Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-22 Thread DJ Nikadeemas
Who me?  Never!!  I haven't once obsessed about his majesty Mills.


- Original Message -
From: Jason Brunton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2004 23:59:59 +
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: (313) Trainspotting

> Weird!  That very film is playing right now on Channel 4 (UK).  
> Trainspotter is an amusing derogatory term used to describe people who 
> are  more interested in  the nuances and details of said pastime than 
> the actual music itself- obsessions with labels, original pressings. 
> catalogue numbers ad finitum.  It comes from the act of 
> "Trainspotting"- an actual hobby where train enthusiasts stand in train 
> stations and record the numbers of different trains and their types and 
> compare notes.  I think most of us on the 313 could be described as 
> trainspotters at one time or another :)
> 
> Jason
> 

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Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-20 Thread Thomas D. Cox, Jr.
-- Original Message --
From: Ian Malbon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

>My apologies in advance to the list for any off-topic tirades 
that may 
>ensue.
>
>I will not continue any public conversation about how grown up I 
am.  
>Or not.
>
>(P.S. they ARE both good in their own way, but that was beside 
the 
>point)

yeah id like to apologise for the unnecessarily irritated email i 
sent. i have nothing against mr malbon, though i do get worked up 
at the backlash american football gets from some people i shouldnt 
have taken it out on him. my bad. 

no apologies to Jason Kenjar though. 

tom 


andythepooh.com


 
   


RE: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-20 Thread FC2 Richards
I happen to enjoy both football and soccer.  I enjoyed playing Soccer more
than Football, but man, watching a Soccer game is one of the more boaring
things to do in professional sports.  The only sports I find more boring to
watch are Golf and Cheerleading.  And calling those sports is quite
debatable in my mind.  
But yes it is true that Soccer (aka Football)is not all that mainstream a
sport here in the US.  The TV coverage is horrible, it has no adult fanfare.
The only people that watch soccer are the kids parents.  Football (aka Grid
Iron) on the other hand has everything that soccer doesn't here in the US.
Except for a certain 14 year old draft pick that is making half a million a
year.
Am I trying to make a point?  No, I think I was really just bored and wanted
to talk about sports on a music list.  And I am not sorry about it being off
topic.  I just think maybe people should grow up a little, stop pointing
fingers and bitching about the way things are done over seas.
Jeff

-Original Message-
From: Thomas D. Cox, Jr. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2004 3:45 AM
To: 313@hyperreal.org
Subject: Re: (313) Trainspotting


-- Original Message --
From: Ian Malbon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

>Clearly we're not talking about American "football" here.
>
>Unfortunately, "Soccer" in the U.S. is a pastime left to mainstream 
>parents who are obsessive most about their own children (most of
whom 
>have purchased neither vinyl nor train tickets in their lives).
>
>The linkage is lost on most yanks.
>
>Sorry for the sidenote.  I'd love to imagine a future where lots of 
>Detroit kids are into soccer/football and techno simultaneously...

why is that? do you have something against american football? it
is possible to like and play both sports you know. if you wanna be
one of those people who looks down on football because its so
physical then f*ck you. how about that? no offense to soccer (i
love the sport) but football is very much like chess and soccer
has nothing in that sort of strategy going for it. theyre both
good in their own way. i just hate people who talk down on
football because of some poor personal relationship they had with
jocks in high school or whatever. grow up. 

tom 


andythepooh.com


 
   


Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-20 Thread Ian Malbon
My apologies in advance to the list for any off-topic tirades that may 
ensue.


I will not continue any public conversation about how grown up I am.  
Or not.


(P.S. they ARE both good in their own way, but that was beside the 
point)

--

On Jan 19, 2004, at 10:45 PM, Thomas D. Cox, Jr. wrote:


-- Original Message --
From: Ian Malbon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Clearly we're not talking about American "football" here.

Unfortunately, "Soccer" in the U.S. is a pastime left to mainstream
parents who are obsessive most about their own children (most of

whom

have purchased neither vinyl nor train tickets in their lives).

The linkage is lost on most yanks.

Sorry for the sidenote.  I'd love to imagine a future where lots of
Detroit kids are into soccer/football and techno simultaneously...


why is that? do you have something against american football? it
is possible to like and play both sports you know. if you wanna be
one of those people who looks down on football because its so
physical then f*ck you. how about that? no offense to soccer (i
love the sport) but football is very much like chess and soccer
has nothing in that sort of strategy going for it. theyre both
good in their own way. i just hate people who talk down on
football because of some poor personal relationship they had with
jocks in high school or whatever. grow up.

tom


andythepooh.com









Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-20 Thread Thomas D. Cox, Jr.
-- Original Message --
From: Ian Malbon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

>Clearly we're not talking about American "football" here.
>
>Unfortunately, "Soccer" in the U.S. is a pastime left to mainstream 
>parents who are obsessive most about their own children (most of
whom 
>have purchased neither vinyl nor train tickets in their lives).
>
>The linkage is lost on most yanks.
>
>Sorry for the sidenote.  I'd love to imagine a future where lots of 
>Detroit kids are into soccer/football and techno simultaneously...

why is that? do you have something against american football? it
is possible to like and play both sports you know. if you wanna be
one of those people who looks down on football because its so
physical then f*ck you. how about that? no offense to soccer (i
love the sport) but football is very much like chess and soccer
has nothing in that sort of strategy going for it. theyre both
good in their own way. i just hate people who talk down on
football because of some poor personal relationship they had with
jocks in high school or whatever. grow up. 

tom 


andythepooh.com


 
   


Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-20 Thread Ian Malbon

On Jan 19, 2004, at 5:52 PM, David Easy wrote:

I'm not sure I agree with the statement that 'music' is more of an 
active
pastime than 'football' or 'cars' for that matter.  Watching football 
can be
a very (inter-)active experience, believe me.  There's more to it than 
just

sitting in front of the telly every weekend.

going to record shops/ going 'clubbing' = going to football matches

buying records = buying programmes/tickets (just as collectable)

dj'ing = playing football


Clearly we're not talking about American "football" here.

Unfortunately, "Soccer" in the U.S. is a pastime left to mainstream 
parents who are obsessive most about their own children (most of whom 
have purchased neither vinyl nor train tickets in their lives).


The linkage is lost on most yanks.

Sorry for the sidenote.  I'd love to imagine a future where lots of 
Detroit kids are into soccer/football and techno simultaneously...

--
IM



Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-19 Thread yussel
i was referring to the fact that most car enthusiast (and arm chair
quarterbacks) don't do any of the things mentioned.

I'm not suprised that people on this list DO in fact get active with their
car/football/record obsessions.

On Mon, 19 Jan 2004, [iso-8859-1] Mark S. Krüx wrote:

> > I'm not sure I agree with the statement that 'music' is more of an active
> > pastime than 'football' or 'cars' for that matter.
>
> As a total car geek I'd have to agree with the above statementsure there
> aren't many that can afford the 'car of their dreams' but even someone of
> modest means could go out and buy a reasonably priced sportscar,  then work
> on it,  race it or whatever.  Hardly passive imo...
>
>


Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-19 Thread Mark S . Krüx
> I'm not sure I agree with the statement that 'music' is more of an active
> pastime than 'football' or 'cars' for that matter.

As a total car geek I'd have to agree with the above statementsure there
aren't many that can afford the 'car of their dreams' but even someone of
modest means could go out and buy a reasonably priced sportscar,  then work
on it,  race it or whatever.  Hardly passive imo...



Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-19 Thread David Easy
> I totally agree, especially considering that the mainstream occupations
> are passive (watching football) or fantastic (how many people can afford a
> 'dream' car)
>
> I guess we're lazy animals that can relate to passive occupations more
> than active ones like collecting records or hanging out in train yards.
>

I'm not sure I agree with the statement that 'music' is more of an active
pastime than 'football' or 'cars' for that matter.  Watching football can be
a very (inter-)active experience, believe me.  There's more to it than just
sitting in front of the telly every weekend.

going to record shops/ going 'clubbing' = going to football matches

buying records = buying programmes/tickets (just as collectable)

dj'ing = playing football

True football fans are just as passionate about their pastime as music
lovers (not that the two are mutually exclusive!), and for every music
mailing list/messageboard there's one dedicated to sport.




Re: (313) Trainspotting - aspergers?

2004-01-19 Thread DJ Entropy

From: Robert Taylor [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

It doesn't stop at trains, I've seen bus spotters, coach
spotters and truck spotters.
It has been argued that trainspotters (and that includes
those of the vinyl persuasion) are in fact suffering from
Asperger's Syndrome, a milder form of autism.



Where did you hear that?  My 20 year old brother is Asperger's/autistic 
and he doesn't collect or "spot" anything.  I'm not disagreeing with you, 
I ask because maybe getting him into something like that would help him 
out a bit; he's a bit lost in life (as autistic people tend to be).









--
-DJ Entropy
(bhpc, elemental compounds, planet muzik, ingrooves, boston)

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Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-19 Thread /0
you're a lucky man if your true dreams are of a creative nature, imo


- Original Message - 
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Brendan Nelson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "313" <313@hyperreal.org>
Sent: Monday, January 19, 2004 5:36 PM
Subject: RE: (313) Trainspotting


> > It's interesting that
> > someone with an obsessive interest in football or cars
> > tends to be seen in a different light than someone with
> > an obsessive interest in music, computers or even trains.
>
> I totally agree, especially considering that the mainstream occupations
> are passive (watching football) or fantastic (how many people can afford a
> 'dream' car)
>
> I guess we're lazy animals that can relate to passive occupations more
> than active ones like collecting records or hanging out in train yards.
>
>
>
>
> >
> > > -Original Message-
> > > From: Robert Taylor [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > > Sent: 19 January 2004 16:41
> > > To: Jason Brunton; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > > Cc: 313
> > > Subject: RE: (313) Trainspotting
> > >
> > >
> > > It doesn't stop at trains, I've seen bus spotters, coach
> > > spotters and truck spotters.
> > > It has been argued that trainspotters (and that includes
> > > those of the vinyl persuasion) are in fact suffering from
> > > Asperger's Syndrome, a milder form of autism.
> >



RE: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-19 Thread yussel
> It's interesting that
> someone with an obsessive interest in football or cars
> tends to be seen in a different light than someone with
> an obsessive interest in music, computers or even trains.

I totally agree, especially considering that the mainstream occupations
are passive (watching football) or fantastic (how many people can afford a
'dream' car)

I guess we're lazy animals that can relate to passive occupations more
than active ones like collecting records or hanging out in train yards.




>
> > -Original Message-
> > From: Robert Taylor [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: 19 January 2004 16:41
> > To: Jason Brunton; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Cc: 313
> > Subject: RE: (313) Trainspotting
> >
> >
> > It doesn't stop at trains, I've seen bus spotters, coach
> > spotters and truck spotters.
> > It has been argued that trainspotters (and that includes
> > those of the vinyl persuasion) are in fact suffering from
> > Asperger's Syndrome, a milder form of autism.
>


RE: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-19 Thread yussel
i've often joked about the autism of my dj friends. like why does carlos
souffront know that the 2nd track on the b-side of the second disc of
brendan gillens's copy of minimal nation has a skip in it??!!

glad our scientists are on it ;)

On Mon, 19 Jan 2004, Robert Taylor wrote:

> It doesn't stop at trains, I've seen bus spotters, coach spotters and truck 
> spotters.
> It has been argued that trainspotters (and that includes those of the vinyl 
> persuasion) are in fact suffering from Asperger's Syndrome, a milder form of 
> autism.
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Jason Brunton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2004 12:00 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Cc: 313
> Subject: Re: (313) Trainspotting
>
>
> Weird!  That very film is playing right now on Channel 4 (UK).
> Trainspotter is an amusing derogatory term used to describe people who
> are  more interested in  the nuances and details of said pastime than
> the actual music itself- obsessions with labels, original pressings.
> catalogue numbers ad finitum.  It comes from the act of
> "Trainspotting"- an actual hobby where train enthusiasts stand in train
> stations and record the numbers of different trains and their types and
> compare notes.  I think most of us on the 313 could be described as
> trainspotters at one time or another :)
>
> Jason
>
>
> On 18 Jan 2004, at 23:27, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> > Where did the term "trainspotting come from?
> > I know there was a film - which I didn't see.
> > What does it mean?
> >
>
> #
> Note:
>
> Any views or opinions are solely those of the author and do not necessarily 
> represent
> those of Channel Four Television Corporation unless specifically stated. This 
> email
> and any files transmitted are confidential and intended solely for the use of 
> the
> individual or entity to which they are addressed. If you have received this 
> email in
> error, please notify [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Thank You.
> #
>
>


RE: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-19 Thread Ploegmakers, Joost
And equally interesting that people of the female gender hardly seem to
be affected by this anomaly...

Hmm, guess that's the reason why there's so few female DJs.

Joost

> It's interesting that 
> someone with an obsessive interest in football or cars 
> tends to be seen in a different light than someone with 
> an obsessive interest in music, computers or even trains. 
> 
> > -Original Message-
> > From: Robert Taylor [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: 19 January 2004 16:41
> > To: Jason Brunton; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Cc: 313
> > Subject: RE: (313) Trainspotting
> > 
> > 
> > It doesn't stop at trains, I've seen bus spotters, coach
> > spotters and truck spotters.
> > It has been argued that trainspotters (and that includes 
> > those of the vinyl persuasion) are in fact suffering from 
> > Asperger's Syndrome, a milder form of autism.
> 


RE: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-19 Thread Brendan Nelson
Isn't trainspotting ultimately descended from philately, 
the mother of all bizarrely obsessive hobbies for nerdy 
blokes?

I've heard that Asperger's argument before, and it does 
make a bit of sense to me to be honest; the whole idea 
of data being more fascinating to certain people than 
other humans are is common in "trainspotters" and in 
Asperger's sufferers. But on the other hand it could be 
argued that it's quite a natural thing to be nerdy and 
obsessive, with football and cars being the two biggest 
obsessions the typical male has. It's interesting that 
someone with an obsessive interest in football or cars 
tends to be seen in a different light than someone with 
an obsessive interest in music, computers or even trains. 

> -Original Message-
> From: Robert Taylor [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: 19 January 2004 16:41
> To: Jason Brunton; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Cc: 313
> Subject: RE: (313) Trainspotting
> 
> 
> It doesn't stop at trains, I've seen bus spotters, coach 
> spotters and truck spotters.
> It has been argued that trainspotters (and that includes 
> those of the vinyl persuasion) are in fact suffering from 
> Asperger's Syndrome, a milder form of autism.


RE: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-19 Thread Robert Taylor
It doesn't stop at trains, I've seen bus spotters, coach spotters and truck 
spotters.
It has been argued that trainspotters (and that includes those of the vinyl 
persuasion) are in fact suffering from Asperger's Syndrome, a milder form of 
autism.

-Original Message-
From: Jason Brunton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2004 12:00 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: 313
Subject: Re: (313) Trainspotting


Weird!  That very film is playing right now on Channel 4 (UK).  
Trainspotter is an amusing derogatory term used to describe people who 
are  more interested in  the nuances and details of said pastime than 
the actual music itself- obsessions with labels, original pressings. 
catalogue numbers ad finitum.  It comes from the act of 
"Trainspotting"- an actual hobby where train enthusiasts stand in train 
stations and record the numbers of different trains and their types and 
compare notes.  I think most of us on the 313 could be described as 
trainspotters at one time or another :)

Jason


On 18 Jan 2004, at 23:27, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> Where did the term "trainspotting come from?
> I know there was a film - which I didn't see.
> What does it mean?
>

#
Note:

Any views or opinions are solely those of the author and do not necessarily 
represent 
those of Channel Four Television Corporation unless specifically stated. This 
email 
and any files transmitted are confidential and intended solely for the use of 
the 
individual or entity to which they are addressed. If you have received this 
email in 
error, please notify [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Thank You.
#



Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-19 Thread mkb

At 23:40 + 1/18/04, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

it's popularity seems confined to the british
isles.


Not really. I have several friends who are obsessed with the NYC subway system.

I'm awfully fond of German trainspotters for taking pictures of train cars made
by Mindener Kreisbahnen GmbH, who puts big "MKB" logos on their 
rolling stock. :)

--
Be sure and unplug Baby Jesus [EMAIL PROTECTED]
before his head melts! AIM:pr0j2501
http://www.dirty.org/~mkb
Matt Kane's Brain


Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-19 Thread Mediadrome

In a message dated 1/18/04 6:39:11 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:

<< it comes from people who spend their time standing by trainlines watching
trains go past and writing down the train numbers or some other details.
from what i can gather, it's popularity seems confined to the british
isles.
it's become a byword for pointless,  obsessive behaviour. >>

Thanks for all the thoughtful replies.

When I was a kid in Chicago (in the 1950s) I lived a block away from a very 
large RR yard.
I would keep a notebook of the various RR companies and their freight cars 
and also  private companies that had their own rolling stock - not the numbers 
- 
 just the types of boxcars, tank cars,  refers (that's refrigerated cars, not 
something you smoke).Some of them were very colorful.

I mentioned this thread to my wife, who rides a commuter train to work every 
day.   She said that some of the older passenger train cars have their own 
names like the "General Sheridan" or the "Mountain View" etc.She said that 
she looks at the names of the cars as they pass by.

Another related point is that trains, at one point on our civilization, were 
the fastest way to get from point A to point B.   The time-space thing.   You 
see a lot of railroad imagery in early 20th century painting.Today it 
would be the airplane or the spaceship.

WOW  pointless,  obsessive behavior   
sounds like me.

mediadrome







RE: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-19 Thread FC2 Richards
I still do that with my baseball cards

-Original Message-
From: Jason Brunton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2004 12:00 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: 313
Subject: Re: (313) Trainspotting


Weird!  That very film is playing right now on Channel 4 (UK).  
Trainspotter is an amusing derogatory term used to describe people who 
are  more interested in  the nuances and details of said pastime than 
the actual music itself- obsessions with labels, original pressings. 
catalogue numbers ad finitum.  It comes from the act of 
"Trainspotting"- an actual hobby where train enthusiasts stand in train 
stations and record the numbers of different trains and their types and 
compare notes.  I think most of us on the 313 could be described as 
trainspotters at one time or another :)

Jason


On 18 Jan 2004, at 23:27, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> Where did the term "trainspotting come from?
> I know there was a film - which I didn't see.
> What does it mean?
>


RE: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-19 Thread ralf gill
sort of went with the i-spy series of books...man, what a waste of time

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, 19 January 2004 12:40 p.m.
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: 313@hyperreal.org
Subject: Re: (313) Trainspotting







it comes from people who spend their time standing by trainlines watching
trains go past and writing down the train numbers or some other details.
from what i can gather, it's popularity seems confined to the british
isles.
it's become a byword for pointless,  obsessive behaviour.
james
www.jbucknell.com





  [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 
  om   To:  313@hyperreal.org   

   cc:  (bcc: James 
Bucknell/ARD/AU/ReadersDigest)  
  18/01/04 11:27   Subject: Re: (313) Trainspotting 

  PM









Where did the term "trainspotting come from?
I know there was a film - which I didn't see.
What does it mean?





Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-19 Thread Jason Brunton
Weird!  That very film is playing right now on Channel 4 (UK).  
Trainspotter is an amusing derogatory term used to describe people who 
are  more interested in  the nuances and details of said pastime than 
the actual music itself- obsessions with labels, original pressings. 
catalogue numbers ad finitum.  It comes from the act of 
"Trainspotting"- an actual hobby where train enthusiasts stand in train 
stations and record the numbers of different trains and their types and 
compare notes.  I think most of us on the 313 could be described as 
trainspotters at one time or another :)


Jason


On 18 Jan 2004, at 23:27, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


Where did the term "trainspotting come from?
I know there was a film - which I didn't see.
What does it mean?





Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-18 Thread James_Bucknell





it comes from people who spend their time standing by trainlines watching
trains go past and writing down the train numbers or some other details.
from what i can gather, it's popularity seems confined to the british
isles.
it's become a byword for pointless,  obsessive behaviour.
james
www.jbucknell.com





  [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 
  om   To:  313@hyperreal.org   

   cc:  (bcc: James 
Bucknell/ARD/AU/ReadersDigest)  
  18/01/04 11:27   Subject: Re: (313) Trainspotting 

  PM









Where did the term "trainspotting come from?
I know there was a film - which I didn't see.
What does it mean?





Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-18 Thread allen
What he meant to say is nerdy term for the ‘sport’ of identifying a track.

; )

> It's a hobby in the UK, in which you collect the numbers from the train
> engines, very geeky - men with sandwiches and flasks, glasses and hooded
> anoraks. Massive in the 7O's, spending all day at the end of a train
> platform, now there's a hobby for you :)
>
>
> - Original Message -
> From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <313@hyperreal.org>
> Sent: Sunday, January 18, 2004 11:27 PM
> Subject: Re: (313) Trainspotting
>
>
>> Where did the term "trainspotting come from?
>> I know there was a film - which I didn't see.
>> What does it mean?




Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-18 Thread Martin
It's a hobby in the UK, in which you collect the numbers from the train
engines, very geeky - men with sandwiches and flasks, glasses and hooded
anoraks. Massive in the 7O's, spending all day at the end of a train
platform, now there's a hobby for you :)


- Original Message - 
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <313@hyperreal.org>
Sent: Sunday, January 18, 2004 11:27 PM
Subject: Re: (313) Trainspotting


> Where did the term "trainspotting come from?
> I know there was a film - which I didn't see.
> What does it mean?
>
>




Re: (313) Trainspotting

2004-01-18 Thread Mediadrome
Where did the term "trainspotting come from? 
I know there was a film - which I didn't see.
What does it mean?


Re: [313] Trainspotting HBO

2002-04-08 Thread Jake
I heard a fila brazilia mix of the six ft under theme on the radio.. Sounded
interesting. :)

on 4/8/02 9:47 AM, Brian Dillard at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> HBO's Six Feet Under pages list the music credits this season - not sure if
> they're trying to prove how edgy they are or it's a prerequisite for their
> music licensing contract. There's a soundtrack coming out w/ both Rae &
> Christian and Photek remixes of the theme music. My fave musical moment this
> season came when Brenda screamed and danced around her house to a Polly Jean
> Harvey b-side.
> 
> Anyway, here's the credit for the Beltran track; interesting that they took
> it from a comp:
> 
> Song #7 - Brenda jerks off one of her massage clients.
> John Beltran - "Collage of Dreams"
> [from the compilation "Dimensions in Ambience Volume 2", Quango Records
> 1997]
> 
> from:
> 
> http://www.hbo.com/sixfeetunder/episode/season2/season2_eps6.shtml
> 
> -Original Message-
> From: Phonopsia [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Sunday, April 07, 2002 7:11 PM
> To: 313
> Subject: [313] Trainspotting HBO
> 
> 
> Anyone else catch a snip of John Beltran from "Ten Days of Blue" in Six Feet
> Under tonight? I did a sonic double-take. :)
> 
> Tristan
> ---
> Upcoming Gigs:
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RE: [313] Trainspotting HBO

2002-04-08 Thread Brian Dillard
HBO's Six Feet Under pages list the music credits this season - not sure if
they're trying to prove how edgy they are or it's a prerequisite for their
music licensing contract. There's a soundtrack coming out w/ both Rae &
Christian and Photek remixes of the theme music. My fave musical moment this
season came when Brenda screamed and danced around her house to a Polly Jean
Harvey b-side.

Anyway, here's the credit for the Beltran track; interesting that they took
it from a comp:

Song #7 - Brenda jerks off one of her massage clients.
John Beltran - "Collage of Dreams"
[from the compilation "Dimensions in Ambience Volume 2", Quango Records
1997]

from:

http://www.hbo.com/sixfeetunder/episode/season2/season2_eps6.shtml

-Original Message-
From: Phonopsia [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, April 07, 2002 7:11 PM
To: 313
Subject: [313] Trainspotting HBO


Anyone else catch a snip of John Beltran from "Ten Days of Blue" in Six Feet
Under tonight? I did a sonic double-take. :)

Tristan
---
Upcoming Gigs:
4/14/02 - Filler @ Blue Room, Adams Morgan, DC
http://www.mp313.com <- Music
http://www.metrotechno.net <- DC techno + more
http://www.metatrackstudios.com <- DC DJ/Production studios
http://phonopsia.tripod.com <- Hub
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <- email


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RE: [313] Trainspotting HBO

2002-04-08 Thread Mann, Ravinder [CCS]
NOW is probably Nights Interlude...i seem to hear it quite a bit on 
gardening/holiday/nature programmes for some reason. On the Century Of Self 
BBC2 last night im sure i heard some minimal techno...sort of like Plastikmans 
Consumed material...but i dont think it was

> -Original Message-
> From: L R [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Monday, April 08, 2002 3:08 PM
> To:   313@hyperreal.org
> Subject:  Re: [313] Trainspotting HBO
> 
> They also played either a Nightmares on Wax track or the original track that 
> they sampled. Think it was a track off of Smoker's Delight. It was during a 
> scene in the basement when Frederico was working on a body. Love that show!
> 
> 
> 
> >
> >missed that one ... during what segment?
> >
> >At 10:10 PM -0400 4/7/2002, Phonopsia wrote:
> >>Anyone else catch a snip of John Beltran from "Ten Days of Blue" in Six 
> >>Feet
> >>Under tonight? I did a sonic double-take. :)
> >>
> >>Tristan
> >>---
> >>Upcoming Gigs:
> >>4/14/02 - Filler @ Blue Room, Adams Morgan, DC
> >>http://www.mp313.com <- Music
> >>http://www.metrotechno.net <- DC techno + more
> >>http://www.metatrackstudios.com <- DC DJ/Production studios
> >>http://phonopsia.tripod.com <- Hub
> >>[EMAIL PROTECTED] <- email
> >>
> >>
> >>-
> >>To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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> >
> >
> >-
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> 
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RE: [313] Trainspotting HBO

2002-04-08 Thread Neil Wallace

ive not seen the show but i would guess you are talking about the nightmares
on wax track that samples quincy jones' version of summer in the city.

:-Original Message-
:From: L R [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
:Sent: Monday, April 08, 2002 3:08 PM
:To: 313@hyperreal.org
:Subject: Re: [313] Trainspotting HBO
:
:
:They also played either a Nightmares on Wax track or the original
:track that
:they sampled. Think it was a track off of Smoker's Delight. It was
:during a
:scene in the basement when Frederico was working on a body. Love that show!
:
:
:
:>
:>missed that one ... during what segment?
:>
:>At 10:10 PM -0400 4/7/2002, Phonopsia wrote:
:>>Anyone else catch a snip of John Beltran from "Ten Days of Blue" in Six
:>>Feet
:>>Under tonight? I did a sonic double-take. :)
:>>
:>>Tristan
:>>---
:>>Upcoming Gigs:
:>>4/14/02 - Filler @ Blue Room, Adams Morgan, DC
:>>http://www.mp313.com <- Music
:>>http://www.metrotechno.net <- DC techno + more
:>>http://www.metatrackstudios.com <- DC DJ/Production studios
:>>http://phonopsia.tripod.com <- Hub
:>>[EMAIL PROTECTED] <- email
:>>
:>>
:>>-
:>>To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
:>>For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: [313] Trainspotting HBO

2002-04-08 Thread L R
They also played either a Nightmares on Wax track or the original track that 
they sampled. Think it was a track off of Smoker's Delight. It was during a 
scene in the basement when Frederico was working on a body. Love that show!






missed that one ... during what segment?

At 10:10 PM -0400 4/7/2002, Phonopsia wrote:
Anyone else catch a snip of John Beltran from "Ten Days of Blue" in Six 
Feet

Under tonight? I did a sonic double-take. :)

Tristan
---
Upcoming Gigs:
4/14/02 - Filler @ Blue Room, Adams Morgan, DC
http://www.mp313.com <- Music
http://www.metrotechno.net <- DC techno + more
http://www.metatrackstudios.com <- DC DJ/Production studios
http://phonopsia.tripod.com <- Hub
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <- email


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Re: [313] Trainspotting HBO

2002-04-08 Thread Phonopsia
- Original Message -
From: "Dan Sicko" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Phonopsia" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "313" <313@hyperreal.org>
Sent: Monday, April 08, 2002 8:54 AM
Subject: Re: [313] Trainspotting HBO


> missed that one ... during what segment?

Erm, I had a little too much fun last night and I'm having trouble recalling
the specifics. I think it was when Claire was watching the Mom's sister do
Tai Chi. It may have been one of the parts when they were looking at her
art. It was just the "ambient" intro to one of the songs which played for
maybe 20 seconds (my copy was stolen so I can't verify the tune). It had
guitar in it. Last week they had Yo La Tengo. As if it wasn't evident from
watching the show, someone's got good taste. :)

Tristan
---
Upcoming Gigs:
4/14/02 - Filler @ Blue Room, Adams Morgan, DC
http://www.mp313.com <- Music
http://www.metrotechno.net <- DC techno + more
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Re: [313] Trainspotting HBO

2002-04-08 Thread Dan Sicko

missed that one ... during what segment?

At 10:10 PM -0400 4/7/2002, Phonopsia wrote:

Anyone else catch a snip of John Beltran from "Ten Days of Blue" in Six Feet
Under tonight? I did a sonic double-take. :)

Tristan
---
Upcoming Gigs:
4/14/02 - Filler @ Blue Room, Adams Morgan, DC
http://www.mp313.com <- Music
http://www.metrotechno.net <- DC techno + more
http://www.metatrackstudios.com <- DC DJ/Production studios
http://phonopsia.tripod.com <- Hub
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <- email


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