> > Yeah but was Stalin the Tweedy fan and Hitler the Farrar fan, or vice versa? Or > did Hitler think that UT were the progenitors of alt-country, while Stalin > asserted that it was a decades old form that was not being duly recognized as > such by the UT fans, or vice versa? Or... > Actually, Stalin reportedly enjoyed listening to orchestrated music with "dogs" doing the vocals. He'd force his generals and aides to dance until the early morning hours to this stuff. -- Terry Smith (who's sincerely sorry he threw this utterly non-musical issue out for comment -- is there a purge coming?)
- Re: instrumentally speaking Ph. Barnard
- Re: instrumentally speaking Terry A. Smith
- RE: instrumentally speaking Jon Weisberger
- Re: instrumentally speaking Terry A. Smith
- Re: instrumentally speaking William T. Cocke
- RE: instrumentally speaking Jon Weisberger
- Re: instrumentally speaking Terry A. Smith
- Re: instrumentally speaking Andy Benham
- Re: Tweedy quote/alt.country... Barry Mazor
- Re: Tweedy quote/alt.country... William F. Silvers
- Re: Tweedy quote/alt.country... Terry A. Smith
- Re: Tweedy quote/alt.country (REAL LONG) Don Yates
- Re: Tweedy quote/alt.country (REAL LO... James Gerard Roll
- Re: Tweedy quote/alt.country Masonsod
- Re: Tweedy quote/alt.country Christopher M Knaus
- Re: Tweedy quote/alt.country Moran/Vargo
- Re: Tweedy quote/alt.country Ameritwang