profession has no knowledge of polio either. People have been told they are imagining things and that a lot of their symptoms are in their head. bSome [survivors] also never associated it with having polio, as that was over and done with when they were younger.b She added: bWe disappeared for a while, that has been our problem. bYou just got on with your life and then you got new symptoms, like fatigue, new muscle weakness and youbre just not able to do the things you used to do. You hit the stage of where you just got on with your life and then bang, itbs like being disabled all over again.b However, Walker said that in other countries, such as the US, Canada and Australia, the condition has received greater recognition, with multi- disciplinary clinics available for those with PPS. She said: bWhen patients come to the clinic, the co-ordinator has made all the necessary appointments, for example if they need to see a physician, or a neurologist or a nutritionist, then that is all organised. That is basically what we want in Scotland b a holistic approach, that is what we are campaigning for.b High-profile survivors of polio include actress Mia Farrow, who backed a letter-writing campaign in the US to raise awareness of PPS two years ago. Others include Franklin D Roosevelt, who became president of the US after battling the disease, film director Francis Ford Coppola and folk singer Joni Mitchell. Science fiction author Arthur C Clarke, 87, was diagnosed with PPS in 1988 and now uses a wheelchair. ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 May 2005 21:26:34 -0700 (PDT) From: Parts of Yes Subject: Re: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover Hello, My name is Sean and I am new to the list-serve though not a new Joni fan (though a relatively recent one given the length of her career). Not to sound cliched but she is truly one of my favorite musical artists...one of the few people whose albums I can listen to for hours. Sheryl Crow is fav too. Before I had really discovered the power of Joni's music, I was listened to Sheryl incessantly...in some of my darkest periods. Granted, her lyrics aren't always as deep or moving as those of Joni's, but they did strike a cord in me at times so to speak. This was before "C'mon, C'mon," though some of the sounds on that did as well for me - "Safe and Sound," and "Weather Channel," mainly. 2005 looks like it may be a big year for Sheryl Crow. Possibly 2 albums and a Joni cover to boot...what more could a long-time Sheryl fan ask for? :). But to me, Sheryl is really not the best artist to cover "Real Good for Free. (one of my favorite songs of all time). I mean, I could see her covering it but just I think of other artists more readily...Natalie Merchant, Jonatha Brooke, Shawn Colvin, Jewel, even Kate Bush and Concrete Blonde to name a few! I'd have to give this matter for thought to figure out which Joni song is better suited for Sheryl Crow. I think it would be quite "ironic" for Sheryl to cover an ALanis song, a Hole song, a Lisa Germano song or even a Liz Phair song. ALl of this notwithstanding, she's certainly come a long way from Michael Jackson... Sean - --- onlyJMDL Digest wrote: > onlyJMDL Digest Saturday, May 28 2005 > Volume 2005 : Number 154 > > > > ========== > > TOPICS and authors in this Digest: > -------- > Re: Joni at Commonwealth continued > [jrmco1@aol.com] > RE: This year's Jonifest in France > [ReckersL@ebrd.com] > Rock Star > [jrmco1@aol.com] > Re: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover [Bob > Muller ] > Re: Rock Star (Timothy White's Joni interview) > [Bob Muller Re: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover > [jrmco1@aol.com] > RE: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover ["Richard Flynn" > ] > RE: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover [Bob > Muller ] > Re: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover > [atel79@dsl.pipex.com] > Re: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover > [tejas4x4@aol.com] > Re: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover > [Em ] > Re: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover > [jrmco1@aol.com] > Re: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover ["Lama, Jim > L'Hommedieu" Re: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover ["Ric Robinson" > Real Good, For Free, 100% JC ["Lama, Jim > L'Hommedieu" ] > RE: Real Good, For Free, 100% JC ["Richard Flynn" > Re: Real Good, For Free, 100% JC > [jrmco1@aol.com] > Re: R&R Hall of Fame Joni, circa 1997 > [jrmco1@aol.com] > Re: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover [Michael Paz > ] > Re: New Sheryl Crow Joni cover [Michael Paz > ] > > - ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Date: Fri, 27 May 2005 03:44:35 -0400 > From: jrmco1@aol.com > Subject: Re: Joni at Commonwealth continued > > Nicely done again, Kakki. So cool to revisit this! > I just love her > vernacular and stream-of consciousness speaking > style. > > Let me fill in your blanks here for ya, girlfriend: > > - - 1st _____. That would be "Scorpio," right? > Like me...? > > - - 2nd _____ ____. And the answer is: the "DAILY > DOUBLE!?" No, I'm > just jerking your chain. She referred to New York > Village Voice > magazine writer and columnist "Greg Tate," who wrote > a humorous piece > entitled "How Black is Joni Mitchell?" He read it > to her and those > assembled at McGill U. in Canada, when they made > Joni a "doctor" and > had a scholarly 2-day Joni-Mitchell-is-a-Genius > seminar, which she > attended to everyone's surprise and delight! I > haven't read/heard > Tate's piece yet. Naturally, I'm dying to get my > grubby hands/ears > on/around it. > > - - 3rd ______. Write in: "radio"; "...radio > friendly" > > Thanks again, Kakki. Such a fun read. > > - -Julius > > - -----Original Message----- > From: Kakki > To: Michael Paz ; > joni@smoe.org > Sent: Thu, 26 May 2005 23:39:39 -0700 > Subject: Re: Joni at Commonwealth continued > > Here is some more of Joni. I simply could not > pick up/hear the > moderator's questions and comments but Joni's voice > stood out (mostly) > very clear so only her commentary is included here: > > ********** > > I learned to play guitar in standard tuning but > I'm born _______ a > week under the "Discoverer" which usually favors > scientists so I have > this peculiar need to be original and (to go) where > no one else has > been, which is kind of a scientific proclivity. So > all the chords in > standard tuning sound happy to me -- whereas most > people like the > familiarity of it, I create chords that you couldn't > get off the guitar > and my friend Debbie Green's husband and boyfriend, > Eric Anderson, > showed me open G tuning which is what the old black > blues players > played - which is banjo tuning translated to the > guitar. And that > motivated me to a considerable degree. And then > after that I began to > just twiddle around to open chords and sometimes I > would tune it like a > rava (sp?) to the environment. I had kind of beach > tunings so the > region where you have songbirds, nature plays in > regional keys. Like > even in Los Angeles we went out and recorded > crickets and one day they > were singing in one key - all of them, and another > day they were > singing in another key - all of them. So areas tune > themselves in a > certain way for whatever reason. So then I began to > do that - like tune > to areas and then also to tune to chords. Like > supposing I had > something that had struck in my craw - a particular > emotion that was > still raw and unfocused but wanting to come out. I > would twiddle the > guitar knobs around until I found a modality that > was emotionally > kindred. Some of these chords were then too > emotionally complex for > white people but black people had no problem with > it. I just had my > doctorate of music and ____ ____ spoke and one of > the things that he > said was "is she so black that she thinks 11th and > 13th chords are ____ > friendly?" Brazilians were able to tolerate or > thrill to a greater > harmonic power whereas Western mind again seemed to > like its tragedy > minor and its happiness major and the most complex > emotion it could > take would be a 7th chord. > > You know, my daughter was at large, like "where's > my girl, where's my > girl?" That's a dissonance in my life for many > years. "Are they going > to drop the bomb, are they going to drop the bomb?" > There's another > dissonance. I spent my whole life with these complex > dissonances and > felt that majors and minors were too simplistic to > express how it was I > felt. So even (with a) happy feeling there would be > a tension line of a > second, like a little irritating buzz running > through a major chord > (that) suited me just fine. > > *********** > > Kakki > > NP: Keiki O Ka 'Aina - Robi Kahakalau > > ------------------------------ > > Date: Fri, 27 May 2005 11:46:49 +0100 > From: ReckersL@ebrd.com > Subject: RE: This year's Jonifest in France > > Sorry for the late reaction, but Jody and Scott > signing up, that's EXCELLENT > news! > > Laurent, how about sending the list of all names > again, as per popular > request? > > And I just saw that the Euro is at its lowest > against === message truncated === "Where some have found their paradise Others just come to harm" - Joni Mitchell, "Amelia" (1976) "It took an hour, maybe a day But once I really listened, the noise Just went away" - Liz Phair, "Stratford-On-Guy" (1993) "On a clear day, I bet you can see the class struggle from here," - - Katrin Cartlidge (Hannah) in Mike Leigh's "Career Girls" "Take this Mute mouth Broken tongue. Now this Dark life Is shot through with light" - Suzanne Vega "Pilgrimage" (1990) "All I know of you is in my memory All I ask is you Remember me." - Suzanne Vega "Rosemary" (1998) "Honey help me out of this mess I'm a stranger to myself But don't reach for me, I'm too far away I don't wanna talk 'cuz there's nothing left to say" - - Fiona Apple "The Child is Gone" Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 29 May 2005 01:47:48 EDT From: LCStanley7@aol.com Subject: Re: New Member/ What Next Album To Choose? > Jo Lar wrote: > > Hi everyone. I'ma new member at JMDL. I just got into Joni and I have 2 of > her albums {C&S, FTR) and I love both of them, especially the former. I'm just > glad to be apart of a place where I can talk about her. I, also, wanna know > what next album should I get from her. :) Hi Jo! Welcome! I would suggest Songs of a Praire Girl. Love, Laura ------------------------------ End of onlyJMDL Digest V2005 #155 ********************************* ------- 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)