www.lonely-socks.com
that's all i need to say!
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Yeah, it's coming. Your girlfriend wants flowers (really, she does), so you may as well get her the right ones. Check out www.sendflowerbouquets.com to learn about the appropriate kind to get her.
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It's the official release date, where do we go to celebrate? ;o)
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The moniker 'experimental noise' may not officially exist, but the genre is alive and healthy, as evident in some of the performances on Saturday at Chapel Hill's Nightlight. Ethereal Planes Indian, Venison Whirled and Esperanto Bat proved that the exploratory use of contact mikes and home-brewed electronics can, at the very least, pique your interest, and at best lead you in a merry dance through a whirlwind of sound, where cacophonous blarings and subtle nuances combine to lead you on aural flights of fancy.
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I have long been a fan of Shawn Colvin’s folk-swathed musical story-telling, and her concert at the Lincoln Theatre last Friday cemented my love for her voice, her music and her craft. Joined by long-time friend and associate Buddy Miller on guitar and Debra Dobkin on all things percussive, Shawn performed a 2-hour set with pieces culled from her upcoming release, “These Four Walls” and from various stages of her career. Shawn and friends showed that a stripped down trio, sans bass, could be just as rhythmic, effective and emotive as any sextet with a bevy of backup singers could hope to be. Buddy Miller’s tremulous guitar and clever fills coupled perfectly with Dobkin’s enthused skin-bashing to ensure that the reduced rhythm section wasn’t left for want.
Unfortunately for Shawn and her stellar cast, a disappointingly muted Raleigh crowd only managed to rouse itself for her Grammy-winning “Sunny Came Home”, before immediately slipping into a stupor upon its end. This was a show by a decorated music veteran, and she proved that night that economy and musicality are the prime ingredients for a brilliant and long-lived musical career.
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chootmeister / Blog
I almost died of laughter!
www.lonely-socks.com
that's all i need to say!
Reply
Valentine's Day
Yeah, it's coming. Your girlfriend wants flowers (really, she does), so you may as well get her the right ones. Check out www.sendflowerbouquets.com to learn about the appropriate kind to get her.
Reply
Where's the party?
It's the official release date, where do we go to celebrate? ;o)
Reply
some call it noise
The moniker 'experimental noise' may not officially exist, but the genre is alive and healthy, as evident in some of the performances on Saturday at Chapel Hill's Nightlight. Ethereal Planes Indian, Venison Whirled and Esperanto Bat proved that the exploratory use of contact mikes and home-brewed electronics can, at the very least, pique your interest, and at best lead you in a merry dance through a whirlwind of sound, where cacophonous blarings and subtle nuances combine to lead you on aural flights of fancy.
Reply
time for a few small repairs
I have long been a fan of Shawn Colvin’s folk-swathed musical story-telling, and her concert at the Lincoln Theatre last Friday cemented my love for her voice, her music and her craft. Joined by long-time friend and associate Buddy Miller on guitar and Debra Dobkin on all things percussive, Shawn performed a 2-hour set with pieces culled from her upcoming release, “These Four Walls” and from various stages of her career. Shawn and friends showed that a stripped down trio, sans bass, could be just as rhythmic, effective and emotive as any sextet with a bevy of backup singers could hope to be. Buddy Miller’s tremulous guitar and clever fills coupled perfectly with Dobkin’s enthused skin-bashing to ensure that the reduced rhythm section wasn’t left for want. Unfortunately for Shawn and her stellar cast, a disappointingly muted Raleigh crowd only managed to rouse itself for her Grammy-winning “Sunny Came Home”, before immediately slipping into a stupor upon its end. This was a show by a decorated music veteran, and she proved that night that economy and musicality are the prime ingredients for a brilliant and long-lived musical career.
Reply