Anya: It's lovely! I wish it was mine! Oh like you weren't all thinking the same thing. Giles: I'm fairly certain I wasn't.

'The Killer In Me'


Buffista Music III: The Search for Bach  

There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.


tina f. - Sep 10, 2005 2:14:44 pm PDT #322 of 10003

and how amazing it is that their sound is as full as it is without percussion

Well - Jeff's stitchgiver (stand up bass made out of a gas tank for non split lip fans) helps a lot. But yeah, the speed and full sound is what make them so unbelievably good live. The worst part of losing Wayne isn't that they will lack a mandolin, but that they lost their best songwriter.

Drakkar Sauna. What're they like?

Kind of undescribable. They were my "stump Hec and Jon" band on our Buffistamix trade so long ago. They are like a vaudevillian old timey kinda rockin duo thing. You just have to hear it - there a lots of good mp3s on their lawrence.com page: [link]

Didn't know they won't be at Winfield. That's a damn shame. I'm substantially less sure I'll go now (which was work-permitting in the first place).

Winfield is SO much more than split lip. If you've never been - I can't recommend it enough. But if you're gonna camp get there early (Thur at least) or have friends save you a spot - it gets really crowded by Fri. night. Imagine 30,000 laid back folks camping and drinking beer along a goreous river and about 85% of them are really decent bluegrass musicians who just play 24/7. It's a guaranteed good time.

Also, until a month ago I lived two blocks from both the Replay and Jackpot. Talk about location.

Ah Lawrence. I lived in East Lawrence (10th and Rhode Island, 11th and New York) through most of my time there minus the two regrettable years at 14th and Tennessee. (yes RIGHT next to Bullwinkles - I was wicked poor).


dw - Sep 10, 2005 3:18:04 pm PDT #323 of 10003
Silence means security silence means approval

Sorry, it was actually this afternoon on Weekend America

Aaah. Found it and heard it. And I agree with the reviewer -- it's not a very organic sound. And it's a little off-putting. If she were more organic, she would sound like Jolie Holland. If she could smooth out her voice some, she would sound like Erin McKeown. And while she doesn't and therefore is different and distinct, it's still off-putting.

I really want to like this album, I do. But at least I only paid $10.87 for it on iTunes, not the $20 Tower is charging nowadays for a DRM-crippled "CD."

(And look, it's not the DRM I'm mad about, it's the way the DRM destroys my fair-use right to rip the tracks to MP3 or whatever format and listen to them on my iPod.)


NoiseDesign - Sep 10, 2005 3:27:54 pm PDT #324 of 10003
Our wings are not tired

It's the DMCA that's a really piece of shit. I've got two CD players with Digital outputs and I have a ProTools editing system, so I can do a real time digital dump of even copy protected tracks and then compress them any way I please. However, with the DMCA since those CD's have copy protection on them, I'm breaking the law by using my digital connection to circumvent the protection. I think it's even a felony. Fair use doesn't even come into play. The DMCA is a steaming pile of feces that need to be torn down.


Jon B. - Sep 10, 2005 3:28:48 pm PDT #325 of 10003
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

not the $20 Tower is charging nowadays for a DRM-crippled "CD."

I was able to rip the promo copy WMBR got....


Mr. Broom - Sep 10, 2005 3:37:58 pm PDT #326 of 10003
"When I look at people that I would like to feel have been a mentor or an inspiring kind of archetype of what I'd love to see my career eventually be mentioned as a footnote for in the same paragraph, it would be, like, Bowie." ~Trent Reznor

Ah Lawrence. I lived in East Lawrence (10th and Rhode Island, 11th and New York) through most of my time there minus the two regrettable years at 14th and Tennessee. (yes RIGHT next to Bullwinkles - I was wicked poor).
You have no idea how hard I'm laughing right now--I live at 14th and Tennessee. Southeast corner, across from Bullwinkle's. Lived right by 10th and Rhode Island previous to this. Bullwinkle's isn't so bad now since they lost their liquor license. They can only be open until midnight.

Your description of Winfield intrigues me. If my friends are still going, I may be sold on it myself.


tina f. - Sep 10, 2005 7:33:23 pm PDT #327 of 10003

I live at 14th and Tennessee. Southeast corner, across from Bullwinkle's.

That's CRAZY - I lived at 1409 Tenn (which in my mind is the southeast corner but I could be wrong) from 2001-2003. People don't understand when I say Chicago seems SO quiet in comparison. Until you've heard 45 frat boys doing the rock chalk chant directly outside your window at full drunken volume w/random fireworks accompanying you don't really know what loud is.

Lived right by 10th and Rhode Island previous to this

I was at 1001 Rhode Island (red brick house right on the corner) from 1994-1997ish. Long before your time I'm sure (when I first moved in the Replay wasn't even there!) - great great neighborhood.

If my friends are still going, I may be sold on it myself.

Well - if you manage to get there and feel like taking a hike to meet a buffista: I camp at the FAR east end of the Pecan grove. Basically you follow 14th Ave. until you get to electric station (where it says "off limits" on this map, take a right, walk a ways and go down a small embankment and we are THE LAST campsite along the train tracks (or actually the levee - the tracks are on the other side of the levee). If you go and manage to walk down there and ask for Tina people should know who you are talking about. But more importantly if you do go don't miss the Wilders - they are at Stage 1 (the really big one) at 10:30 on Sat. night and they are amazing. After that it's all about Stage 5 which is in the campground - leave the official fairgrounds area out of the east exit and follow the crowd until you see all the giant parachutes in the trees and find a spot - stage 5 on Sat. night is not to be missed.


Mr. Broom - Sep 10, 2005 7:50:53 pm PDT #328 of 10003
"When I look at people that I would like to feel have been a mentor or an inspiring kind of archetype of what I'd love to see my career eventually be mentioned as a footnote for in the same paragraph, it would be, like, Bowie." ~Trent Reznor

1409 would have to be on the other side of the Sunflower House, the third house from the corner. I'm 1400 (oh noes my address on teh intarweb), on the corner proper. Next time I walk by I'll have to have a look. And you're so very right about the damn fraternity brahs--they get up to some serious volume out there. I actually hope we don't make the Final Four this year, which statement would get you beheaded in many parts of this town.

Anyone other'n the Wilders you'd recommend I bone up on prior to the show? I like to do my research. It's how I got into Okkervil River before they opened for the Decemberists, which decision I applaud myself for daily. Easily one of the greatest "new" bands I've heard this year.


tina f. - Sep 10, 2005 8:04:08 pm PDT #329 of 10003

1409 would have to be on the other side of the Sunflower House, the third house from the corner.

That was a typo. I lived in 1400 Tenn. Seriously - apt. # 4 on the second floor. Holy shit - if you are in #4 I am going to have to freak out a little. If that is your apt., and the cabinets are still blue - that was me! They were a hideous checkerboard black and white (to match the tile) when I moved in. No matter what apt. you have in that bldg. I can tell you some unsavory story about it I'm sure (we all kind of got to know each other what with the abnormally thin walls).

Anyone other'n the Wilders you'd recommend I bone up on prior to the show?

Not really. The mainstages at Winfield are not why you go, in fact I would recommend not really spending a ton of time at stages 1-4 - it's outside the fairgrounds at stages 5-8 in the Pecan grove you want to check out and that could be just about anyone. Jeff & Vida are always good. Last year there was a young band called Pagosa Hotstrings that was amazing. But it's kind of all about the surprises at Winfield.


Mr. Broom - Sep 11, 2005 7:12:11 am PDT #330 of 10003
"When I look at people that I would like to feel have been a mentor or an inspiring kind of archetype of what I'd love to see my career eventually be mentioned as a footnote for in the same paragraph, it would be, like, Bowie." ~Trent Reznor

I'm #2, so no go there. Haven't met the ladies who live upstairs yet, though they seem nice enough. Though the possibility that the walls are that thin makes me feel a bit... insecure.


Hayden - Sep 11, 2005 8:12:38 am PDT #331 of 10003
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

Gatemouth Brown, RIP. I took a toke of wacky tobaccy from the man's pipe once, but he was a taciturn man, and we exchanged no words. He was a gentleman and a scholar, though, as well as a fine example of the mish-mash of Southern blues-funk-hillbilly-R&B-soul-rock.