From: owner-onlyjoni-digest@smoe.org (onlyJMDL Digest) To: onlyjoni-digest@smoe.org Subject: onlyJMDL Digest V2010 #145 Reply-To: joni@smoe.org Sender: owner-onlyjoni-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-onlyjoni-digest@smoe.org 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 Thursday, May 27 2010 Volume 2010 : Number 145 ========== TOPICS and authors in this Digest: -------- Re: Don Juan's Reckless Daughter [Mike Pritchard ] Re: Don Juan's Reckless Daughter [Michael Paz ] Joni mention on www.sfgate.com [Lori Fye ] Lookout Mountain United Downstairs Choir Trivia and a shameless coming out ! [brianasymes@ao] Re: Lookout Mountain United Downstairs Choir Trivia and a shameless coming out ! [Corey Blake ] Re: Don Juan's Reckless Daughter [Lori Fye ] re:Dave and Robin Astound...Again [joe farrell ] Re: Don Juan's Reckless Daughter [Dave Blackburn Subject: Re: Don Juan's Reckless Daughter Deb Messling said: I'll echo Paz and express my envy of people who are discovering this music for the first time. mike says: But surely the >30 years of listening pleasure you have had from this album more than compensates for the moment of discovery, right? mike in bcn np Urge for Going - Eddie Nuenning & Lara Schallenberg ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 08:34:21 -0500 From: Michael Paz Subject: Re: Don Juan's Reckless Daughter Ah that does count for something. Michael Paz michael@thepazgroup.com Tour Manager Preservation Hall Jazz Band http://www.preservationhall.com On May 26, 2010, at 4:32 AM, Mike Pritchard wrote: Deb Messling said: I'll echo Paz and express my envy of people who are discovering this music for the first time. mike says: But surely the >30 years of listening pleasure you have had from this album more than compensates for the moment of discovery, right? mike in bcn np Urge for Going - Eddie Nuenning & Lara Schallenberg ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 09:31:16 -0700 From: Lori Fye Subject: Joni mention on www.sfgate.com Somebody with the handle spice_agony" wrote, at 7:42 AM on May 26, 2010, in the comments section that follows the article at http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2010/05/25/national/a001601D 76.DTL : "Paraphrasing Joni: "Don't it always seem to go - That you don't know what you've got "till it's gone - They drilled paradise and made a huge oil spill." Lori Santa Rosa, CA ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 12:52:27 -0400 From: brianasymes@aol.com Subject: Lookout Mountain United Downstairs Choir Trivia and a shameless coming out ! Was there a Music Manager back in the sixties and seventies that had a Company called Lookout Management ? Is this were Joni got the Idea for the Choirs name on Circle Game. Also I have posted a bunch of videos of me playing my Ukulele's on You Tube. My voice should be called a weapon of musical destruction so on the latest addition "Spruce House Concerto" all I do is play. My videos are posted under SlimSymes. I am playing in my little 12' x 12' office made of recyled building material that I hammered and nailed myself. I taught myself how to play the uke, I did have a little help from a Pro by the name of James Clem who has awesome slide guitar skills, he has some nice videos on You Tube as well. Siquomb Slim Symes ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 10:18:43 -0700 From: Corey Blake Subject: Re: Lookout Mountain United Downstairs Choir Trivia and a shameless coming out ! Hi Slim, Lookout Mountain Avenue is a side street in Lauren Canyon. I always assumed it was a reference to that. Maybe they rehearsed and/or recorded them in the lower level of someone's house or studio on Lookout Mountain Ave. That's what I've always imagined, anyway. - -Corey On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 9:52 AM, wrote: > Was there a Music Manager back in the sixties and seventies that had a > Company > called Lookout Management ? > Is this were Joni got the Idea for the Choirs name on Circle Game. > Also I have posted a bunch of videos of me playing my Ukulele's on You > Tube. > My voice should be called a weapon of musical destruction so on the latest > addition "Spruce House Concerto" all I do is play. My videos are posted > under > SlimSymes. I am playing in my little 12' x 12' office made of recyled > building > material that I hammered and nailed myself. > I taught myself how to play the uke, I did have a little help from a Pro by > the name of James Clem who has awesome slide guitar skills, he has some > nice > videos on You Tube as well. > > > Siquomb > Slim Symes > - -- - --------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.CoreyBlake.com - a whole lot of me Do you Dig Comics? http://www.digcomics.com Mailing List - http://coreyblake.googlepages.com ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 10:39:18 -0700 (PDT) From: Catherine McKay Subject: Re: Joni mention on www.sfgate.com I was thinking this morning about "Banquet" and how appropriate it still is. I am seeing a LOT of newspaper clips at work about the upcoming G8/G20 thingities happening here in about a month and the more I read about it, the more pissed off I get. (A few goodies are: cost of security expected to be about one BILLION dollars; university students being displaced from residence for the time the summit is here in Toronto; homeless people being "relocated, and on it goes.) Although I understand the need for security, I do question why they would choose to hold this thing in the centre of a large city, turning that particular neighbourhood into a fortress, such that, if you happen to live within the "red zone," you'll need to go through some sort of security thing just to get home. I do hope they "relocate" the homeless people to a nice, comfy place where they will be well fed and looked after. Maybe a place like the Deerhurst Inn (which is where the G8 thing is going to be and apparently very posh - i wouldn't know!) Businesses in that area are being given the suggestion that maybe people could work from home for a day or two (the Friday before, I guess.) Which makes me wonder, why doesn't the G20 just teleconference and save everyone a LOT of money and a lot of hassle? The concerns are about security. People are angry about world conditions and want to be able to demonstrate this during the time when the eyes of the world will be here. Some of them are angry AND crazy. There will most likely be teargas involved. And since the "designated" protest area is Queen's park, which is a block from home, should I invest in a gas mask? How high does teargas go, I wonder? Between people's IMO justified anger at world conditions and the arrogance of large corporations like BP, I thought that Joni's lyrics could be slightly reworked, and still work. Until I looked at the lyrics on jonimitchell.com, I thought it was "Shell oil fields," and now I read that it's "pails" and I think I seem to remember that they probably gave away beach pails when I was a kid, because I sort of remember that - at the very least, there were inflatable beach balls, so that fits with the beach images in the rest of it. But because of the oil reference, I started thinking about the situation in the gulf, and so changed the Shell thing to BP, just a little oil slick in the midst of all that summertime happiness: I took my dream down by the sea Yankee yachts and lobster pots and sunshine And logs and sails And **BP oil spills** Dogs and tugs and summertime Back in the banquet line Angry young people crying ________________________________ From: Lori Fye To: joni@smoe.org Sent: Wed, May 26, 2010 12:31:16 PM Subject: Joni mention on www.sfgate.com Somebody with the handle spice_agony" wrote, at 7:42 AM on May 26, 2010, in the comments section that follows the article at http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2010/05/25/national/a001601D 76.DTL : "Paraphrasing Joni: "Don't it always seem to go - That you don't know what you've got "till it's gone - They drilled paradise and made a huge oil spill." Lori Santa Rosa, CA ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 17:48:46 +0000 From: "Zooby" Subject: Re: Lookout Mountain United Downstairs Choir Trivia and a shameless coming out ! Yes, I always thought it was the street where they lived. Apparently Joni took a wooden house while her place was being redecorated (though I'm not entirely sure if this is the same house that she lives in now). And the place she was renting was on Lookout Mountain with Neil, Stephen, Graham (unless he was already 'with' her) and Crosby all up and down the same street, with some of the Laurel Canyon ladies forming some of the rest of the choir. Much Joni Jamie Zooby Sent using BlackBerry. from Orange - -----Original Message----- From: Corey Blake Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 10:18:43 To: Subject: Re: Lookout Mountain United Downstairs Choir Trivia and a shameless coming out ! Hi Slim, Lookout Mountain Avenue is a side street in Lauren Canyon. I always assumed it was a reference to that. Maybe they rehearsed and/or recorded them in the lower level of someone's house or studio on Lookout Mountain Ave. That's what I've always imagined, anyway. - -Corey On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 9:52 AM, wrote: > Was there a Music Manager back in the sixties and seventies that had a > Company > called Lookout Management ? > Is this were Joni got the Idea for the Choirs name on Circle Game. > Also I have posted a bunch of videos of me playing my Ukulele's on You > Tube. > My voice should be called a weapon of musical destruction so on the latest > addition "Spruce House Concerto" all I do is play. My videos are posted > under > SlimSymes. I am playing in my little 12' x 12' office made of recyled > building > material that I hammered and nailed myself. > I taught myself how to play the uke, I did have a little help from a Pro by > the name of James Clem who has awesome slide guitar skills, he has some > nice > videos on You Tube as well. > > > Siquomb > Slim Symes > - -- - --------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.CoreyBlake.com - a whole lot of me Do you Dig Comics? http://www.digcomics.com Mailing List - http://coreyblake.googlepages.com ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 10:53:55 -0700 From: Corey Blake Subject: Re: Lookout Mountain United Downstairs Choir Trivia and a shameless coming out ! Hi Jamie, I've wondered who made up that Choir for some time. I never knew that CSNY were in there. Is there a full list somewhere of who made up the Choir on "Circle Game"? - -Corey On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 10:48 AM, Zooby wrote: > Yes, I always thought it was the street where they lived. Apparently Joni > took a wooden house while her place was being redecorated (though I'm not > entirely sure if this is the same house that she lives in now). And the > place she was renting was on Lookout Mountain with Neil, Stephen, Graham > (unless he was already 'with' her) and Crosby all up and down the same > street, with some of the Laurel Canyon ladies forming some of the rest of > the choir. > > Much Joni > > Jamie Zooby > Sent using BlackBerry. from Orange > > -----Original Message----- > From: Corey Blake > Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 10:18:43 > To: > Subject: Re: Lookout Mountain United Downstairs Choir Trivia and a > shameless coming out ! > > Hi Slim, > Lookout Mountain Avenue is a side street in Lauren Canyon. I always assumed > it was a reference to that. Maybe they rehearsed and/or recorded them in > the > lower level of someone's house or studio on Lookout Mountain Ave. That's > what I've always imagined, anyway. > > -Corey > > On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 9:52 AM, wrote: > > > Was there a Music Manager back in the sixties and seventies that had a > > Company > > called Lookout Management ? > > Is this were Joni got the Idea for the Choirs name on Circle Game. > > Also I have posted a bunch of videos of me playing my Ukulele's on You > > Tube. > > My voice should be called a weapon of musical destruction so on the > latest > > addition "Spruce House Concerto" all I do is play. My videos are posted > > under > > SlimSymes. I am playing in my little 12' x 12' office made of recyled > > building > > material that I hammered and nailed myself. > > I taught myself how to play the uke, I did have a little help from a Pro > by > > the name of James Clem who has awesome slide guitar skills, he has some > > nice > > videos on You Tube as well. > > > > > > Siquomb > > Slim Symes > > > > > > -- > --------------------------------------------------------------- > > http://www.CoreyBlake.com - a whole lot of me > > Do you Dig Comics? http://www.digcomics.com > > Mailing List - http://coreyblake.googlepages.com > - -- - --------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.CoreyBlake.com - a whole lot of me Do you Dig Comics? http://www.digcomics.com Mailing List - http://coreyblake.googlepages.com ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 11:43:44 -0700 From: Russell Bowden Subject: DJRD Gang, I've said it before and I'm saying it again...DJRD has always been right in the top 3 works of Our Queen. I love EVERY minute of since the first hearing the day I bought it Pueblo, CO back in '77. Love, Russ in Alameda, CA Sotto voce _________________________________________________________________ The New Busy is not the old busy. Search, chat and e-mail from your inbox. http://www.windowslive.com/campaign/thenewbusy?ocid=PID28326::T:WLMTAGL:ON:WL :en-US:WM_HMP:042010_3 ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 11:55:28 -0700 From: Lori Fye Subject: Re: Don Juan's Reckless Daughter > DJRD is a lot to digest, and at the time it was 'too far out there' for a > lot of people who apparantly wanted her to crank out another C&S. This is another of those times when I feel so fortunate to have made my own "Joni discovery" with Hejira, because DJRD was just a natural segue. Loved it the minute I got a copy (on cassette), and love it still. The version of "Jericho" on that album still brings me to a complete stand-still, each and every time I hear it. Lori Santa Rosa, CA ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 20:51:41 +0100 From: joe farrell Subject: re:Dave and Robin Astound...Again I have to say Safaris to the Heart is truly wonderful and if anybody reading this has not got this CD...why? get it now. Robin's voice is superb and the tracks they cover make for a very interesting and representative compilation. The first time i played it the opening of Rainy Night House gave me goose bumps it was so gorgeous and from there it just got better. Thanks to Robin, Dave and Mutts of the Planet for a very valuable and beautiful addition to the catalogue of Joni covers, it is a credit to her immense talent. Regards, Joe. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 13:14:42 -0700 (PDT) From: Catherine McKay Subject: Re: Don Juan's Reckless Daughter Oh, I've told this story before, but don't let that stop me... I didn't hear DJRD when it first came out. In fact, I didn't own it, or Mingus for that matter, until some time after I joined this list, which is 10-12 years ago. I've probably had those two albums for max ten years. DJRD is absolutely one of my most favouritest albums EVER. I honestly can't say I had even heard much, if anything, from it until I bought it, so, for me, in the grand scheme of things, it's still quite new. The opening notes just suck me right in and I wanna go dancing down on Cotton Avenue! I think some critics may have suggested it's not cohesive, that it's all over the place, but I think it's a complete story/arc that takes you all over the world and back home again, and I love it. I get what you're saying about the Tenth World being good running music. Even though I don't run (hell, I can hardly even walk these days!), I find it great meditative sort of music to be listened to when you've got something to do that could be a bit of a slog and need that extra kick in the arse to get up and going. ________________________________ From: "Bob.Muller@Fluor.com" To: Leah Welborn Cc: joni@smoe.org Sent: Wed, May 26, 2010 2:28:58 PM Subject: Re: Don Juan's Reckless Daughter To be sure! I mean, there were plenty of artists who rocked the 70's, and put out an amazing body of work in the decade, but I can't think of ANY of them who made the artistic arc that Joni did. So much ahead of the times. I particularly remember DJRD's release because I was big-time on the Joni train at this point, unlike everything that came before C&S. When WQDR in Raleigh said that they would feature the album in its entirety at midnight (a couple days prior to its release), I was ready with my headphones and tapedeck. As much as I loved Hejira, I couldn't wait to hear what was up next. The whole album is so dream-like (dreams being one of its several themes), and I was sucked in from that opening...the mystical vocals and guitar intro to Cotton Avenue, Jaco's bass all over the place, the almost overwhelming-ness of Paprika Plains, and so on. I was bored by "The Tenth World" at first but have grown to appreciate it - and have since learned that it's GREAT to run to. DJRD is a lot to digest, and at the time it was 'too far out there' for a lot of people who apparantly wanted her to crank out another C&S. Bob ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 13:21:58 -0700 From: Dave Blackburn Subject: Re: Don Juan's Reckless Daughter I also find The Tenth World remarkable in that Joni put a 6'.45" track on her album that she is not apparently on (Chaka Khan is but not JM as far as I can tell). The Weather Report lineup was so strong that year (the year of Heavy Weather) that Joni just let thge WR rhythm section go for it and included their jam as part of her collage. Egoless, in perhaps the only recorded case! Dave On May 26, 2010, at 1:14 PM, Catherine McKay wrote: > I get what you're saying about the Tenth World being good running > music. Even though I don't run (hell, I can hardly even walk these > days!), I > find it great meditative sort of music to be listened to when you've > got > something to do that could be a bit of a slog and need that extra > kick in the > arse to get up and going. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 16:41:57 -0400 From: Bob.Muller@Fluor.com Subject: Re: Don Juan's Reckless Daughter Or maybe they just snuck it in there while she was on a smoke break. Bob NP: Graham Parker & The Rumour, "Waiting For The UFO's" - ------------------------------------------------------------ The information transmitted is intended only for the person or entity to which it is addressed and may contain proprietary, business-confidential and/or privileged material. If you are not the intended recipient of this message you are hereby notified that any use, review, retransmission, dissemination, distribution, reproduction or any action taken in reliance upon this message is prohibited. If you received this in error, please contact the sender and delete the material from any computer. Any views expressed in this message are those of the individual sender and may not necessarily reflect the views of the company. - ------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 17:40:17 EDT From: Merk54@aol.com Subject: Re: Don Juan's Reckless Daughter I agree that DJRD is one of the great ones. It's funny, because when asked what my favorite Joni Mitchell album is, I always say Hejira without hesitating. But if you ask me which one I play the most, DJRD wins hands down. From the instrumental Overture preceding Cotton Avenue with that thundering bass note of Jaco's (one of my favorite notes of all time - I always turn it up to 11 to hear that one), to the hallucinatory imagery and duality of the title track, to the final pronouncement of "In my dreams we fly!", and all the bits of wonder and amazement in between, this is music that sets me free. It's also something I can listen to regardless of the mood I'm in, which isn't always the case with Joni's music. I've seen Joni in concert about a dozen times, and my one disappointment is never seeing her perform DJRD (the song). Lyrically and musically I think this one song represents Joni at her creative peak. How I wish her and Jaco had more time together. Jack ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 18:13:31 EDT From: Merk54@aol.com Subject: Safaris to the Heart - Robin and the Mutts... How bout Volume 2? Okay. I have to weigh in on this recording. It took me a while to order it, and then it took me a while to get around to playing it, but wow, this recording is something special. The Jungle Line and Dreamland are my two favorites, but everything on here is an absolute keeper. What Robin and the Mutts do with The Jungle Line is nothing short of amazing, and in my opinion it even surpasses the original recording (which is saying something). There's a sinister element to Robin's signing on this song that just takes it to another level. In my opinion, this one song is worth the price of admission. Right behind TJL is Dreamland, which again may exceed the original recording. The band is just smoking on this cut, and when they sing "Propped up on a samba beat", I go crazy every time. Everything else is also top notch - just familiar enough to feel like an old friend, but just different enough to feel fresh and new. I'm already waiting for Safaris - Volume 2. Here's my song list of things I would like to see covered (in no particular order). The Dry Cleaner from Des Moines The Wolf that Lives in Lindsey Shiny Toys Banquet (The WTRF Tour version) Black Crow DJRD Trouble Child In France They Kiss on Main Street Shine Turbulent Indigo The Beat of Black Wings I wish I could have seen the recent show. Maybe someday Robin and the Mutts will make it out to Chicago. Jack ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 15:47:58 -0700 (PDT) From: Bob Muller Subject: Re: Safaris to the Heart - Robin and the Mutts... How bout Volume 2? MAY exceed?? :-) I love me some Joni, but The Mutts "Dreamland" smokes the original, which is also excellent in its own way of course. And all the more incredible when you realize it was a LIVE performance! OMG. Glad you're digging the disc, Jack. It's getting heavy play here, along with: NP: Sharon Jones & The Dap Kings, "Window Shopping" Bob ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 May 2010 02:33:35 +0100 From: Jamie Zubairi Home Subject: That Boy on DJRD Re: onlyJMDL Digest V2010 #144 After some initial snooping I found an article here about 'that boy' The Making of the Don Juan's Reckless Daughter Cover [image: Print]Angela LaGreca [Rock Photo] June 1985 - B; ARTICLES - B; Browse by publication - B; by rating - LIBRARY SECTIONS - B; Articles B; Cultural References - B; Books and DVDs - B; Photographs B; Videos - "In the song, Don Juan is really the art of the tongue, it's rapping - coffee house poet talk," says Joni who dressed up as a black guy for the LP's cover and sleeve. That's her too, underneath the Indian garb. The shooting sessions were upbeat, with Joni trying on different dresses and dancing around while Norman Seeff clicked away. When he asked for another change of clothes, he hardly recognized the black character that strutted from the dressing room five minutes later. "At that point, I realized I really enjoy character acting," she says. Working again with the Camera Lucida (Lucy) machine, Joni arranged the photos agreed upon from the sessions: she blew up the shot of her as the black guy and put it in the foreground; she liked the spirit of the shot with the top hat because it symbolized what she felt was the 'magic' on the album; and she included the shot of a kid who'd been in a session for a previous album. "He was shy and had never danced before, that's why he's looking at his feet," she says. But to her, the elements were not "homogenized" enough to be the final cover shot. When she noticed a postcard of a nude with a Mickey Mouse hat and balloons on a bulletin board she felt it was "the element that was like the cherry on the pudding that makes the whole thing come together." She worked it onto the dress, partly obscuring the pubic area and figure of Mickey Mouse (for legal reasons), I added the birds, and then had an airbrusher smooth over the edges of all the photos. She then selected the background colors from the options presented by Glen Christensen, who, she says, has a "wonderful knowledge of inks." According to Joni, most reviews of the album missed its point: "Basically it has to do with turning your back on America and heading into the Third World...at the time Muslims were messing around in Washington, there were radical tensions. I was disillusioned. The songs on the album have a lot of ethnic references and there's a certain sentimentality for the North American Indian." On 26 May 2010 22:07, wrote: > Oh, *that* boy, front and center. I thought they were questioning the > little Joni Mitchell dressed as an Indian which does appear also on the LP > cover - sorry I messed up. I'll eat crow - make that Black Crow. > > > > -----Original Message----- > From: Zooby > To: hejira924@aol.com; joni List > Sent: Wed, May 26, 2010 4:45 pm > Subject: Re: onlyJMDL Digest V2010 #144 > > Hmmmm the young boy is the photographer's friend's son. > > Let me see, there is an article on that in the jmdl archive.... > Sent using BlackBerryB. from Orange > > -----Original Message----- > From: hejira924@aol.com > Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 16:20:18 > To: Subject: Re: Joni mention on www.sfgate.com And the gas leaks And the oil spills It's been sickening me for some time now. And TFATD ballet seems more right-on relevant than ever. Mark in Seattle - -------------------------------------------------- From: "Lori Fye" Sent: Wednesday, May 26, 2010 9:31 AM To: Subject: Joni mention on www.sfgate.com > Somebody with the handle spice_agony" wrote, at 7:42 AM on May 26, 2010, > in > the comments section that follows the article at > http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2010/05/25/national/a001601D > 76.DTL > : > "Paraphrasing Joni: > "Don't it always seem to go - That you don't know what you've got > "till it's gone - They drilled paradise and made a huge oil spill." > > Lori > Santa Rosa, CA ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 18:22:21 -0700 From: "Mark Scott" Subject: Re: Safaris to the Heart - Robin and the Mutts... How bout Volume 2? - -------------------------------------------------- From: > What Robin and the Mutts do with The Jungle Line is nothing short of > amazing, and in my opinion it even surpasses the original recording (which > is > saying something). There's a sinister element to Robin's signing on this > song that just takes it to another level. In my opinion, this one song is > worth the price of admission. > Amen to this, Brother! There is an edge to Robin's voice on 'The Jungle Line' that is perfect for the song. More intense than Joni's vocal on THOSL. > Everything else is also top notch - just familiar enough to feel like an > old friend, but just different enough to feel fresh and new. Very well put. The whole of 'Safaris to the Heart' is top of the line from beginning to end. If you don't have it, get it. Mark in Seattle ------------------------------ End of onlyJMDL Digest V2010 #145 ********************************* ------- Post messages to the list by clicking here: mailto:joni@smoe.org Unsubscribe by clicking here: mailto:onlyjoni-digest-request@smoe.org?body=unsubscribe