Gunn: The final score can't be rigged. I don't care how many players you grease, that last shot always comes up a question mark. But here's the thing. You never know when you're taking it. It could be when you're duking it out with the Legion of Doom, or just crossing the street deciding where to have brunch. So you just treat it like it was up to you—the world in balance—'cause you never know when it is.

'Underneath'


Buffista Music II: Wrath of Chaka Khan  

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.


joe boucher - May 04, 2005 7:08:55 am PDT #8477 of 10003
I knew that topless lady had something up her sleeve. - John Prine

Mazel tov, Jim!

Ditto from the other side of Flatbush!

Sorry to say I'm benighted on the Go-Betweens front, & sorrier to learn that they're playing almost literally in my back yard but nowhere near those w/ the large GB love. L J, if you decide to make the drive, or better yet take the Chinatown bus (it's like $15 from DC to NYC, plus you can read or sleep instead of fighting traffic), you have a place to stay. Corwood, my friend, that offer is of course extended to you even though I know you can't take me up on it. If you can swing a cheap flight to Chicago, though, I can guarantee you a place to stay. Probably a ride to/from the airport, too.

have you ever heard the Lambert, Hendricks and Ross song where Jon Hendricks does impressions of famous jazz bass players? I know he does Ray and Mingus, and I can't remember the third.

Nope. Wonder who the third is?

Also, I love the part in "Dearie's Blues" where Blossom sings, "Ray Brown says I was built for speed."

Wonder if he said that Ella was built for comfort. (Do you know Howlin' Wolf's great fat guy songs, "Built for Comfort" and "300 Lbs of Joy"? FAbulous stuff! Hoy! Hoy! I'm the boy! I got 300 pounds of heavenly joy!)


Alicia K - May 04, 2005 7:17:03 am PDT #8478 of 10003
Uncertainty could be our guiding light.

Congratulations are in order, so here's my offering: Congratulations!

I'm a bit U2'd out at the moment ... I'll pause here to let you all recover from the shock ... and am listening to some other stuff and letting it grow on me.

Today's revelations: I really like the CDs by Butterfly Boucher and Jem.


Hayden - May 04, 2005 7:19:44 am PDT #8479 of 10003
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

Corwood, my friend, that offer is of course extended to you even though I know you can't take me up on it. If you can swing a cheap flight to Chicago, though, I can guarantee you a place to stay. Probably a ride to/from the airport, too.

Mucho gracias! Friends in Chapel Hill, Chicago, LA, and San Francisco have already made similar offers, too (and what a lucky guy I am to have such great friends!), but, as you say, there is absolutely no way. My wife would love to make it possible, too, but the fact is that we're down a paycheck for the next two months. Oh well. I'm sure they'll be back sometime in the next 16 years.


joe boucher - May 04, 2005 7:25:24 am PDT #8480 of 10003
I knew that topless lady had something up her sleeve. - John Prine

NY-istas, are there good sites for finding out what live music is playing in NYC?

I usually check the Voice, but I find the print version much more useful than the website... which doesn't really help you. Sorry. The great thing about New York is also the terrible thing about it: it's FULL of great, cool stuff. Even if you were independently wealthy and could devote yourself full time to going to shows w/o worrying about cost you'd still miss a ton of stuff that shouldn't be missed. And that's not even throwing in competing art forms (film, theater, dance, museums). It's a better problem to have than having a dearth of the arts, but it is frustrating, especially when time and money are issues, as they are for most of us.

If I hadn't already used "Tattoo" for the Buffistamix it would be high on my list. I think I proposed "Love Songs, Nothing but Love Songs" for a LITG sidebar consisting of unusual love songs (to tatoos, old refrigerators, marijuana, and I don't remember what else). Sooo many choices.

Thanks to all for the congrats. Send good marriage~ma to my fianceé as she will need it.


Kate P. - May 04, 2005 7:33:39 am PDT #8481 of 10003
That's the pain / That cuts a straight line down through the heart / We call it love

Congrats to Jim and Joe!


erinaceous - May 04, 2005 9:04:35 am PDT #8482 of 10003
A fellow makes himself conspicuous when he throws soft-boiled eggs at the electric fan.

Congrats to Mr. Boucher, and also to the future Mrs. Boucher, who obviously knows a good thing when she sees it. :-)

And Jim, I had a 10-lb baby with no problems and no drugs, so you can use that to balance out the scary stories labor/delivery stories that people like to stop you with. What is it about having a baby that turns people into the Ancient Mariner?

And I was going to use the Go-Betweens for my unconventional love song but now I'm not so sure. Which locution I cannot think of without thinking of the recent New Scientist Feedback column where the man wrote in to say he used to think he was indecisive but now he's not so sure.


Sue - May 04, 2005 9:06:17 am PDT #8483 of 10003
hip deep in pie

Hayden - May 04, 2005 9:06:57 am PDT #8484 of 10003
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

What is it about having a baby that turns people into the Ancient Mariner?

The tiny albatross around our necks for the next 18 years. Ah, I kid. I kid because I love.

And I was going to use the Go-Betweens for my unconventional love song but now I'm not so sure.

Which one? Or should I wait until you make up your mind?


DavidS - May 04, 2005 9:12:15 am PDT #8485 of 10003
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Can we have no more scary delivery stories until further notice?

Absolutely. Sorry, Jim. But the good news is modern medicine filled with everyday miracles and happy endings.

May the arrival of the Jim and Ms. Jim's offspring be a smooth and easy process, absolutely textbook with thoroughly mundane anecdotes.

Congratulations! Welcome to the realm of sleep deprivation.


sumi - May 04, 2005 9:13:47 am PDT #8486 of 10003
Art Crawl!!!

The further good news is that obviously people have kids fairly easily and often -- look how many of us there are!