RE: (313) Re : (313) Frankie Bones

2006-03-06 Thread Michael . Elliot-Knight
but most of them don't go this far out of their way to self-promote in a nearly-fictional manner. pounded that nail in all the way Tristan I know DJs always fluff themselves up with I've played beside so-and-so (like they're good buddies) but to make the claims that FB does - well, it's

Re: (313) Re : (313) Frankie Bones

2006-03-06 Thread Michael . Elliot-Knight
cc Subject Re: (313) Re : (313) Frankie Bones

Re: (313) Re : (313) Frankie Bones, r.i.p.

2006-03-06 Thread seek
- Original Message - From: Michael.Elliot-Knight You should be his publicist. Give it a rest. seek It sounds like what you're saying is that it's ok for him to shoot his mouth and fabricate additional influences that aren't owed to him because of everything he *has* done. MEK

Re: (313) Re : (313) Frankie Bones (fwd)

2006-03-06 Thread Derek Plaslaiko.
Subject Re: (313) Re : (313) Frankie Bones - Original Message - From: Tristan Watkins I mean, how many people outside of the mid-Atlantic would actually go see him if he were playing

(313) Frankie Bones

2006-03-04 Thread Tristan Watkins
I remember when I moved to Baltimore, and then D.C. around the turn of the century, I was suddenly surrounded by people who knew and cared about Frankie Bones, whereas almost no one had done in the midwest when I lived there, at least that I was aware of. As far as I can tell Frankie Bones was an

Re: (313) Frankie Bones

2006-03-04 Thread Michael . Elliot-Knight
Subject Please respond to (313) Frankie Bones [EMAIL PROTECTED] sia.co.uk

(313) Re : (313) Frankie Bones

2006-03-04 Thread Poivrenoir
I feel like the more I argue in favor of Frankie Bones the more I look like I wish I was the next room mate. But when you say Frankie Bones is a regional hero and certainly goes out of his way to attribute more than that to himself. Do you mean the region called the US and Europe? I mean what

Re: (313) Frankie Bones

2006-03-04 Thread seek
- Original Message - From: Tristan Watkins Beyond that, he hasn't made much of a mark on the rest of the world in the last 10-15 years unless I've missed it. To sing his praises is like yelling about how Donald Glaude was one of the most important DJs in Seattle in the early-mid '90s.

RE: (313) Re : (313) Frankie Bones

2006-03-04 Thread Tristan Watkins
-Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 04 March 2006 04:08 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: 313@hyperreal.org Subject: (313) Re : (313) Frankie Bones I think the Bones remarks, that is what he makes, are exxagerated, I believe I spelled that wrong

RE: (313) Frankie Bones

2006-03-04 Thread Tristan Watkins
-Original Message- From: seek [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 04 March 2006 12:20 To: 313@hyperreal.org Subject: Re: (313) Frankie Bones Frankie isn't a god, and his site definitely fluffs up his resume, but he certainly was an important figure in dance music in the 80s, well

Re: (313) Frankie Bones

2006-03-04 Thread Stewart Caig
From my perspective as a young kid on the late 80s, early 90s rave scene in the UK. Frankie Bones was very much a name we respected and always looked out for. I admit his music hasnt exactly aged well, but tracks like his bones breaks stuff, the loony tunes stuff he did with Lenny Dee, your

Re: (313) Re : (313) Frankie Bones

2006-03-04 Thread seek
- Original Message - From: Tristan Watkins I mean, how many people outside of the mid-Atlantic would actually go see him if he were playing in your city tonight? How many people still follow his music? I honestly don't know because he's never mattered to me in either sense, but I'm

Re: (313) Frankie Bones' thugs in harmony

2006-03-04 Thread seek
- Original Message - From: Tristan Watkins -Original Message- From: seek He made great tracks and remixes with Tommy Musto, and his own tracks - eg. the Bonesbreaks series - were in the crates of every dj worth their salt. And that's in the mid/late 80s, and not 'techno'