In a message dated 99-02-04 18:11:14 EST, Mike writes:
He assured me no one will be asked to give up publishing or songwriter
rights. He's an admitted newbie to netcasting, stumbling a little blindly in
the dark and looking for advice. Can't blame a guy for not knowing, just a
lack of
Actually, so far "Real" is a contender for me, too.
I'm with Chad on that one; disappointing.
Can't we all just get along?
Here's a version of a review of Real that I wrote. It's in today's Austin
Chronicle.
Jim, smilin'
Various Artists-Real-The Tom T Hall Project (Delmore-Sire) 4 stars
The
Thanks for that "Real" review.
I can't believe it, but I don't think I mentioned Summer Teeth. O wait, I
know why. The person asked for indies.
np. A Shot in the Arm for the hundred billionth time in a row
In a message dated 99-02-04 19:51:11 EST, Joe writes:
I wonder if this is true of other fields like politics or big business,
etc.
I'm sure Hitler could be a charming dinner companion...
Elena
jim:
I'm not wanting to play contrarian again, but I have to jump in on this. I
think Heather Myles' problem is that she's only a fair to middlin' singer
with a taste for just ok songs and the good songs she chooses have been
done better by others (I mean Kiss An Angel Good Morning?-puh-leese). I
Ok who has the listing of anti-valentine, breakups, revenge material
compiled. Please forward me a copy offlist
Iceman
At tonight's Lucinda Williams concert in Des Moines, Lucinda commented
several times about someone putting this on the Internet, so here goes:
Lucinda made a plea to Gurf to put aside all the hard feelings and talk to
her. She said, "Be sure to say that I love Gurf, because I do, and that
love
Jon asks whether about the Hank Thompson disc called "Sounds of the Brazos
Valley: Unissued Radio Broadcasts c1952" has
much overlap with Flyright Fly's CD 948, Radio
Broadcasts 1952, which has 16 cuts,
Here's some additional information. From the "Sounds of the Brazos Valley"
liner notes:
On Fri, 5 Feb 1999 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In a message dated 99-02-04 19:51:11 EST, Joe writes:
I wonder if this is true of other fields like politics or big business,
etc.
I'm sure Hitler could be a charming dinner companion...
No, everyone said he was a big bore. Hermann
At 5:47 PM -0600 on 2/4/99, Joe Gracey wrote:
jamie wrote:
On Thu, 4 Feb 1999, Stuart Munro wrote:
As well, aren't there a few alternatives to these two that you TwangCast
boys might consider? Shockwave, Audioative (both of which Carl
Z's station
use, if I'm not mistaken),
At 11:40 PM 2/4/1999 Ms. Woodchip wrote:
Myles has a good voice, but I don't think
it's anything that special. I'll say the same thing about the songwriting on
Allison
Moorer's cd. They both have good voices and they are good looking.
Well, tastes do vary, eh? I'll say that for my part, I
I can't believe the author left out The Doors. "The Doors" , "Strange
Days", "Waiting For The Sun". Never mentioned The Who either. Of course,
there have been some great defining moments offered of the individual song
variety: "Layla"
Derek The Dominoes; "House Of The Rising Sun", The
In a message dated 99-02-04 19:51:11 EST, Joe writes:
I wonder if this is true of other fields like politics or big
business,
etc.
I'm sure Hitler could be a charming dinner companion...
No, everyone said he was a big bore. Hermann Goering, on the other hand,
was a fun guy.
-- Mike
And in neither case does the fact that both gals are nice looking have
anything to do with how I hear the records.
But speaking of nice looking: (!)
All subjective of course, one person's goldmine is another's tar-pit.
But, I cannot help but think of one k.d. lang who does have a superior
Reply to: RE: Artists dropped?
The closing of Decca left most of the label's artists in the cold including Chris
Knight and Danni Leigh. And Dolly Parton.
Steve Gardner wrote:
Hey,
Has anyone heard about any cool alt.country, americana or aaa artists
dropped recently due to the
Reply to: RE: Artists dropped?
The closing of Decca left most of the label's artists in the cold
including Chris Knight and Danni Leigh. And Dolly Parton.
Steve Gardner wrote:
Hey,
Has anyone heard about any cool alt.country, americana or aaa artists
dropped recently due to the huge
Antwort an: Re: best so far
The correct album title is "The Man from God Knows Where"!
Lowell Kaufman wrote:
My favorite alt-country record so far is Tom Russell's new record "The Man From
Nowhere" -
Reply to: RE: best so far
- Steve Earle and The Del McCoury Band, The Mountain
- The Gourds, Ghosts of Hallelujah
- Various Artists, Blaze Foley: In Tribute and Loving Memory... Vol. 1
- Tom Russell, The Man From God Knows Where
some girl wrote:
I need some names for the cream of
Reply to: RE: best so far
- Steve Earle and The Del McCoury Band, The Mountain
- The Gourds, Ghosts of Hallelujah
- Various Artists, Blaze Foley: In Tribute and Loving Memory... Vol. 1
- Tom Russell, The Man From God Knows Where
some girl wrote:
I need some names for the cream of
She is definitely an original! Heather
Myles is a diamond in the rough-I do agree with you on the her attitude, but
that it what great artists need! the problem is too many are followers-
Heather is and has been her own girl- Kinda remind you of Dale
Watson? (too country for country?) RW
A couple of weeks ago here in Sheffield I heard a local band do a
great version of 'Crazy Arms' - which song I have been singing to
myself ever since ...
If that's typical of Ray Price, then it looks like I've got a big
gap in my record collection, and I'd like to hear more. Can anyone
For those of you bemoaning the fact that Sparklehorse never tour the
US, here are some recently announced dates. Neal, there's even an
L.A. date.
--- Forwarded Message Follows
Sparklehorse tour dates! On tour with Varnaline.
3/12 Chapel Hill, NC Cat's Cradle
3/13
The group was dropped by TAG/Atlantic after releasing its 1996 album,
"24 Hours A Day," which has sold 16,000 units, according to SoundScan.
That is just a laughably stupid number. Proof positive that big money,
or the lack of it, can make or break an artist. I realize that the
Yes on both accounts. It's on her best of collection.
-Original Message-
From: Mike Woods [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, February 04, 1999 7:07 PM
To: passenger side
Subject: Re: Sugar Town?
On Thu, 4 Feb 1999, Geffry King wrote:
Something tells me this
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The group was dropped by TAG/Atlantic after releasing its 1996 album,
"24 Hours A Day," which has sold 16,000 units, according to SoundScan.
That is just a laughably stupid number. Proof positive that big money,
or the lack of it, can make or break
Whitburn says it went to Number 5 for Nancy in late 1966. Funny how I don't
remember it since that's my "era". g
In a message dated 2/4/99 11:30:00 PM Central Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:
Prickly mandolins?
I bet this was meant as a compliment. Really. As for five, well I can count
that high on the back cover, but, you know, if writers could count they'd be
musicians.
xo,
Linda
Dan Bentele writes:
Well, you probably said a number of things that folks will be
interested
in, Tera g, but I am curious about the above, mainly because I
honestly
don't know or can't remember; did Nashville actually abandon Lang? I
mean, was she dropped, was her budget slashed, did radio
R.W. Shamy Jr. writes:
Heather is and has been her own girl- Kinda remind you of Dale Watson?
(too country for country?)
Just like June Carter Cash?
--Jon Johnson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
New Hampshire Jon says:
As I remember it, there had been some rumors about her sexuality
here and there before she came out, but I don't think that was what
caused Nashville to turn its back on her. I really don't recall the fact
that she was a lesbian as being a huge surprise to
Well the solution to this is of course for Henneman to strip off his
shirt, and
stick a cucumber down his skin tight white pants. ehh. or maybe not.
Well, he almost did last night! They're just finishing up the album due
out this Spring, and got out of the studio (back in Brooklyn) for the
Smilin' Jim says:
[Americana] Programmers get
excited over some pretty mediocre stuff that leaves the rest of us just
shaking our heads and wondering what you're thinking.
That "rest of us" is a little disingenuous coming from a programmer g.
Actually, though, I agree with Jim - except that
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
WH! Lookit all the new *s this week! Note that the Calendar has a
contributing editor this week: P2er Tom Mohr. Keep filling in the blanks,
thanks!
Well, I 'umbly offer a few additions to Linda's cast of
thousands...
The Empty Bottle ad includes the most
Very sorry to hear you're packing in it for a while, Jeff. Please do it
again soon. Real soon!
--junior
Doing other people's songs just doesn't have the same stigma in country
(though maybe it does these days g) as in some other fields; why, as late
as his Philadelphia live album, Merle Haggard was doing impressions of other
artists (Johnny Cash, Hank Snow, Marty Robbins, Buck Owens)
Anyhow,
[Matt Benz] I still say the Dixie Chicks look terrible, hair and
outfits wise. Can I get a witness?
Yep, Barry, I definitely think it's a shame people don't do more covers of
their peers, in the manner you're describing. This was indeed a more
common practice in the 60s and before. Interpreting other contemporary
songs can provide some variety and a change-of-pace in basically any show.
[Matt Benz] I still say the Dixie Chicks look terrible, hair and
outfits wise. Can I get a witness?
Heh, they ain't no Carlene Carter, what can I say g. Should this be on
the fluff list???
--junior
Well, I'm not gonna dish on their looks, just the outfits and do's. To
get all Blackwell about it, The Dixie Chicks went scratchin in the wrong
dirt when they picked these outfits. Look away, look away, Dixie land,
indeed!
-Original Message-
From: BARNARD [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
I could care less how the Dixie Chicks dress, so no witness here, Matt. I
do think it's interesting, though, that the writer of that piece seemed to
think that Tammy Wynette and Loretta Lynn wore gingham frocks throughout
their careers, which is way, way off-base. The difference is that when
Since the Del McCoury comment I posted here recently, naming Der Bingle as
one of his favorite singers, reminded me that I've heard the same from lots
of other cool country guys (e.g., Maggard), I figure my library isn't
complete without something representative. Any thoughts?
Jon Weisberger
I agree entirely, Matt. I mean, those girls need to do the makeover show
on E! network. We must not be their target audience Their music can
be (or was, at one point, as people here have been pointing out) quite
respectable, but the look sure isn't hitting home with me...
--junior
PS. I
Bing was big favorite of the young Elvis, too. "Harbor Lights," one of the
very first songs Elvis recorded at Sun (I mean, right there with "Blue
Moon of KY," etc.) was a Bing hit.
I recently saw Bing in a high society movie with Grace Kelly and Frank
Sinatra and he was incredibly cool and
Actually, now that I think about it, I don't really care for the "look" of
many contemporary country artists. My head's always full of old-time
stuff and the way the performers dress now in general just doesn't get it
for me. Men *and* women, I'm talking about...
--junior
i was never a big fairport fan but i will say richard thompson deserves a
listenhis work with his ex linda is good stuff and his solo work after
that is excellantgreat guitar player and songwriter
mark
Well, I guess I should've amended my earlier statement about Thompson, but I
was
Jon asked:
Since the Del McCoury comment I posted here recently, naming Der Bingle as
one of his favorite singers, reminded me that I've heard the same from lots
of other cool country guys (e.g., Maggard), I figure my library isn't
complete without something representative. Any thoughts?
I
-Original Message-
From: Jon Weisberger [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, February 05, 1999 9:34 AM
To: passenger side
Subject: RE: What Country is Really All About
I could care less how the Dixie Chicks dress, so no witness here,
Matt. I
do think it's
Jon Weisberger writes:
Since the Del McCoury comment I posted here recently, naming Der Bingle
as
one of his favorite singers, reminded me that I've heard the same from
lots
of other cool country guys (e.g., Maggard), I figure my library isn't
complete
without something representative. Any
Agreed, Jr, and I'm no fashion plate myself. For instance, I think the
Mavricks look pretty silly with their faux hipster mafia look, and well,
any of those other bands like Diamond Rio need to realize that Chess
King closed down back in the 80's. Hell, they make BG bands look like
the whip.
M
Lance,
Thompson's work can be uneven, especially if you're not an
already-informed fan, but he's definitely worth keeping up with.
Have you tried that 3-disc "best of" compilation?? Over the years
I've bought and resold a number of his albums, but that compilation
has stayed in my
Black Oak Arkansas, a band even uglier
and far worse than Henneman Co. had 3 gold records in the 70's
That was the 70s
Jim "Joe Bob" Dandy looked much better in white spandex, in fact the thought
of the bottle rockets in spandex makes me ill
Louise Kyme wrote regarding Jon's comment that "if you
can't play the drums, you can't do anything. Except, I guess,
play an accordion":
ahem, 'scuse me, that was low.
Aw, let'm talk, Louise. Choosing the high road instead of
indulging in cracks like "What do you expect from a bass
Black Oak Arkansas, a band even uglier
and far worse than Henneman Co. had 3 gold records in the 70's
That was the 70s
And???
Dan Bentele
Jon:
Theirs was the first version of "Singing The Blues" I ever heard. I still
like the song itself, but I'd have to say that their rendition hasn't aged
well in my book...
This is impressive, Jon g. No "Smoke on the Water," but BOA's
version of "Singing the Blues" Hm.
Was the
Matt:
Agreed, Jr, and I'm no fashion plate myself. For instance, I think the
Mavricks look pretty silly with their faux hipster mafia look, and well,
any of those other bands like Diamond Rio need to realize that Chess
King closed down back in the 80's. Hell, they make BG bands look like
Heh heh. Isn't "Maggard" Cletus Maggard, of them CB joke albums? I've
got one. You know, with a 6 minute plus bit on how Washington crossing
the Delaware would've been if they had trucks and cb's. It's a stinker!
-Original Message-
From: Jon Weisberger [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:
I'd think that Lang left off trying to make it in the country music field
because she didn't have much success in it, and while coming out might have
been the last nail in the coffin, her no-meat stance (- indicates public
aspect, not just private taste) *was* poorly received, and it *did* come a
There are several lesbians in country music who have done quite well.
Oh really? By all means, name even one successful *openly*
gay country artist, male or female.
Yeah, this baffled me, too. Who (short of spreading
Just a quick note to let y'all know Elena Skye The Demolition String Band
will be opening for Ricky Skaggs at Irving Plaza tonight. Also featured
tonight will be John Herald, one of the original Green Briar Boys, his band
will feature some hot, hot local pickers.
Skaggs band won't be too
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hey kids;
What's the general feeling hereabouts on Don Was as a producer? I've got a
buddy who's a pretty big Van Halen fan (a tough path of late I suppose g),
and apparently Was has been tapped to head things up for the new VH record.
Any insight??
thanks,
I'm off to Nashville, to spend some time hangin' and jamming at the big
SPBGMA blowout, plus a couple of other interesting prospects that I hope to
report on upon my return at weekend's end. Y'all behave yourselves, now...
Jon Weisberger Kenton County, KY [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Joe:
And he uses a Focusrite.
I need to ask, what's a Focusrite??
--junior
On Fri, 5 Feb 1999, Jon Weisberger wrote:
Ty Herndon seems to have overcome the, er, questions raised about his
sexuality (not just male/female orientation) by his solicitation arrest of a
couple of years ago.
Yes, but did he then come out and say "okay folks, cat's out of
the bag,
The Hot Club of Cowtown stopped by the show last night. They were as
wonderful as always, and put on an excellent show at the Tractor later on.
Also, I have good news for Swingin' Doors archive listeners -- due to
popular demand, the KCMU webmaster has agreed to begin archiving again a
limited
On Fri, 5 Feb 1999, Bill Silvers wrote at the end of his fine defense of
Heather Myles:
Kelly Willis is my favorite female singer these days. I saw her for the
first time in St. Louis last October and she was even better than I
thought she'd be. But she's not really directly comparable to
On Fri, 5 Feb 1999, Ian Durkacz wrote:
A couple of weeks ago here in Sheffield I heard a local band do a
great version of 'Crazy Arms' - which song I have been singing to
myself ever since ...
If that's typical of Ray Price, then it looks like I've got a big
gap in my record
"White Rabbit" 45. And, lest we forget, there was Homer's brilliant
reference to the Airplane, Starship, and Alan Parsons Project, which I would
love to see get quoted here by another Simpsons obsessive.
"Now Grand Funk Railroad paved the way for Jefferson Airplane, which cleared the way
for
In a message dated 2/5/99 10:22:37 AM Central Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:
Oh for christ sake...the fact that K.D. made her anti-meat
sentiments loudly known had a lot less to do with her lack of success in
the country market than the fact that she didn't look/act the way
succesful
On 02 Feb, Chad Cosper [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://www.indieaudio.com/
Does that mean AMERICANA Music could get played?
Like there's not any out there now?
NOW ONLINE, www.TwangCast.com TM RealCountry netcast 24 X 7
Please Visit Then let us know what you think!
This may
Lianne:
(Frankly, I don't believe that soliciting homosexual sex for drugs is quite
the same thing as being a homosexual...)
Let's see Nah, I'm not gonna go there g.
--junior
In a message dated 2/5/99 12:10:09 PM Central Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Frankly, I don't believe that soliciting homosexual sex for drugs is quite
the same thing as being a homosexual...)
According to the report, Herndon had a baggie of crystal meth that he offered
to share
I forgot to mention the upcoming debut album from Damnations TX, Half Mad
Moon. Few acts blend rock and twang as effectively as these folks --
they're equally adept at crunchy pop-rock gems and soulful acoustic twang.
Most of all, I just love their gorgeous sisterly harmonizing.--don
"Ph. Barnard" wrote:
Joe:
And he uses a Focusrite.
I need to ask, what's a Focusrite??
--junior
It's a really nice line of compressors that are so well-engineered that
you can really squash things without the artifacts commonly found in
cheaper units, like loss of highs, etc. I'd kill
Don writes: Yep. Heather's much more of a hard country singer. She's more
comparable
to folks like Conway Twitty, Gene Watson, Mel Street, etc. I'd bet most
of the folks who find her "boring" would most likely say the same about
those guys.
OK, I know we've been over this before, but it hasn't
Kip:
Oh for christ sake...the fact that K.D. made her anti-meat
sentiments loudly known had a lot less to do with her lack of success in
the country market than the fact that she didn't look/act the way
succesful Top 40 female artists are supposed to look/act.
Slim:
There
Joe Pernice will tour Australia (solo) in February. Some of you might
be wondering why he would return there so soon, having just been there in
December. Well, the immigration people weren't being very cooperative in
December, and he never got there. So, immigration willing, here are the
Don, David, and others,
Thank you for the recommendations! I ran out last night and bought
Hadacols "Better Than This" (the first store I went to was actually
sold out, that really peeked my attention), it is fabulous! Since then I
have listened to it about six more times, and I am still
On Fri, 5 Feb 1999 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
OK, I know we've been over this before, but it hasn't sunk in yet. (I'm
a hard headed Italian, if ya haven't guessed yet). What's so "hard"
about any of this? I was never really a fan of Twitty (though seeing
Dale Watson perform some of his songs
At 01:16 PM 2/5/99 EST, Slim wrote:
In a message dated 2/5/99 12:10:09 PM Central Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Frankly, I don't believe that soliciting homosexual sex for drugs is quite
the same thing as being a homosexual...)
According to the report, Herndon had a baggie of
Joe on Focusrites:
It's a really nice line of compressors that are so well-engineered that
you can really squash things without the artifacts commonly found in
cheaper units, like loss of highs, etc. I'd kill for one but I ain't
rich enough...
Ah damn. Guess I'll just go back to my
Jerry Curry wrote:
In my opinion, Richard Thompson is one of the most important
and influential artists of the late 70's/80's. His swansong albums with Linda: _I
Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight_ and _Shoot Out the Lights_ are two definite
desert island recordings for me.
I don't know
One last thing about Ms. Lang, and then I'll leave the topic
alone. Not like's it's never been discussed here g.
To clarify: although k.d.'s sexual orientation probably wasn't the
only factor that aliented potential fans and kept her off the radio
(another being she was,
On Fri, 5 Feb 1999, James Nelson wrote:
Jerry Curry wrote:
In my opinion, Richard Thompson is one of the most important
and influential artists of the late 70's/80's. His swansong albums with Linda: _I
Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight_ and _Shoot Out the Lights_ are two definite
On Fri, 5 Feb 1999, James Nelson wrote:
Jerry Curry wrote:
In my opinion, Richard Thompson is one of the most important
and influential artists of the late 70's/80's. His swansong albums
with Linda: _I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight_ and _Shoot
Out the Lights_ are two definite
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 02/05 2:26 PM
Kip wrote:
People often laud Thompson's "Shoot Out The Lights" as
being his best of that period, and maybe that's because it's
more of a rock record with folk overtones. But I myself prefer
"I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight", which is just about as
Bob writes:
. Mike, you might also consider renting a
Mac for a few days and getting it to work over a modem yourself -- then
write up a help page for Mac users to follow.
We'll have links to Mac user groups on site soon so that the issue of making
the player work (I understand it has problems
Without sounding too crass, can I suggest that the record wouldn't be as great
if they hadn't been going through the divorce? "Walking On A Wire" and "Wall of
Death" especially seem to be given added depth by the context.
I wouldn't wish that fate on anyone, but if it had to happen I'm glad to
The Cubster came up awhile back; I saw this today:
Cub Koda
Cub Koda appears to be mending well and recovering from heart problems that
sidelined the singer/writer/performer last August.
"Don," Cub reported January 12, "It's liner note time again. Just finished up notes
to a Willie Dixon
Richard Thompson has argued that both the writing and recording of SOTL
preceded the events that led to the breakup of the marriage, FWIW. On
the other hand, the tour to promote the record happened while they were
breaking up and apparently was pretty tense.
Carl Z.
Excerpts from
Carl Abraham Zimring wrote:
Richard Thompson has argued that both the writing and
recording of SOTL preceded the events that led to the
breakup of the marriage, FWIW. On the other hand, the tour
to promote the record happened while they were
breaking up and apparently was pretty tense.
I
Hey,
I noticed some things in the last digest and felt like chiming in.
There sure are a lotta grumpy people out there...it's amazing when your read
a whole days worth of posts in 5 to 10 minutes. :^)
Best of so far: Since I love lists I'm compiling my "Best CDs of 1998 that I
found out about
I like k.d. lang.
I also like the nasty quote attributed to her fiddle player, Ben Mink,
who said something like "going to Nashville was like walking in on some
big old inbred family who'd just hit the lottery."
--
Geff King * [EMAIL PROTECTED] * http://www2.ari.net/gking/
"Don't let me
Steve Gardner emerges and writes:
Another teaser: I just got a copy of an oldtime album that
will only be sold with the paperback version of Charles Frazier's "Cold Mountain."
If you haven't read the book, it's awesome. Wait until 3/23 though to buy it
because you really have to
hear
Jerry Curry put down his old Nektar albums long enough to post:
In my opinion, Richard Thompson is one of the most important and
influential artists of the late 70's/80's. His swansong albums with
Linda: _I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight_ and _Shoot Out the
Lights_ are two definite
Tomorrow's listed time for the Red Meat/Jeff Bright show is 9:00, not 10:00
as I originally stated...sorry!
Owen Bly
Ranchero Records
Oakland, CA
What can I say. I'm an RT freak. But it wasn't always that way. Back in
1983, I'd barely heard of the guy. Then I taped SOTL from a friend,
because of all the critical acclaim. At first it didn't do much for me.
I played the tape a few times and then it sat there for quite some time.
But I
The Boudin Barndance - 2/4/99
Dan Ferguson
WRIU-FM, 90.3 Kingston, RI
Thursdays 6-9 pm
A show that wasn't supposed to be more than 45 minutes long ended up going the
distance when the URI basketball broadcast team couldn't find the UMass
campus. Dumb college kids. Hence no real plans other than
Or somethin' like that. Both sides of Bloodshot's tribute 7" to Loretta
Lynn are winners for me. Kelly Hogan delivers a rather suave version of
"Hanky Panky Woman," and Neko just flat-out torches "Rated X." I had to
go splash some cold water on my face after listening. It'd be nice to see
Not to beat a lame horse but:
Joe Gracey said:
I think it is a little bit unfair to characterize mac users as a tiny
minority- if you want to be anecdotal about it, literally everybody I
know in the music business world-wide uses Macs and I daresay the
majority of creative people in all fields
Geoff Muldaur will be making another appearance on A Prairie Home Companion
June 19; the show will be broadcast from Reno.
Mary Katherine
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