warm, funky, exultant records that were just right for nightclubs and
high-tech launch parties packed with gamines in $300 shoes sloshing
day-glo cocktails
Really, if that isn't taking the piss (as the UK contingent says)
I don't know what is.
Well, it's pretty clear that Michelle Goldberg has
On Tue, Jan 29, 2002 at 09:16:50PM -0800, Sunlight Data wrote:
warm, funky, exultant records that were just right for nightclubs and
high-tech launch parties packed with gamines in $300 shoes sloshing
day-glo cocktails
Really, if that isn't taking the piss (as the UK contingent says)
I
As ozymandias G knows, I was exaggerating about the Aeron chairs
for effect :)
There were actually other non-Expansion parties at other than
Organic office spaces, but I didn't want to confuse the stories
too much.
Yes, that was DJ Vitamin B (Brian Behlendorf, actually) you see
briefly in the
WTF is office-party music?
-Original Message-
From: Brian Dillard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, January 29, 2002 11:58 AM
To: '313@hyperreal.org'
Subject: [313] article in Salon.com mentions Strings of Life
http://www.salon.com/ent/music/review/2002/01/29/chemical/index.html
At 11:55 AM -0700 1/29/2002, Holly MacDonald-Korth wrote:
WTF is office-party music?
A (ahem) clever Salon writer coinage.
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I agree, I don't think the article was terrible. I know exactly what the
author was talking about when they wrote office party music - it's the
music most of my co-workers are just now getting excited about - Hey have
you heard about this new electronica band called Daft Punk?
MEK