Carl wrote:
I think if you look at the P2 Survey you'll see the untruth of this. I'm
convinced that alt-country is a (as Monsieur London puts it) "tailbust" and
"gen-x" phenomenon. A glance around the audience at any alt-country show
I've attended shows it skewing way to folks in their late-20s
At 12:06 PM 3/5/99 -0500, you wrote:
Tera wrote:
- alt.country seems to be music for we aging baby boomers as opposed to
alt.rock or new country which seems to target the teen to twenties crowd.
Just a quick note as I gather breath to respond to Jake's epic
call'n'response from yesterday -
I
In a message dated 3/6/99 9:18:32 AM Central Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The older folks,
the ones with jobs and largely without .EDU at the end of the e-mail
account, are more into the music.
and less into the bands? wait. . .I'm confused. This often happens at the
brink of
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The older folks, the ones with jobs and largely without .EDU at the end
of the e-mail
account, are more into the music.
and less into the bands? wait. . .I'm confused. This often happens at the
brink of a cosmic insight. Please keep going with this train of
Tera wrote:
- alt.country seems to be music for we aging baby boomers as opposed to
alt.rock or new country which seems to target the teen to twenties crowd.
Just a quick note as I gather breath to respond to Jake's epic
call'n'response from yesterday -
I think if you look at the P2 Survey