From rollingstone.com:
TMBG Dial Up Anniversary Anthology, tour planned to celebrate twenty
years...
Rhino records will release Dial-A-Song: Twenty Years of They Might Be Giants
on September 3rd, a fifty-two track compilation that, as promised in the
title, spans the two decade career of Johns Flansburgh and Linnell.
The two-CD set will include a trio of previously unreleased tracks -- live
versions of "She's Actual Size," "Spy" and "Stormy Pinkness" -- in addition
to a handful of odds and ends that had appeared on soundtracks, including
"Dr. Evil" from Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me and the group's
Grammy-winning "Boss of Me" from Malcolm in the Middle. The remainder of the
songs were culled from They Might Be Giants's nine studio albums, from
1986's They Might Be Giants to the just-released children's album, No!. Most
thoroughly represented is the band's best-selling album, 1990's Flood, from
which seven songs were drawn.
"I think our entire career is 'the other way of doing it,' pretty much all
the way down the line," Flansburgh says. "And that's very exciting for us.
We're happy to be an example of something that works outside of the regular
way it works. Just simply because of the contempt we have for the world." In
addition to promoting No!, the Giants are also working on their next adult
album, the follow-up to last year's Mink Car. "It's interesting, you do
something like [No!], and then you can go back to exploring adult images
again," Flansburgh says. "It's really good to keep yourself challenged. I
think I've come to realize one of the reasons so many bands fade out is they
feel like they only do one thing well. We probably only do one thing well --
or we may not even do it that well -- but, more importantly, we pretend that
we can do more than one thing well."
The duo is also planning to begin a lengthy tour of the U.S. to celebrate
their anniversary. The jaunt will launch in July and run through August,
before taking a short break and resuming in October and November.
"Basically, wherever you live," Flansburgh says, "like it or not, we're
coming to your town [laughs]."
Track listing for Dial-A-Song:
Disc One
Birdhouse in Your Soul
Ana NG
Don't Let's Start
Boss of Me
Older
Istanbul (Not Constantinople)
Doctor Worm
The Guitar
Dr. Evil
New York City
Particle Man
Cyclops Rock
Minimum Wage
Man, It's So Loud in Here
We're the Replacements
Why Does the Sun Shine? (The Sun Is a Mass of Incandescent Gas)
Your Racist Friend
Bangs
Snail Shell
Twisting
Another First Kiss
They'll Need a Crane
The Statue Got Me High
(She Was a) Hotel Detective
Put Your Hand Inside the Puppet Head
I Palindrome I
Disc Two
She's an Angel
How Can I Sing Like a Girl
James K. Polk
Meet James Ensor
Mammal
Pet Name
No!
I Can Hear You
Spider
I Should Be Allowed to Think
Fingertips
She's Actual Size
Spy
Stormy Pinkness
Exquisite Dead Guy
Robot Parade
Boat of Car
S-E-X-X-Y
Number Three
The End of the Tour
They Might Be Giants
Hey Mr. DJ, I Thought You Said We Had a Deal
Nightgown of the Sullen Moon
Snowball in Hell
Purple Toupee
Cowtown
They Might Be Giants tour dates:
7/12: Denver, CO, AT&T LoDo Music Festival
7/13: Park City, UT, Harry O's
7/14: Boise, ID, Big Easy
7/16: San Francisco, The Fillmore
7/19: Portland, OR, Crystal Ballroom
7/20: Seattle, Paramount Theater
7/21: Seattle, Sky Church at Experience Music Project
7/23: Petaluma, CA, Mystic Theater
7/24: Santa Cruz, CA, The Catalyst
7/25: San Diego, 4th and B
7/26: Los Angeles, John Anson Ford Theater
7/27: Anaheim, CA, House of Blues
7/28: Las Vegas, House of Blues
7/29: Scottsdale, AZ, Cajun House
8/15: New York, Central Park SummerStage
Kay
Who wants to bet the Stormy Pinkness will be the "Love" version from Unlimited?
-Nick
Haha, that's what I was thinking exactly.
Also, "Most thoroughly represented is the band's best-selling album,
1990's Flood, from which seven songs were drawn." Right, because that's
the one people in need of a greatest hits album are least likely to have.
It is a decent list of stuff, I guess...I could whine about some stuff
that's not included that I really feel should be, but I'm not going to
bother. But I still don't understand who the target audience of this is.
I can't imagine liking them enough to be willing to pay for a two-disc
album ($25-30?) but not enough to just buy everything.
And it better have damn good liner notes.
--
Quinn {selfcall...@houston.rr.com, AIM:lazeebunny}
http://www.angelfire.com/tx/quinncorner/index.html
"The healing doesn't stop the feeling."
~They Might Be Giants
Maybe it'll be one of those few two-disc sets that actually goes for 15. I've
seen a couple of compilations like that.
Then again, someone here already pointed out that Flans is an avarice. ;]
>Rhino records will release Dial-A-Song: Twenty Years of They Might Be
Giants
>on September 3rd, a fifty-two track compilation that, as promised in the
>title, spans the two decade career of Johns Flansburgh and Linnell.
>
It's basically the official TMBG mix tape.
*Lincoln - 5*
> Ana Ng
> Cowtown
> Purple Toupee
> They'll Need a Crane
> Snowball in Hell (Not a bad song, but... WYEDG, damnit.)
*Flood - 7*
> Birdhouse in Your Soul
> Istanbul (Not Constantinople)
> Your Racist Friend
> Particle Man
> Twisting
> Minimum Wage
> They Might Be Giants
*Apollo 18 - 6*
> I Palindrome I
> Mammal
> The Statue Got Me High
> Spider
> The Guitar
> Fingertips (I'm curious to see how they'll do this... if it'll be separate
tracks or a whole.)
*Miscellaneous T - 3*
> We're the Replacements
> Nightgown of the Sullen Moon
> Hey Mr. DJ, I Thought You Said We Had a Deal
*John Henry - 4*
> Snail Shell
> I Should Be Allowed to Think
> Meet James Ensor
> The End of the Tour
*Factory Showroom - 7*
> S-E-X-X-Y
> How Can I Sing Like a Girl?
> Exquisite Dead Guy
> New York City
> James K. Polk
> Pet Name
> I Can Hear You
*Severe Tire Damage - 2*
> Doctor Worm
> Why Does the Sun Shine? (The Sun Is a Mass of Incandescent Gas)
*Long Tall Weekend - 1*
> Older (Here's hoping it's this version. Or the original.)
*Mink Car - 4*
> Bangs
> Cyclops Rock
> Man, It's So Loud in Here
> Another First Kiss (I don't dislike it nearly as much as some others, but
I don't think it's worthy of a 'best of' album.)
*No! - 2*
> No!
> Robot Parade
*Other - 4*
> Boss of Me
> Dr. Evil
> She's Actual Size (Live) (Better be the best damn Dial-a-Drum Solo ever.
Hickey is my idol, but I'm not so sure about this choice.)
> Spy (Live) (I don't have a problem with this song... but we could have
three studio songs in place of this)
> Stormy Pinkness (Live) (Hopefully not the Emusic version)
My thoughts-
John Henry has FOUR. As far as I'm concerned (and I don't fucking care how
many people think I'm stupid for this), John Henry is its own 'best of'
album.
Also not included:
Where Your Eyes Don't Go (I'm speechless here... they even recognized it as
a fan favorite on Radio TMBG. This should have been one of the easier
choices.)
My Evil Twin
Turn Around
SenSurround (again, more overlooking this song)
Rhythm Section Want Ad
Metal Detector
Spiraling Shape (uh... why?)
The Bells Are Ringing
See the Constellation (one of the best guitar riffs, ever. from any band.)
Four of Two (much better choice for a track from No! than either of the two
listed)
Your Mom's Alright (a lesser choice... remove Another First Kiss and put
this in. If you're going for an overall look of the band, consider the
collaborations you've done. YMA is the best collaboration I can think of...
it's much better than Dr. Evil.)
Rest Awhile
On the Drag
any good B-side tracks... Ondine, Unforgotten, We've Got a World That
Swings, etc
And of course:
Thunderbird
What is Everyone Staring At?
Finished With Lies - Ballad (pleasepleasepleaseplease)
Man, It's So Loud In Here - ROCK (okay, so the studio rock version wasn't
spectacular... but it was still so much cooler overall. Ditch the electronic
stuff, have the horns not sound like they're playing classical music, and...
hell, just rock out. That's what you do, right?)
Tumbleweed
No Answer
Hell Hotel (I really really really want to hear this with the Band of Dans
already... hell, just release it as it is... something)
Triborough Bridge/Triboro/however it's offically known (I can dream, can't
I?...)
...and many more. In place of trying to 'capture the zaniness of the band'
or whatever the hell... I would have 'settled' for 'just' hearing some great
songs. Maybe that's just me...
> They Might Be Giants tour dates:
Come to Ohio. Please. We don't have anything here. If it weren't for Cedar
Point, they would've nuked us already.
-john
john m <theymigh...@att.net> wrote in message
news:ouqQ8.46347$LC3.3...@bgtnsc04-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...
>
> My thoughts-
>
> John Henry has FOUR. As far as I'm concerned (and I don't fucking care how
> many people think I'm stupid for this), John Henry is its own 'best of'
> album.
I don't think you're stupid. I wholeheartedly agree.
They could have just done "Then Again: The Later Years" and included every
post-Bar/None track they've ever recorded. Perhaps that would satisfy more
fans (and cost a BILLION dollars).
--
Shaun
www.tmbg.cc
I totally agree! I love that riff... but on radio TMBG they say it was stolen
from a Monkeys song. they never play it live and it would be such a good song to
do live.
Mike
Monkees. And yes, it's basically the opening riff to Last Train to
Clarksville but with a slightly different rhythm. the same riff can
also be found in Moxy Fruvous' "Michigan Militia."
http://www.billboard.com/billboard/daily/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_
id=1522213
If that's the one recorded in Berlin in 1989, Billboard.com will take
that bet. Note also that it's one of "three previously-unreleased live
recordings." If they want to sell many of these, the liner notes are
going to have to be made of gold.
--
Oh, and Robot Parade's the adult version
Robert Hutchinson |
| "Butterflies are real asses."
| -- Conan O'Brien
|
Spiraling Shape is a bit of a disappointment as well, just cos I think
musically it's one of their best songs.
On Thu, 20 Jun 2002 19:59:16 GMT, "john m" <theymigh...@att.net>
wrote:
I like it much more than the children's version. I just hope they've
improved it somewhat. The mp3 had terrible panning problems.
-john
Yeah and that always reminded me of Paperback Writer.
*With input from*? Well, that explains some things. And yes,
*continuing* to neglect the best album (JH) sucks.
Robert Hutchinson:
> If that's the one recorded in Berlin in 1989, Billboard.com
> will take that bet.
My file says 1988, but that's probably an error. Tmbg.net has few shows
listed for either year, but none of the 1988 dates are in Europe.
> Note also that it's one of "three previously-unreleased live
> recordings." If they want to sell many of these, the liner
> notes are going to have to be made of gold.
I don't think they're betting the farm on selling it to the likes of us. It's
the casual fans they're after, the ones who used to own Flood but don't
anymore, or have it on cassette or something, or the ones who have yet to go
beyond Boss of Me. But then, I'd think those people aren't as likely to
spring for a two-disc set, so maybe what they're hoping is that we hardcore
fans will buy it to give other people as gifts. I know a bunch of people who
would like to get it.
Bryce
AMEN SISTER!!!!
The world has forgotten...John Henry....
>Nick2cool wrote:
>
> >> The two-CD set will include a trio of previously unreleased tracks
> >> -- live versions of "She's Actual Size," "Spy" and "Stormy
> >> Pinkness"
> >>
> >
> > Who wants to bet the Stormy Pinkness will be the "Love" version from
> > Unlimited?
>Haha, that's what I was thinking exactly.
>
>Also, "Most thoroughly represented is the band's best-selling album,
>1990's Flood, from which seven songs were drawn." Right, because that's
>the one people in need of a greatest hits album are least likely to have.
>
>It is a decent list of stuff, I guess...I could whine about some stuff
>that's not included that I really feel should be, but I'm not going to
>bother. But I still don't understand who the target audience of this is.
>I can't imagine liking them enough to be willing to pay for a two-disc
>album ($25-30?) but not enough to just buy everything.
>
>And it better have damn good liner notes.
TMBG seem to have absolutely no idea who their audience is. TMBGU was
obviously only going to appeal to the most die hard fans yet they fed
us crap for 12 months.
This set is nothing short of idiotic. It'll be too expensive for
anyone who is marginally interested in TMBG and die hard fans will
have no interest in it because they already have everything on it. If
they put out a regular Greatest Hits set I'd probably buy it
especially if they tacked on 2 or 3 actual unreleased songs (oh yay, 3
previously released live tracks!) $20 or more for just liner notes is
just insane.
I can not believe that they honestly think this set would sell better
than an actual DAS compilation. What is the reasoning behind that?
I would like to have some of whatever they were smoking when they sat
down and decided this set was a good idea.
The sad part is lots of TMBG fans will run out and buy it just because
it's TMBG and be glad for the opportunity.
TMBG knows they are going to sell this primarily to die hard TMBG fans
so why not just put out a damn DAS collection and sell more copies?
Word. John Henry rocks my world.
>
>
>john m <theymigh...@att.net> wrote in message
>news:ouqQ8.46347$LC3.3...@bgtnsc04-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...
>>
>> My thoughts-
>>
>> John Henry has FOUR. As far as I'm concerned (and I don't fucking care how
>> many people think I'm stupid for this), John Henry is its own 'best of'
>> album.
>
>I don't think you're stupid. I wholeheartedly agree.
Yeah it's insane that they include almost double the tracks from FS,
an album that has almost half the tracks John Henry does. They
couldn't find a few more tracks out of 20 that were worth including?
This whole set seems like an experiment in doing everything wrong. If
they have the rights to all the Elektra stuff why not release another
b-sides compilation? That would sell 10x as much as this turd.
Your association with us wacko internet fans has obviously clouded your
perception of reality...like how vastly, vastly outnumbered we are, probably
500 to 1, by people who only own one or two albums, or, more likely, just
downloaded Istanbul and Particle Man off of Napster.
People do buy these 2-disc greatest hits collections. Many, many bands
release them. In fact, I can't think of a single band I like, both more and
less popular than TMBG, that hasn't done one at some point. Record companies
wouldn't still be releasing them if they were unprofitable, would they?
Christ, you act like TMBG's decisions are a personal insult to you.
--
Sylvan
http://www.godcomic.net
"The hamster is still dead." --Leonard Nimoy
The thing is, if you used to own Flood, go buy it for $10 at Best Buy.
If someone was into TMBG they'd buy the albums themselves. If you're a
fan trying to get someone into TMBG (good luck!) you sure aren't going
to buy them a $25 set that they'll probably throw in the garbage.
This set truly has zero appeal. The majority of the sales will be to
die hard fans who simply have to have everything and casual fans who
don't know exactly what they are buying and then regretting it when
they realize what it is.
They should've put out two separate discs. One filled with b-sides and
rare songs (some of which they threw in this set) and a regular
Greatest Hits CD with as many songs as they could fit on an 80 minute
disc. They could fit 35 songs easy on one.
Die hards would probably buy both anyway and the Greatest Hits disc
would be more accessible to the general public. Why that is such a
hard concept I don't know.
This is the band after all that thought $10 was a good price for a 5
song holiday EP with nothing new on it.
Hey, that's me!
Forking ship. Now I have to go out and buy it. Damn you, TMBG! Last time
they had three S songs in a row it was actually worth buying...
If they do it as separate tracks, this compilation would kick ass when played
randomly.
Also, since it's "assembled by the label", we shouldn't expect it to be exactly
what we diehard fans would want. We're not even its target audience.
Since when does the band set these prices?
Nathan
Inspite of what it seems like to us in here, there are more wavelengths in the
fan spectrum than "completionist" and "They must be what?". A former Flood
owner might not have liked everything on Flood, and see that this anthology
has their favorites and some other things they've heard but don't own.
> If you're a fan trying to get someone into TMBG (good luck!)
> you sure aren't going to buy them a $25 set that they'll
> probably throw in the garbage.
This is why you *qualify* all your sales leads. :)
> They should've put out two separate discs. One filled with b-sides and
> rare songs (some of which they threw in this set) and a regular
> Greatest Hits CD with as many songs as they could fit on an 80 minute
> disc. They could fit 35 songs easy on one.
>
> Die hards would probably buy both anyway and the Greatest Hits disc
> would be more accessible to the general public. Why that is such a
> hard concept I don't know.
News flash: this *is* a greatest hits album. Of course there's a stigma
against calling it that, but that's what it is. The not-such-a-hit stuff
(Spider, Fingertips, etc) is bonus material on this greatest hits album.
How's that for an easy concept?
> This is the band after all that thought $10 was a good price for a 5
> song holiday EP with nothing new on it.
I only had two of those tracks in CD-quality form, but of course I'd still
rather have paid $6. :-/
Bryce
this is me. it's sick.
jessie.
like Nixon was sick.
Nixon's the one.
That's not a problem. That was done on purpose.
-scratch
and Weird Al's I Remember Larry.
And they did do Constellation live a handful of times. Much like Metal
Detector, Why Must I Be Sad/Out Of Jail (yes JH had two), and Hopeless
Bleak Despair. Seems like they tend to pick what could be the best live
song off a particular album and then only do it live like 5 times.
-scratch
-scratch
Uh... mine is all in the left channel, with occasional scratchiness and
music in the right. That was on purpose?
-john
You're not the boss of me now and you're not so big.
Yes. It's like Edith Head.
-scratch
In that case...
I like it much more than the children's version. I just hope they've
improved it somewhat. The mp3 had terrible panning.
-john
> If
> they have the rights to all the Elektra stuff why not release another
> b-sides compilation?
do they though? this album is out on rhino records... could it be that
rhino got the rights from elektra to put these tracks on this album? or
am i an idiot and they absolutely have the rights to all their elektra
songs, or something.
other stuff... most people on the newsgroup are saying it's a stupid
idea to release it like this... that casual fans arent gonna put down
the $30 (or whatever) for it, and hardcore fans just for the sake of
owning it. well, i know a lot of people who are casual fans or
whatever, and dont own many albums, but are genuinely itno tmbg, and
would buy it. that describes most of my friends who listen to them.
and, for big fans, it's your choice whether or not you'll want to own it
just for the sake of owning it. i certainly will buy it, get it
autographed, and put it away on my shelf, most likely.
oh and whoever was complaining that the holidayland ep was too pricey at
$10, you're a sucker if you paid full price... i think i got mine for
under $9 including shipping
The big big whoredom scares me.
Nathan
I thought it was "Pleasant Valley Sunday," at least accordingly to the
notoriously inaccurate Radio TMBG captions.
Nathan
Rhino is owned by Warner. Electra is owned by Warner. I would assume that
Rhino getting the rights for the Electra era material was a fairly simple all
in the family thing...
-Nick
> In article <i0t4hucn57qsbgcdo...@4ax.com>,
> Kevin Sullivan <ke...@beestung.net> wrote:
>
> > If they have the rights to all the Elektra stuff why not release
> > another b-sides compilation?
>
> do they though? this album is out on rhino records... could it be that
> rhino got the rights from elektra to put these tracks on this album? or
> am i an idiot and they absolutely have the rights to all their elektra
> songs, or something.
Rhino and Elektra are both divisions of the Warner Music Group. I'm not
sure exactly how the economics work, with the money being transferred
from one division to another, but presumably Rhino got a pretty good
deal on the reissue rights for the Elektra tracks.
(Not that anyone cares about my opinion, but my main quibble with the
song selection is the absence of "Sleeping in the Flowers.")
--
Jim Ellwanger <trai...@mindspring.com>
<http://trainman1.home.mindspring.com> welcomes you daily.
"The days turn into nights; at night, you hear the trains."
That's what they said, but, well, listen to the two songs and see what
it sounds like to you.
-scratch
People Are Wrong
There's a feeling of boredom of the big whoredom.
~Rappaccini's Daughter
=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=
I believe in everything; nothing is sacred.
I believe in nothing; everything is sacred.
=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=
I dunno, I just don't see a 2 disc TMBG Greatest Hits set selling all
that well. Certainly no more and probably much less than a set filled
with demos and outtakes would sell.
Personally I can't think of a single band I like that *has* done a 2
disc Greatest Hits. The closest thing would be Smashing Pumpkins who
included a *free* b-sides and rarities disc along with their Greatest
Hits disc. ($12 for 30+ songs, 12 or so of which were never before
released.)
I don't take it personally I just don't get TMBG sometimes, and it
isn't just me either, everybody seems to think this set is just a bad
idea. Let's face it, TMBG aren't Billy Joel or Pink Floyd...
The stupidest thing about the set is that with all of the unreleased
material they have they didn't even bother to put on a few new tracks.
3 live tracks is not much of an incentive for fans to shell out $25.
The thing has *52* tracks. They could've peppered 8-10 new songs over
the two discs and it'd make it a much better purchase for fans.
I have no problem with TMBG trying to make a set that is primarily
intended for non-fans, it just doesn't make any sense for them to go
out of their way to make it so UNappealing for their fans. 8-10 new
songs and you're still left with 42-44 classic TMBG tunes. They aren't
going to sell any less copies to those non-fans because of that and
instead they'd sell a lot more copies to their fans and everyone is
happy. That's just good business.
I'm really curious to see how many copies the set actually ends up
selling.
>Kevin Sullivan:
>> The thing is, if you used to own Flood, go buy it for $10 at Best Buy.
>> If someone was into TMBG they'd buy the albums themselves.
>
>Inspite of what it seems like to us in here, there are more wavelengths in the
>fan spectrum than "completionist" and "They must be what?". A former Flood
>owner might not have liked everything on Flood, and see that this anthology
>has their favorites and some other things they've heard but don't own.
And how many people in the world do you think fall into that
category?:)
<snip>
>> Die hards would probably buy both anyway and the Greatest Hits disc
>> would be more accessible to the general public. Why that is such a
>> hard concept I don't know.
>
>News flash: this *is* a greatest hits album. Of course there's a stigma
>against calling it that, but that's what it is. The not-such-a-hit stuff
>(Spider, Fingertips, etc) is bonus material on this greatest hits album.
>How's that for an easy concept?
It's not a greatest hits album, it's a greatest hits *double* album.
My point is that it doesn't need to be. I guess the extra money they
make off of it being double the price will be more than the money they
won't make from people who avoid it because it's too expensive. After
all, one sale of a 2 disc set is the same as two sales of a single
disc.
And it isn't bonus material if you're paying for it. A whole disc
worth of "bonus" material is a lot for someone to swallow who is just
interested in the "hits" which could have easily been collected on one
disc with room for an extra 10 "bonus" tracks.
I was complaining, but I never bought it. It was a matter of being
overpriced in addition to not having anything new on it. I'm sure I
could've gotten the thing for $3 off of eBay.
Whoever came up with the $10 price tag when the EP is sitting next to
all their albums selling for $11.99-$14.99 was a friggin' genius :p
Heh, I've seen them do Metal Detector a few times. It was one of the
few songs I've ever seen them do as a request that wasn't on the
setlist anyway (like someone yelling out for Particle Man:p).
They were all set to start a song and someone yelled out for it and
Linnell was like, "You want to hear Metal Detector? OK."
I was a happy man:)
The Bells are Ringing definitely takes the cake though. That song
rocks live.
> And they did do Constellation live a handful of times. Much like Metal
> Detector, Why Must I Be Sad/Out Of Jail (yes JH had two), and Hopeless
> Bleak Despair. Seems like they tend to pick what could be the best live
> song off a particular album and then only do it live like 5 times.
Constellation was more than a handful. It was pretty much the entire
fall 1992 tour. they usually played it after Stump the Band. but it
was never played after that. so, like Metal Detector and the others, it
was only on the tour for the album it was on (although MD showed up a
few times in 1997 and 1998 - once Danny joined, they couldn't do it,
because it requires a 5-string bass)
which describes how you're feeling all the time.
Time is marching on.
-scratch
one more! one more!
or the time when the storm tangled up the wire.
Underneath the gathering thunderstorm.
-scratch
I'll note it again.
--
This is why I shouldn't put information in my signature block
Robert Hutchinson |
| "Butterflies are real asses."
| -- Conan O'Brien
|
Yeah, maybe you should avoid putting information in your signature block. :)
Bryce
Unnoticed by few.
Kay
As I went through the pillow, I noticed something.
--
Quinn {selfcall...@houston.rr.com, AIM:lazeebunny}
http://www.angelfire.com/tx/quinncorner/index.html
"The healing doesn't stop the feeling."
~They Might Be Giants
something grabbed ahold of my hand.
I'll do that.
--
*I'm* responsible for the anthology track selection! *I* did it! Hahaha!!
i held your hand, you held mine; it was the best night of my life.
jessie.
mwahaha.
How may I give you a hand from the position at your feet where I stand?
Your indolent friend,
Jenn
Stand on your own head for a change
*~*~*Mo*~*~*
There's never been a head like this before.
She Thinks She's Edith Head
*~*~*Mo*~*~*
I'll stop thinking what I shouldn't be thinking.
Right. For instance, a hardcore porn fan wouldn't want a Playboy, but
Playboy isn't directed towards fans of harcore porn.
she's actual size, but she seems much bigger to me.
Haha, precisely.
-scratch
Red means stop. Do not go.
--
Now that the subject's changed ...
So the warm blood flows with the red blood cells lacking nuclei through the
large four-chambered heart
I am an actual worm.
I am not your broom.
I'm having a heart-attack
*~*~*Mo*~*~*
Don't break the heart that needs you.
(Ack! Why am I doing this again?)
Nathan
Dinne...@tmbg.org
http://www.geocities.com/fablesto/
"And the silver chauffeur says it's all in your head, when you're 24 karat
dead." --They Might Be Giants
I'm your only friend, I'm not your only friend.
Don't let's start, I've got a weak heart.
Cow's a friend to me.
Do this -- No! Don't do that -- No!
Everyone's your friend in New York City.
Yes, no, maybe, I don't know, can you repeat the question?
I hate you. Not really.
I'm a scholar!