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traveyes
(Southern Oregon)
Posted: Feb 21, 2005 - 13:51
 

i was wondering if it ever ends....

.
beelzebubba
(Where the hell is Walldrug, South Dakota?)
Posted: Feb 21, 2005 - 13:51
 

Some people should not be allowed near computers, or at least don't sell them any music software.
Pyro
(Between a rock and a hard place)
Posted: Feb 21, 2005 - 13:50
 

Sounds like a cross between Banco de Gaia and Bill Nelson, with a little Art of Noise thrown in. I like it!
beelzebubba
(Where the hell is Walldrug, South Dakota?)
Posted: Feb 21, 2005 - 13:48
 

This is Tanya, someone is in town looking for me. I will give you the car and license plate. It's a new Trans-AM with a California license lettering "KNIGHT".
mojoman
(Rocky Mountains, Colorado)
Posted: Feb 21, 2005 - 13:48
 

B-dub wrote:


It was John Dryden who first promulgated the doctrine that a preposition may not be used at the end of a sentence,


To which Winston Churchill replied, "That is the sort of nonsense up with which I shall not put!"
Platypus
(here, now)
Posted: Dec 24, 2004 - 14:09
 

good stuff. would sounds great sammiched back-to-back with some Lemongrass.
coding_to_music
(Marlborough Massachusetts)
Posted: Dec 09, 2004 - 18:52
 

Interesting Song!
MsJudi
(Houston, TX)
Posted: Dec 09, 2004 - 18:52
 

Irritating in the extreme.
skindy
(Albany, NY)
Posted: Nov 10, 2004 - 06:21
 

B-dub wrote:
It was John Dryden who first promulgated the doctrine that a preposition may not be used at the end of a sentence...

Why, thank you. I feel so edified.

By the way, interesting song. 8)
B-dub
(Durham, NC)
Posted: Oct 26, 2004 - 11:07
 

grizzly_anderson wrote:
Definitely not the right kind of music for the end of a Monday. This kind of slow, simplistic, repetetive stuff might be fine when I wasn't trying desperately to stay awake and focused through the end of the work day, but as it is, it's the worst possible thing to be listening to.


It was John Dryden who first promulgated the doctrine that a preposition may not be used at the end of a sentence, probably on the basis of a specious analogy to Latin. Grammarians in the 18th century refined the doctrine, and the rule has since become one of the most venerated maxims of schoolroom grammar. But sentences ending with prepositions can be found in the works of most of the great writers since the Renaissance. English syntax does allow for final placement of the preposition, as in "We have much to be thankful for" or "I asked her which course she had signed up for." Efforts to rewrite such sentences to place the preposition elsewhere can have stilted and even comical results, as Winston Churchill demonstrated when he objected to the doctrine by saying “This is the sort of English up with which I cannot put.” ·Sometimes sentences that end with adverbs, such as "I don't know where she will end up" or "It's the most curious book I've ever run across", are mistakenly thought to end in prepositions. One can tell that up and across are adverbs here, not prepositions, by the ungrammaticality of I don't know up where she will end and It's the most curious book across which I have ever run. It has never been suggested that it is incorrect to end a sentence with an adverb.
MrSpaz
(Orlando, FL)
Posted: Oct 26, 2004 - 11:06
 

Someone should upload the "Nice weather for ducks" song. I don't remember if that's actually the title or not, but I like it. That and "Return to Patagonia" and "The Curse of Kaza'r."
trekhead
Posted: Oct 26, 2004 - 11:05
 

"Mmmmmmmmmmmmmm........Jelly in the bath!..................Aurghhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!"
grizzly_anderson
(Denver, CO)
Posted: Oct 11, 2004 - 15:52
 

Definitely not the right kind of music for the end of a Monday. This kind of slow, simplistic, repetetive stuff might be fine when I wasn't trying desperately to stay awake and focused through the end of the work day, but as it is, it's the worst possible thing to be listening to.
RichardPrins
(z­­³)
Posted: Aug 13, 2004 - 18:41
 


(ask Eddie Murphy...)
noyou
(Pasadena, CA USA)
Posted: Jul 21, 2004 - 00:14
 

rcurrier wrote:
Just what we need, music with the MP3 glitches built-in to the original.

Are you saying there are glitches in the MP3, or are you making a comment on the music itself, as it was meant to sound? I uploaded this, and the MP3 I uploaded does NOT have any glitches. I make sure of that before I upload them.
noyou
(Pasadena, CA USA)
Posted: Jul 21, 2004 - 00:11
 

Uploaded March 30, 2004
TreborG2
(VA - somewhere east of paradise)
Posted: Jul 16, 2004 - 14:08
 

Pretty cool.. followed links to amazon.. they have a free MP3 download of the track "Staunton Lick" from their site!

Wow.. Staunton Lick kicks some a$$

If you like "In The Bath" .. check "Staunton Lick" at amazon.. and if you buy.. remember to follow the link for the album first from Radio Paradise.. you'll pay the same price.. but some jingly shiny bits will go to Radio Paradise!!

rcurrier
(San Juan Capistrano, CA)
Posted: Jul 16, 2004 - 14:05
 

Just what we need, music with the MP3 glitches built-in to the original.

Gregorama
(Austin, TX)
Posted: Jul 16, 2004 - 14:03
 

Excellent. Nice groove & scratch.
thebeav69
Posted: Jul 16, 2004 - 14:02
 

I loved Lemon Jelly's second album, Lost Horizens. I HIGHLY recommend it to anyone with musical taste!
dmd
(Montreal)
Posted: Jul 16, 2004 - 14:00
 

Is that a sample of Laurie Anderson's voice? Anyone know? Sure sounds like her.