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25 new of 124 responses total.
krj
response 50 of 124: Mark Unseen   Feb 12 21:05 UTC 2002

Nobody else has gotten one of the new music quarters yet?
jaklumen
response 51 of 124: Mark Unseen   Feb 12 21:46 UTC 2002

No.
micklpkl
response 52 of 124: Mark Unseen   Feb 12 21:48 UTC 2002

Haven't seen one, but the US Mint had some groovy pictures. This is the
Tennessee state quarter, correct? Louisiana will also have a minor musical
theme.
scott
response 53 of 124: Mark Unseen   Feb 12 22:32 UTC 2002

I haven't gotten a new state quarter in about 4 months.  :(
krj
response 54 of 124: Mark Unseen   Feb 13 00:00 UTC 2002

Yes, the Tennessee quarter is honoring country music, with a guitar and 
a fiddle.   I've only seen that first one myself.
eeyore
response 55 of 124: Mark Unseen   Feb 13 05:01 UTC 2002

I had one of them a couple of weeks ago, butdidn't hold on to it.
flem
response 56 of 124: Mark Unseen   Feb 13 17:07 UTC 2002

I saw one of the Tennessee quarters a week or two ago.  I was with some people
who actually cared, so we spent a few minutes with a magnifying glass trying
to figure out if the piece of sheet music on it was actual music, or just
looked like it from a distance.  We concluded that it wasn't, since the staves
only had four lines that we could find.  
tpryan
response 57 of 124: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 23:59 UTC 2002

        So the fence on the Kentucky quarter is not really a stave (staff)
with the tune "My Old Kentucky Home"??
scott
response 58 of 124: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 04:15 UTC 2002

Maybe the missing 5th line is the result of inbreeding?   ;)
dbratman
response 59 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 11 22:40 UTC 2002

Most artistic evocations of printed music are unplayable.  I've seen 
four-line staves, six-line staves, imaginary or nonexistent clefs, 
double-staves in which neither the number of beats in the bar nor even 
the bar-lines matched up, impossible key signatures, the lot.
krj
response 60 of 124: Mark Unseen   Mar 21 05:28 UTC 2002

Well poot.  I had thought the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame show was going
to be broadcast on VH1 on Thursday night.  But it was Wednesday, and 
I missed it.  I was really looking forward to the Talking Heads set, 
too.  Did anyone see this?
krj
response 61 of 124: Mark Unseen   Apr 26 18:27 UTC 2002

Mickey's been enthusiastic about Patty Griffin; her new album 
"1000 Kisses" has been the subject of a couple of over-the-top raves
by Dave Marsh.  Thoughts?   
krj
response 62 of 124: Mark Unseen   Apr 29 18:22 UTC 2002

Note for Twila: there is a new Baba Yaga CD!  I'd been trying 
to figure out how I was going to get a copy of this, and today I 
learned that Cliff has it at cdroots.com.  There is a bio of the 
band at http://www.cdroots.com/fono-baba.html which tells more than 
we ever knew about them before; it's been over a decade, I think, 
since their previous album.   Irish and Hungarian rock instrumentalists
and a small choir of Russian folk singers.
anderyn
response 63 of 124: Mark Unseen   Apr 30 13:40 UTC 2002

Can you get two?! I want one.
micklpkl
response 64 of 124: Mark Unseen   May 20 21:26 UTC 2002

Ken, in re: resp:61 and Patty Griffin ...

You might enjoy reading the (over-the-top?) article in this week's 
Austin Chronicle. Patty is the cover girl for this issue.

http://www.auschron.com/issues/dispatch/2002-05-17/music_feature.html

krj
response 65 of 124: Mark Unseen   Jun 28 02:20 UTC 2002

Random greed whine/not to self:  While shopping for Dad's birthday
present at Barnes & Noble, I found the new album from Cape Breton
fiddler Natalie MacMaster.  It's a 2-CD live set and from the snippets
one can hear on the "RedDotNet" preview system, it sounds VERY good.
krj
response 66 of 124: Mark Unseen   Sep 2 00:11 UTC 2002

Apparently Peter Gabriel has completed the album UP, just ten years
after his last studio album.  (Where I come from, we call that 
"retirement."  :)  )  rollingstone.com has a review of it
(they didn't like it much) and amazon.com is taking orders for 
late September shipment.
orinoco
response 67 of 124: Mark Unseen   Sep 2 02:21 UTC 2002

I seem to have a particular knack for discovering musicians just as they pass
their prime.  Still, Peter Gabriel's been in pretty heavy rotation lately,
and I may have to buy this one.  
krj
response 68 of 124: Mark Unseen   Dec 9 03:43 UTC 2002

Sorry I haven't been holding up my end of the conference lately.
I haven't been in much of a mood to write, except for Grex's party
chat.
 
I had an old-fashioned CD pigout at the used CD shop Encore today. 
I went to get a few inexpensive opera discs for a friend's child 
who is expressing interest, and I found a big pile of stuff 
which I might end up keeping instead of giving away.  

The chosen opera was AIDA sung by Tebaldi and Bergonzi
with vonKarajan conducting, and we might end up keeping that; also 
there was an anthology from a BBC show called "Listen to the Band"
which is all brass music, which Leslie thinks looks interesting.
There's been a series of anthologies from this show, according to 
amazon.co.uk, and much of them are out of print.  :/

Well, I still have some cheapie opera anthologies I can send along 
for the youngster.
 
Background shopping music was first, an instrumental Sandy Nelson LP.
Kind of kitschy fun; Allmusic.com cites Nelson's drumming 
as a significant influence on surf music and Keith Moon.  
I don't remember the title, it probably doesn't matter, though
there were some nice 60s covers on that specific album -- 
"Time Won't Let Me" (originally by The Outsiders) was the one I remember.

Second background album was a Stiff Little Fingers
anthology.  I have only the faintest recollection that such a band
ever existed, but sadly I have reached the point where I'm now 
nostalgic for the 1980 punk sound.  S.L.F. sounds a lot like 
second-rate Clash, so I bought the anthology out of the store's player.
dbratman
response 69 of 124: Mark Unseen   Dec 9 22:26 UTC 2002

Nostalgic for the 1980 punk sound?  Yikes.

I remember circa 1989 conversing with Brad Westervelt about the 
advancing crest of nostalgia, and predicting "In the Nineties, there 
will be disco nostalgia."  Seemed hard to believe at the time, but lo, 
so it came to pass.

So I shouldn't be surprised at punk nostalgia either, but ... punk 
seems to be the opposite of what one can be nostalgic for.
cyklone
response 70 of 124: Mark Unseen   Dec 10 00:28 UTC 2002

You'd be surprised. At my band's gigs people go nuts for the Dead Kennedys
and Ramones tunes. 

other
response 71 of 124: Mark Unseen   Dec 10 03:10 UTC 2002

What do you call the band?
cyklone
response 72 of 124: Mark Unseen   Dec 10 03:24 UTC 2002

BLAMMO
jaklumen
response 73 of 124: Mark Unseen   Dec 12 05:32 UTC 2002

resp:69  I'm still waiting for 80's nostalgia to catch on.

True, disco nostalgia came along-- and it's bled over into the 00's.  I 
think, really, that boy and girl band excess is part of that 70's 
nostalgia, although it has been an oft-repeated formula since the 50's.

Hmmm.. punk nostalgia.  Yes, that seems to be a contradiction in terms.
Perhaps it might be useful to ask what punk is all about.  As far as 
the Sex Pistols contribution, I remember Johnny Rotten being quoted as 
saying "America won't get what it's about," or something to that 
effect.  And I think that was pretty accurate; if I understand it 
right, the rage was over the crushing poverty in northern England 
(Manchester, for example) as the industrialist economic structure 
basically collapsed, and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was basically 
indifferent.
cyklone
response 74 of 124: Mark Unseen   Dec 12 13:46 UTC 2002

I think you read Rotten too broadly. The Sex Pistols themselves, as well
as the Clash, admit to being influenced heavily by the Ramones, who toured
England early. The Sex Pistols were also influenced by the Stooges.
Neither the Ramones or Stooges were very political, yet they form the
basis for a large part of the punk sound. I believe Rotten was refering to
America understanding what the *Sex Pistols* were all about, not punk in
general. In any case, The Dead Kennedys were extrememly political,
reacting to Thatcher's US alter-ego, Reagan. 

"Punk nostalgia" has more than one facet. Based on my experience playing
the songs live, people respond to "Too Drunk to Fuck" and "Sheena is a
Punk Rocker" primarily for nostalgic reasons. We also get a great response
to songs like "Holiday Inn Cambodia" and Fear's "Let's Have a War" and I
think at least one of the reasons is because those songs still have
resonance in our current political climate. 

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