Chalkhills Digest Volume 5, Issue 275
Date: Tuesday, 5 October 1999

         Chalkhills Digest, Volume 5, Number 275

                 Tuesday, 5 October 1999

Today's Topics:

             Chalkhills Shirts / CD Auctions
             Re: Music, Architecture and NYT
                     spam and idiots
                   Re: Upsy Daisy, Dom
       the Uffington Horse used in a film backdrop?
            Transistor Blast promo/Lilac Time
             Apple Venus Demos to be released
                      garden shacks
                      Re: fruit nut
                        Few tings
                    I introduce myself
                    Chalkhills website
                           bees
             BEFORE EVERYBODY GETS ON MY ASS
                        List stuff
                  Re: Mysteries / Bowie
               RE: 90-min Sting Atrocity!!!
                  Re: Clarified Peaches
            Bowie and basslines, but not both
                Homespun - Why would you ?

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He asked why you weren't home?

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message-Id: <3.0.5.32.19991004180932.00960560@pophost.micron.net>
Date: Mon, 04 Oct 1999 18:09:32 -0600
From: Phil Corless <philco@micron.net>
Subject: Chalkhills Shirts / CD Auctions

I've been receiving lots of email asking "When are you
going to do the new Chalkhills t-shirt?!"

I'll be doing them in November.  Watch Chalkhills for news
of that.  I'm not doing it sooner because for the next month
I'm a little preoccupied with selling over 300 CDs on eBay.

Several relatives and friends have handed over a bunch of CDs
they want me to sell for them.  Those, along with a big bunch of
my own, will be placed on eBay all through October... I'll probably
be listing 10 to 20 per day until they run out.

What will you find?  XTC, Martin Newell, Randy Newman, Squeeze,
Traveling Wilburys, George Harrison, Danny Elfman, Housemartins,
Blur, Suzanne Vega, The The, Matthew Sweet, The Specials, U2,
Aimee Mann, Aztec Camera, The Grays, Jason Falkner, The Pogues,
Oingo Boingo, Thomas Dolby, Eels, David Bowie, David Byrne, Elvis
Costello, Elvis Presley, Robyn Hitchcock, Peter Gabriel, all sorts
of movie scores, and more!

In other words, lots of GOOD stuff.... Very little crap.

Check my eBay page frequently during the next 4 weeks:
http://members.ebay.com/aboutme/philkar/

Thanks!  And watch in November for the Chalkhills shirt information.

- Phil C.

------------------------------

Message-id: <9989316@mailbox2.Hitchcock.ORG>
Date: 19 Sep 1999 21:39:45 EDT
From: John.J.Pinto@Hitchcock.ORG (John J. Pinto)
Subject: Re: Music, Architecture and NYT

The New York Times of 9/19/99 printed a letter (Section 2 pg.4) from a
John Hynes that quotes without credit, "Writing about music is like
dancing about architecture". As this has been of some interest to
Chalkhillians as of late it was remarkable to read it in the newspaper of
record (no pun intended).

I do not read the quote as implying that music is so greatly removed from
words that writing about music is futile or pointless. In fact to "dance
ABOUT architecture" might be a very challanging to choreograph.  If therer
is a need to further muddy the waters consider the German writer Goethe's
remark. "I call architecture frozen music".

Mr Hynes suggests the difficulty is in the fact that music and writing are
processed by different parts of the brain. That seems to be a very silly
explaination as music and movement are also processed by different parts
of the brain.

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 4 Oct 1999 19:14:33 -0700 (PDT)
Message-Id: <199910050214.TAA95172@mando.engr.sgi.com>
From: John Relph <relph@cthulhu>
Subject: spam and idiots

Todd asked:
>
>1) John, are you okay? No quote in the last issue (the first time
>I've seen this in all my years here), spam slipping into another,
>people attempting to start endless loops ... I'm getting
>worried. Speak to me, laddie! SPEAK TO ME!!

Well, I've been on vacation for two weeks.  I put the list on
auto-pilot.  Obviously there have been some problems.  The spam?
Obviously my filters are not good enough.  The idiot?  The person in
question did not post the ENTIRE digest back to the list, merely a
very long section of it, in pieces small enough to get past my
filters.  I am sorry for both problems.  And since I was not here, I
couldn't put a lyric snippet in.

But I had a nice vacation, so I suppose it was a small enough price to
pay.

I still have not figured out a way to get the website to update
automatically, so I suppose I should work on that.

	-- John

------------------------------

Message-ID: <37F95FEC.D3A3ECB@pobox.com>
Date: Mon, 04 Oct 1999 22:18:20 -0400
From: Jefferson Ogata <ogata@pobox.com>
Organization: The Antibozo
Subject: Re: Upsy Daisy, Dom

Todd and Jennifer Bernhardt <toddjenn@erols.com> wrote:
> My XTC-fan-in-training sister-in-law recently bought Upsy Daisy
> Assortment, and was surprised that the actual song order on the CD varied
> from the track listing on the jewel-case insert. Has anyone else come
> across this? I wanted to check Chalkhills before posting this, but the
> server's down (or so my browser sez).

My jewel box matches your sister-in-law's. I've never noticed the
songs being out of order before, so I think the CD matches the box
too. I'll pop it in for a quick listen: yup. Same order. Are you sure
she didn't have her CD player in shuffle mode? Hmm, but the listings
are close. That's weird with a beard, man.

This is an opportunity to point out something amusing about the Upsy
Daisy Assortment box, however, that you may not have noticed. Look
carefully at the track list on the back of the jewel case, in
particular at the drop shadow on "8. LOVE ON A FARMBOY'S WAGES". You
may note that the artist who put the text on it appears to have
flubbed, and the evidence is in the way the drop shadow is rendered
slightly differently on the "'S WAGES". In other words, it appears
that the text was fixed after someone noticed (thankfully) an error:
the title "LOVE ON A FARMBOY". I've often thought that's a rather
charming title, but not for an XTC song. The Dukes could do it,
perhaps.

Naturally, I'll be present for the Festival of Lawson. Penny for the
Dom?

--
Jefferson Ogata.  smtp: <ogata@pobox.com>
http://www.pobox.com/~ogata/
finger: ogata@pobox.com  ICQ: 19569681  whois:
jo317@whois.internic.net

------------------------------

From: STakesh@aol.com
Message-ID: <477a361a.252ac149@aol.com>
Date: Mon, 4 Oct 1999 22:49:45 EDT
Subject: the Uffington Horse used in a film backdrop?

Hi, Chalkers,

While reading the Salon "Table Talk" archived discussion
on the overlooked, obscure, worthwhile films (while watching
Monday Night Football at the same time, hey hey, so much
for narrow cultural stereotyping!), I came across this interesting
nugget:

"Another Canadian production that is worth the watch is
"Map of the Human Heart" a love story between a Yupik
Eskimo and a Cree Indian set in WWII London. Romantic,
great music, twisted story and one of the best love scenes
atop a ballon that floats over the White Horse earth sculpture."

Now, I haven't seen this movie, so don't kvetch to me if you
rent this and see, oh, another Iron Age earthwork of a horse,
O.K.?  I only hope the lovers were safe in a gondola, rather
than perched precariously atop a hot-air balloon ("The Last
Balloon," indeed!).

Yipee-Ki-Yay, and go, Dolphins, go,
S. Takeshita

------------------------------

Message-Id: <199910050252.WAA08422@mail1.javanet.com>
Subject: Transistor Blast promo/Lilac Time
Date: Mon, 4 Oct 99 22:52:47 -0400
From: Max Germer <maxindu@javanet.com>

If anyone needs the promo cd that was sent out in advance of the box, I
have it up on ebay pretty cheap:

>http://cgi.ebay.com/aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=174912921

I've fallen for the Lilac Time's "& Love For All" cd, which I recently
found dirt cheap. Aside from producing the band, is there another Andy
connection?

Max
http://www.themaggies.com/

------------------------------

From: "Bob Dunn" <rjd55@mindspring.com>
Subject: Apple Venus Demos to be released
Date: Wed, 22 Sep 1999 11:18:54 -0400
Message-ID: <NDBBIGLKGKDAIOMNLDGGEENPCKAA.rjd55@mindspring.com>

XTC's Apple Venus Volume 2 won't hit stores until next year, but fans of
the English alternative pop band will get an early Christmas gift on Oct. 5
when TVT/Idea Records releases Homespun - The Apple Venus Volume One Home
Demos.

With the same track sequence as Apple Venus Volume 1, XTC's last studio
effort, the home demos features the original eight-track recordings of the
songs from the album as well as liner notes by the band and the lyrics,
which were missing from Apple Venus Volume 1 the first time out.

Meanwhile, the band is currently holed up in a Swindon, England studio with
producer Nick Davis putting the finishing touches on the follow-up, Apple
Venus Volume 2, now set for a tentative release date of spring 2000.

Here is the track listing for Homespun - The Apple Venus Volume One Home
Demos:

1. "River of Orchids"
2. "I'd Like That"
3. "Easter Theatre"
4. "Knights in Shining Karma"
5. "Frivolous Tonight"
6. "Greenman"
7. "Your Dictionary"
8. "Fruit Nut"
9. "I Can't Own Her"
10. "Harvest Festival"
11. "The Last Balloon"

     Bob

   .*'|'*.  | Bob Dunn
   * /|\ *  | rjd55@mindspring.com
   `*,|,*`  | http://www.mindspring.com/~rjd55>
            | Page me: http://www.mirabilis.com/1475053

------------------------------

Message-ID: <37F98039.116E@gte.net>
Date: Mon, 04 Oct 1999 21:36:10 -0700
From: "May O'Mahoney" <may5272@gte.net>
Subject: garden shacks

 From Jill Oleson:

  "'Here in the late nineties, with all its multiplicity
of choice, it's easy to forget how truly alternative those early
programmes were.'"

This statement made me feel grateful to have experienced this.  I always
tuned into our local Sunday night music show eagerly awaiting songs that
would throw me into a world that was truly alternative.  Music that made
my parents queasy but didn't compel them to throw me into therapy or
positive reinforcement sessions that included the whole family.

Some random thoughts:

Has anyone noticed that it is de riguer/in/blessed by the advert gods to
be 'alternative' now?

What?  You don't repel down the side of mountains suspended by your nose
ring?

************

I was watching TV before work the other day and they were using sex to
sell oatmeal to fiftysomethings.

Could I have a side of viagra with my forehead piercing?

************

Ok, I don't know where that came from but I will say this.  I'm glad
that I know about a time before slick packaging.  I'm glad that I grew
up in a time when you put together your punk posters with SCISSORS AND
GLUE and a XEROX machine.

My idea of a good time is a box of chocolates.
My idea of great music is that that is made in garden shacks.

Yours Truly,

May AKA Nostalgia Girl

------------------------------

Message-ID: <37F98AA6.30D94065@bellatlantic.net>
Date: Tue, 05 Oct 1999 01:20:38 -0400
From: Jim Slade <castells@bellatlantic.net>
Subject: Re: fruit nut

Huh????  I've been really busy lately, which has cut down on my time to
concentrate on Chalkhills, but this thread has shaken me out of my stupor.
Am I completely missing something, or are the "poisons" in question simply
pesticides?  The song is based on gardening imagery, isn't it?  I've never
thought of the poisons as anything but pesticides.  I've never thought of
the narrarator as anything but a *slightly* eccentric smalltown guy, like
the character in every Colin song.

Jim
 http://www.groovedisques.com

> From: "garret harkawik" <funktaisia@hotmail.com>
>
> As you all know, there has been a lot of discussion about whether or not
> the narratore in the song "Fruit Nut" is planning on poisoning his wife.
> In my opinion, the man is planning to poison his friends because he
> sounds like he is angry at someone when he sings "Some day they'll
> seeeeeeee".  Plus, I think that the wife is in on it too because he also
> sings "I mix the poisons and the wife don't complain".

------------------------------

Message-ID: <002301bf0f57$f7cad5e0$1284b3d1@oemcomputer>
From: "Aaron Pastula" <apastula@earthlink.net>
Subject: Few tings
Date: Tue, 5 Oct 1999 10:34:25 -0700

>with all the musicians who (seemingly) partake in this digest, i was
>wondering if we could do an instrument/equipment inventory. what do you own
>& what is your favourite instrument? (try to keep it clean for the innocent
>among us!)

A dark red, five-string Ernie Ball Musicman bass.  Best purchase I ever
made.  She even has her own side of the bed.  And I keep her as innocently
clean as possible, changing the strings on a schedule that coincides with my
dental appointments.

>Figured out the mysterious albums.  1 of them were the Dub album which had
>the song "Beat the Bible."  Thanks for no help.  Real nice list that no one
>wants ot help other fans.

Hey, you're quite welcome for no help!  Glad to know we could be of no
service.  Here at XTC central, we're all just a bunch of self-centered
trekkies who aim to not please, and we always appreciate your suggestions on
how to be less helpful and effective.  Thank you for bringing this to our
attention.  Excuse me while I check this message for errors in grammar,
spelling, taste or humor.

AP

------------------------------

From: Wuellig@aol.com
Message-ID: <846768c6.252b9e07@aol.com>
Date: Tue, 5 Oct 1999 14:31:35 EDT
Subject: I introduce myself

Hi !
I'm 18, French, and I've become a big XTC fan at the beginning of this
summer. In fact I had listened previously tu Drums and Wires but it hadn't
really pleased me at first after 2 listenings ; neither did "Fossil Fuel".
But one day I realized that I hadn't even listened til the end of the record
! How silly of me ! Cos when I heard "Complicated Game" I understood that my
fate was sealed... I remember that the same thing happened when I saw an (oh
so short) extract of a live version of "Alcohol" by the Kinks : the feeling
that you will need your whole life to explore and understand someone's genius
(or sometwo's, in the case of XTC, not to forget Colin's marvelous
songwriting skills)...
And so I've been listening passionately to XTC for about three months ;
nonetheless I don't know all their records, but I'm gonna reach this goal
soon. My favourites must be "Oranges and Lemons", "Nonsuch" and many many of
their singles, above all the very first ones (but the albums of this period
disappointed me a bit).
At first, while I listened to D&W and Fossil Fuel, I thought (I still don't
know why) that Andy was the bass player and this made me very proud because I
play bass and I'm a beginning songwriter (I play and sing in a band called
Pillows E.T ; we rehearse in a very very small basement in Versailles but we
carry on !), so I felt Andy was kind of a leader to me because I told myself
"Wow, this guy plays bass and besides writes beautiful songs, this is quite
unusual" (if we except Sir McCartney). But when I read English Settlement's
notes, I understood that Colin was the bassist. I was a bit disappointed
because in those days I didn't hold Colin for a very good songwriter and
above all he wrote so little compared to Andy ; but now I hold "Wonderland",
"My bird performs" and "Frivolous tonight" among others for XTC's
masterpieces.
I don't know if Andy and Colin read the list, but I'd like to say here that
XTC made my summer a wonderful time, and if that goes on, well I'm about to
reach perfect happiness !
Besides, to go on with my introduction, I like roleplaying games, science
fiction, I'm a litterature student and in matter of rock I also love The
Kinks, Roxy Music, Bowie, Alice Cooper, Frank Zappa, The Sparks, Spirit, Led
Zeppelin, Siouxsie and Pulp. But I like many others !
See you soon !
Martin

------------------------------

Message-Id: <v04210100b4200b6cfa6c@[137.216.83.139]>
Date: Tue, 5 Oct 1999 14:16:38 -0600
From: Duane Hanson <Duane_Hanson@sdstate.edu>
Subject: Chalkhills website

Hello,

I just wanted to say thank you for maintaining an excellent and
informative web site. I've been stopping off at Chalkhills regularly
for a couple of years now, and always find something to make the trip
worthwhile.

And (also important) I am impressed with the clear, uncluttered
design of your site, with how easy the site is to navigate, and with
how quickly it loads.

I check on the websites of several other musicians, and none of them
is as clear and informative as Chalkhills. (I wish the Dave Gregory
website would take some cues from this--I've tried to access the site
three times. The first time I was informed that I needed a newer
browser. The second and third times it just kept loading, and
loading, and never getting anywhere...)

Anyway, thank you for keeping me up-to-date with one of my favorite bands!

Duane Hanson
Off somewhere in South Dakota

------------------------------

Message-ID: <19991005193855.13372.rocketmail@web2901.mail.yahoo.com>
Date: Tue, 5 Oct 1999 12:38:55 -0700 (PDT)
From: nross <PhoenixYellowRose@rocketmail.com>
Subject: bees

In response to:

Subject: STING, BITE ME!
From: "Diamond" <arnos@nantucket.net>

>>Do you know that VH1's Behind The Music gave Sting an HOUR AND A HALF
to tell his story? An hour and a half? Does he really deserve all this
time?<<

Biased here, I LOVE The Police. (I know, boos and hisses from the lot
of ya'... well, go romp with a friggin telletubbie then) I hadn't
watched the whole deal, I didn't realize it was an hour and a half. I
was more appalled that the show was based upon Sting, and not The
Police... I mean, without The Police, I'd doubt Sting would have become
so darn popular. Of course, without Sting, The Police may have been as
annoying as a siren, who knows.

But, really, admit it folks, you liked them once, and now ya'll jus dis
em cause its cool to steponthetantricbee...

>>Well, while I was pondering this over, I started thinking about how
cool it would be if XTC was on Behind the Music.<<

:-) Fat chance... but hey, if the Redskins can win from 21 pts down,
anythings possible. Yeah! D.C. Woo Woo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I'm going to throw this nice quote out to you all:

"Its really a wonder I haven't lost all my ideals, for they seem so
absurd and impossible to carry out. Yet, I keep them because, in spite
of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart."
-Anne Frank

have a very nice day ya'll. peace.

=====
Nicole's internet music station:
http://www.imagineradio.com/mymusiclisten.asp?name=phoenixyellowrose

------------------------------

Message-ID: <37FA4899.9D0DE076@averstar.com>
Date: Tue, 05 Oct 1999 14:51:34 -0400
From: Harrison Sherwood <sherwood@averstar.com>
Organization: Averstar, Inc.
Subject: BEFORE EVERYBODY GETS ON MY ASS

...I know, I know...

I fucked up.

Yes, I basically forgot an entire Beatles album. Not even in the
brain-damaged fantasies of the most STP-addled Sixties casualty could
"Magical Mystery Tour" be considered "brutally honest and free of
artifice." I meant the White Album.

I will do a penance of twenty consecutive repetitions of "Blue Jay Way"
through headphones while smoking three clove cigarettes and drinking tea
made from morning-glory seeds and nutmeg. Mea culpa. Mea maxima culpa.
My, as they say, bad.

Harrison "Fear of 'Flying'" Sherwood

------------------------------

From: Bob.Muller@fluor.com
Message-ID: <85256801.006A7747.00@fdlnata10.fdnet.com>
Date: Tue, 5 Oct 1999 15:41:13 -0400
Subject: List stuff

Charlie said:

<<Figured out the mysterious albums.  1 of them were the Dub album which
had the song "Beat the Bible."  Thanks for no help.  Real nice list that no
one wants to help other fans. >>

Like almost everyone here, I read your original request but was unable to
offer any help because you didn't give enough to go on...if I recall,
SEVERAL folks asked for more details to try and help you - your complaint
is very unjustified imo.

Speaking for myself, I was given several nice welcomes when I recently
joined up, especially commendable given that this is a digest-only, and not
a single-message list. Takes extra effort to send a personal welcome, and I
appreciated it!

<< I would have never thought early on that groups like Elvis Costello or
Sting would turn out so lame.  >>

Elvis' "Painted From Memory" had some of the best songs of any release in
'98 (Bettered only by "Car Wheels On A Gravel Road"). Likewise, Sting is a
little overhyped but I don't feel he's released a turkey yet. Given your
need for "consistency", maybe you don't feel that artists should experiment
and grow. I would think this would be a very limiting point of view.

Bob

------------------------------

From: dan@gge.com
Message-ID: <37FA54AB.7FDAEF06@gge.com>
Date: Tue, 05 Oct 1999 12:42:39 -0700
Subject: Re: Mysteries / Bowie

charlie wrote:
>Another thing, it would be a nice gestrue for XTC to maybe tell me
>what possible albums it could have been.

several people responded to your post when you were trying to figure out
what "mysterious" xtc albums you had seen, but no one could help you b/c
you didn't describe the albums at all. how are we (you know, the people
ganging up and conspiring against you) supposed to know? also,
chalkhills has an extensive discography with pictures and everything for
you to look up stuff like that.
-------------------------
and while i can't write or present an argument as well as mr. sherwood
(of the shire sherwoods) i will respond to

>I insist Bowie was the first major rocker to elevate the Image over
>the Real, and to make this elevation central to his art

by saying: little richard.

-dan "i might also say liberace, but i won't" duncan

------------------------------

Message-ID: <19991005210157.15210.rocketmail@web219.mail.yahoo.com>
Date: Tue, 5 Oct 1999 14:01:57 -0700 (PDT)
From: "Lisa G." <devilgirlchocolate@yahoo.com>
Subject: RE: 90-min Sting Atrocity!!!

I heartily agree with Kevin Diamond that there should
not have been a 90-min "Behind The Music" on Sting.
Urrgh!!!  It REALLY should have been 90-min on THE
POLICE!  But, anyhoo...

Yes, we should all band together and see if we can't
get XTC's story told.  I'd love to see it on the
screen, even though I love reading it frequently.
Egads, they even had a BTM on GLEN CAMPBELL.  Shite!

Enjoying "Easter Theater" from "Homespun" as I write,

Lisa (aka The Devil Girl)

=====
"I am the girl who wanted to be God."-- Manic Street Preachers

------------------------------

From: WTDK@aol.com
Message-ID: <aed9e5b4.252bc639@aol.com>
Date: Tue, 5 Oct 1999 17:23:05 EDT
Subject: Re: Clarified Peaches

Forgot who clarified the James and The Giant Peach issue but I stand
corrected. Thanks for clearing up misinformation (I had heard that story a
while back from someone I met who worked at Disney about Andy's songs
being rejected). I had heard the $30,000 bit before but in a bit different
context favorable to Disney as well.

On another note ... Charlie Buck's note about receiving an email from a
Chalkhills subscriber about his grammar. Charlie, don't take it
personally, they just need to get a life (or have kids--there that'll take
up their time). I personally couldn't care less about misspellings and the
like as long as the message gets through...

My favorite discovery of the day...I called Rasputin's Records (they're in
the SF bay area) and asked if they had any copies of Homespun in
stock. The response was that they had a CD by XTC called Homespam...

------------------------------

Message-ID: <19991005234936.60270.qmail@hotmail.com>
From: "Megan Heller" <hellerm@hotmail.com>
Subject: Bowie and basslines, but not both
Date: Tue, 05 Oct 1999 16:49:36 PDT

Harrison Sherwood demonstrates--
>Bowie certainly
>had his antecedents--no artist is absolutely without influences--but >I
>insist Bowie was the first major rocker to elevate the Image over >the
>Real, and to make this elevation central to his art. Bowie's >public image
>was that he *was* a public image;

I found this interesting to read today, just after seeing the cover of
Bowie's new album-- if you haven't seen it, it's Bowie kneeling (with his
new look of longer hair and looser clothing), holding the head of Bowie as
he looked two years ago (short, spiky hair, angular) in his lap, as if the
latter is dying.  Hm, probably a bit overstated, dramatic, pretentious for
those who don't go for Bowie, but I'm a sucker for just about anything he
does. (Except the late 1980s.)

This discussion also makes me think about how truly disturbing I find this
recent Garth Brooks/Chris Gaines thing.  And now he's on the R&B charts...
(between that and the hurricanes and earthquakes, I am starting to wonder
about the armageddon...)

ON ANOTHER TOPIC... I was listening to AV1 yesterday, and had it turned up
rather louder than normal because I was doing housework.  It occurred to me
that I'd never noticed Colin's bassline in "The Last Balloon".  It actually
sort of changed the dynamic of the song for me-- it's played down so much in
the mix (at least on my cd player), but I think it adds another dimension to
the song.

m.

------------------------------

Message-ID: <37FA9AB9.4CC4@Virgin.net>
Date: Wed, 06 Oct 1999 01:41:29 +0100
From: Peter Wright <Peter.Wright2@Virgin.net>
Subject: Homespun - Why would you ?

Hi All,
       So 'Homespun' is a CD of the AV1 demos. Purely out of curiousity
I ask : Why ?  Having owned a copy of the demos for ages before AV1 was
released I was struck by how close the 'finished' songs were to the
demos. Apart from the obviously better production values they were
pretty much carbon copies of the 'shed' songs.
Only completists could possibly want 'Homespun' . Why on Earth didn't
they include the 'lost' songs on there? Like 'Prince of Orange' and the
others that didn't make the cut. It wouldn't have cost them anymore as a
CD has lots of room on it !  I would most certainly have bought it then.
For a cheaper way to have 'Homespun' , follow these instructions :

1) Record AV1 onto a well used audio cassette , preferably bought at a
boot sale.
2) Dub it from tape to tape til you have a 5th generation copy complete
with hiss and disgusting EQ.

Voila ! Saved yourself #10 !!
Pete.

------------------------------

End of Chalkhills Digest #5-275
*******************************

Go back to Volume 5.

6 October 1999 / Feedback