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25 new of 124 responses total.
otaking
response 87 of 124: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 17:16 UTC 2003

In my case, I just took advantage of the Harmony House sale and bought way
too much for awhile. Now that I have a job where I can listen to Cds for
hours, I try to catch up to all the old ones I've accumulated.

Like Ken, I've barely bought any CDs so far this year. I think I picked up
2 soundtracks last month.
dbratman
response 88 of 124: Mark Unseen   Feb 17 07:06 UTC 2003

I never encountered the variety of ur-music fan who accumulates records 
but doesn't listen to them until I met Ken.  This was his distinctive 
trait in ALPS, the music apa to which we belonged.
otaking
response 89 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 1 21:02 UTC 2003

Re: myself in #87: Since that last posting, I bought 10 more CDs, thanks to
the $1 sale at Borders.
mcnally
response 90 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 1 23:16 UTC 2003

  $1 sale?
krj
response 91 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 5 04:07 UTC 2003

I fondled a few CDs at Borders tonight, though I put them all back;
I still have yet to buy a new CD this year. 
 
One disk in a playstation probably would have grabbed my wallet, if
it hadn't been out of stock.   I really liked the guitar sound on the 
new James McMurtry album "Saint Mary of the Woods."

I've gone hot and cold with McMurtry in the past.  I absolutely loved
"Where'd You Hide The Body," which I think was his third album.
But the followup "Too Long In The Wasteland" left me cold, and so
did one of his earlier albums, so I haven't thought about him much
recently.
tpryan
response 92 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 7 22:36 UTC 2003

        Thanks for putting them back.
otaking
response 93 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 17:57 UTC 2003

Re #90: Unfortunately, I caught the sale at the very end.
krj
response 94 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 9 07:23 UTC 2003

OK, I finally broke down and bought some new CDs:
    Joe Strummer and the Mescaleros, GLOBAL A GO-GO  (inspired by the 
           March "FRoots Radio" show, which I have been playing 
           obsessively)
    Neko Case, BLACKLISTED    (in-store play at Encore)

I have one mail order on the way for Terry Woods' new album (for 
St. Patrick's Day) and Croft No. 5 (another of the Scottish folk-techno
pack), and one mail order pending for Luigi Cinque and the Tarantula
Hypertext Orchestra, and the Progmatics.

Sigh.
krj
response 95 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 13 05:44 UTC 2003

Ooops, I forgot to give a heads-up to warn anyone who might care that
Elvis Costello was the guest host on Letterman's show on Wednesday
night.  (Letterman is out with an attack of shingles.)  Costello
did a great job, probably the best of the guest hosts I've seen
in the last half-dozen shows.
 
I haven't listened to Costello much for 20 years -- I adored his first
three albums but was disillusioned by his subsequent incarnations as a 
country singer and a sensitive crooner.  But Schoolkids was playing 
some relatively recent Costello item in the store last weekend and 
I sort of liked it -- but now I don't remember what it was.
(Looking at allmusic.com: maybe it was "King of America"?)
dbratman
response 96 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 07:22 UTC 2003

Speaking of singers' reincarnations, here's an interview with Claudia 
Schmidt in which she expresses her dismay at venues who say "Hey, oh, I 
don't know, we hear you're a jazz singer now."  As a dyed folkie who at 
most only tolerated her occasional jazz bent, I'm of the opinion that 
she has no-one to blame but herself for this impression, but so it goes.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?
file=/gate/archive/2003/03/13/derk.DTL&type=printable

Also available, at least at the moment, at the simpler address:
http://www.sfgate.com/columnists/derk/
mcnally
response 97 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 20:17 UTC 2003

  Both of Costello's 1986 releases, "King of America" and "Blood and
  Chocolate" are excellent albums..
jaklumen
response 98 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 15 05:24 UTC 2003

folkies who can't stand jazz?  hmm, the nerve.. =P
dbratman
response 99 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 15 07:25 UTC 2003

It would be inaccurate to say I can't stand jazz.  I merely dislike 
it.  However, I am a folkie who absolutely detests country.  I realize 
they're adjoining territories of music.  But for me there's a clear 
line between them, and I rebel as soon as it's crossed.
anderyn
response 100 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 15 22:24 UTC 2003

How do you feel about the alt.country thing? (Buddy and Julie Miller, um, Dave
Carter and Tracy Grammer_)? I really find that I like that part of country
music, and I *hate* country music, grew up having to listen to it.
jaklumen
response 101 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 16 10:45 UTC 2003

I'm puzzled that western has now been shuffled back into folk.  My 
understanding was that country, originally, was an old division of 
folk-- the Appalachian tradition, right?  Western was the trail songs 
of the cattlemen, to my understanding.  What is now called "country" 
was a merging of the old country genre with western-- I don't think it 
was that long ago that some were still calling it country & western.  
But I guess it's just as well that moniker was dropped, as it has 
traded a lot of licks with rock n roll, the genre spawned from rhythm 
and blues and race music.
tpryan
response 102 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 16 15:05 UTC 2003

        Part of what seems to separate C&W from folk is the 
'glam' Country artists.  The Rhinestones, frilled shirts, 
beads, instruments with intricate inlays, fake hair, high
hair, highly decorated cowboy hats, etc.
happyboy
response 103 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 16 19:02 UTC 2003

alt.country is a bullshit label.
jaklumen
response 104 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 17 01:40 UTC 2003

hmm, that 'glam' image seems to have changed, then, because it's 
supposedly hip and bubblegummy now.  The guys still honky-tonk, I 
think, but the women seem to work very hard to look very fashionable 
and romantic.
dbratman
response 105 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 17 07:42 UTC 2003

Twila, I've never heard of these "alt.country" folk you mention.  But 
my reaction is simple: if it twangs, I hate it.
anderyn
response 106 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 17 12:54 UTC 2003

This isn't exactly twang-y. What it is takes some of the folk roots of country
and builds upon them, but in a way that doesn't hit my *aiee, it's country!*
button. Interestingly enough, both Carter&Grammer and the Millers are very
religious in imagery, which I like a lot (the Millers, at least Julie, are
Christian, and Dave Carter was very interested in Buddhism, although his Texan
fundamentalist roots show in some of the lyrics), and they're unabashed in
sharing that.
krj
response 107 of 124: Mark Unseen   Jul 7 06:12 UTC 2003

Lesson for next year's Top of the Park:  Google-search every band that you 
have not heard of after the schedule appears...
 
For Wednesday's show, I made a point to catch Muruga's Global Village 
Ceremonial Band, but I blew off the opening band, Fubar.  I arrived in 
time to catch the last two songs by Fubar and I was really impressed
by what a good rock band they were.
 
Tonight I went googling for references to them.  Fubar's leader is 
George Bedard's bass player, and the woman vocalist is Sophia Hanifi, 
who I thought was so wonderful in the short-lived band Map of the World
all those years ago.  (I saw Map of the World open for 10,000 Maniacs
at Rick's in East Lansing maybe 1985?  Sophia and Khalid Hanafi's band
did a much better show.)  Yargh.  Had I but known....
 
Sophia did tell me the band plays occasionally at the Del Rio.
other
response 108 of 124: Mark Unseen   Jul 7 11:26 UTC 2003

George Bedard's bass player: Randy Tessier
krj
response 109 of 124: Mark Unseen   Dec 6 06:27 UTC 2003

If I hear any more wonderful music right now I shall quite certainly
explode.
gelinas
response 110 of 124: Mark Unseen   Dec 6 18:39 UTC 2003

 :)
krj
response 111 of 124: Mark Unseen   Jan 12 18:54 UTC 2004

resp:81 :: I'm back into what now looks like an annual winter 
music crash.  (Thanks to Gelinas for reminding me that I'd done 
this in early 2003.)  I picked up about a dozen CDs in December, 
including Christmas presents and a bit of a pigout at a closing
used CD shop near Philadelphia, but all of it remains unplayed.
I've also hardly listened to the BBC since the holidays.  
CDs aren't getting played at home or at work at all, though I 
do drag through a couple on the long commute to work.
 
I just need a vacation, I guess.  
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