From dainisb@... Sun Jun 2 17:01:47 2002 From: dainisb@... (dainisb@...) Date: Sun, 2 Jun 2002 18:01:47 +0300 Subject: The [Gri:n] files # 5 Message-ID: <3CFA5D8B.24141.12FA324@localhost> "The [Gri:n] Files" page was updated again - interviews with musicans of: Arca (France) 2 By Bukowski (Greece) Nagisa Ni te (Japan) Jakob (New Zealand) (Peel've played 2 tracks by Jakob) Stafr¿nn Håkon (Iceland) (Peel played a track by Ampop) at http://gd.times.lv/files5.htm Dainis http://gd.times.lv/ (updated both parts) http://www.nra.lv/green/ (second part of an interview with Stafr¿nn Håkon will be updated tomorrow) From spinnerx15@... Mon Jun 3 18:40:28 2002 From: spinnerx15@... (jdonelkovich) Date: Mon, 03 Jun 2002 16:40:28 -0000 Subject: Sounds of the Suburbs Message-ID: Can someone tell me who the woman is pictured with John in the cd booklet, opposite the "Isle of Wight" page? By the way, is there anyone (Tom Roche perhaps)who has a copy of the series that us Americans might be able to view? Thanks! Oh, and that business about bumping Peel last week for an extended Lammo program...ridiculous. From martinw@... Tue Jun 4 20:49:12 2002 From: martinw@... (Martin Wheatley) Date: Tue, 04 Jun 2002 19:49:12 +0100 Subject: A Crate Of Gin For Mr Peel Message-ID: <4.3.2.7.2.20020604194800.00c491b8@...> Andy Kershaw on Radio 3 last night said (I'm paraphrasing!) Bristol is getting to be a very hippie place, I met this guy out the back who said 'You know all these bank holidays we get in the spring' I said 'yes'. He said 'There ought to be one for John Peel's birthday. I didn't tell him Peel's birthday was in August but now I come to think of it Peel is the new Queen Mum! martinw From rockerq@... Tue Jun 4 23:43:33 2002 From: rockerq@... (rockerq@...) Date: Tue, 4 Jun 2002 17:43:33 EDT Subject: [peel] A Crate Of Gin For Mr Peel Message-ID: <9b.2868fadd.2a2e8e85@...> << come to think of it Peel is the new Queen Mum! >> Let's hope he is still doing his job at 101! Rocker rockerq@... From stuff1424@... Thu Jun 6 18:57:19 2002 From: stuff1424@... (stuff1424@...) Date: Thu, 6 Jun 2002 12:57:19 EDT Subject: [peel] Digest Number 514 Message-ID: <183.95be6a3.2a30ee6f@...> Greetings, Looking for a copy of last night's Oxes performance for Mr Peel- I wasn't expecting it to sound quite so spectacular! Any offers for a copy on tape would be greatly appreciated and i'm willing to trade, provide a tape or cover any expenses etc. cheers, Rich. From adyfoley@... Thu Jun 6 19:23:08 2002 From: adyfoley@... (=?iso-8859-1?q?ady=20foley?=) Date: Thu, 6 Jun 2002 18:23:08 +0100 (BST) Subject: oxes In-Reply-To: <183.95be6a3.2a30ee6f@...> Message-ID: <20020606172308.71277.qmail@...> likewise please, md or cdr would be good. ta ady --- stuff1424@... wrote: > Greetings, > > Looking for a copy of last night's Oxes performance for Mr Peel- I > wasn't > expecting it to sound quite so spectacular! Any offers for a copy on > tape > would be greatly appreciated and i'm willing to trade, provide a tape > or > cover any expenses etc. > > cheers, > > Rich. > __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Everything you'll ever need on one web page from News and Sport to Email and Music Charts http://uk.my.yahoo.com From rob-bl@... Thu Jun 6 20:35:13 2002 From: rob-bl@... (Rob Strong) Date: Thu, 6 Jun 2002 19:35:13 +0100 Subject: [peel] oxes/circle References: <20020606172308.71277.qmail@...> Message-ID: <013601c20d88$ed3ff420$89d230d5@oemcomputer> From: "ady foley" > likewise please, md or cdr would be good. and me! I was out seeing Circle in Birmingham last night. Following Mr. Peel's on-air query about why they were in the country but weren't doing a session for him, they have cancelled the show they were due to play in Brighton on Sunday so that they can go into Maida Vale to record for the show. Rob From goofy@... Tue Jun 11 00:26:15 2002 From: goofy@... (Goofy Kent) Date: Tue, 11 Jun 2002 01:26:15 +0300 Subject: [peel] oxes/circle References: <1023463224.122.50494.m12@yahoogroups.com> Message-ID: <01b101c210ce$9a7ebde0$7d1456d4@pii350mhz> Rob Strong: > I was out seeing Circle in Birmingham last night. Following Mr. Peel's > on-air query about why they were in the country but weren't doing a > session for him, they have cancelled the show they were due to play > in Brighton on Sunday so that they can go into Maida Vale to record > for the show. Yes! Finally that came through! I just got an e-mail from Circle guitarist Gygge and he was pretty excited about doing the session. Now Circle will be the third Finnish band doing a Peel session (Deep Turtle and Aavikko being the other two) and the thing that makes me kinda proud is that Circle and (now defunct) Deep Turtle are both from my hometown. G. From dainisb@... Thu Jun 13 22:02:16 2002 From: dainisb@... (dainisb@...) Date: Thu, 13 Jun 2002 23:02:16 +0300 Subject: Post-Rock bands Message-ID: <3D092478.17482.2C66AA0@localhost> Today was updated the website called "The Green Dolphin's Poll" at 1) http://gd.times.lv/post.htm Post-Rock bands (about 50 new links) 2) http://gd.times.lv/post2.htm Post-Rock labels & media (about 20 new links) Dainis http://gd.times.lv/ http://www.nra.lv/green/ From nburling@... Fri Jun 14 12:54:35 2002 From: nburling@... (palacese25) Date: Fri, 14 Jun 2002 10:54:35 -0000 Subject: Sonarrrr..... Message-ID: John's Radio 1 homepage has a Sonar video diary... From martinw@... Tue Jun 18 20:59:30 2002 From: martinw@... (Martin Wheatley) Date: Tue, 18 Jun 2002 19:59:30 +0100 Subject: Peel Doing A Webchat Wednesday Night Message-ID: <4.3.2.7.2.20020618195707.00c4ea10@...> Since I get the digest someone's probably already posted this but in case not According to John's web page http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1/alt/johnpeel/ he's doing a webchat tomorrow night Check the page for details martinw From troche@... Wed Jun 19 06:30:48 2002 From: troche@... (Tom Roche) Date: Wed, 19 Jun 2002 00:30:48 -0400 Subject: Domestic BBC Radio Shows now available as Archive Files Message-ID: Mr. Peel said this evening his domestic shows will now be archived for a week as Real Audio files at the Radio 1 Website. I haven't checked it out yet. It seems this is part of a larger plan, as outlined in this story in Mondays Guardian. Thanks to martinw for the link. tom r Media Guardian Andy Kershaw anytime Web radio is finally getting its act together, says Owen Gibson Monday June 17, 2002 The Guardian Whether it be Andy Kershaw's eclectic mix of world music late on a Friday night, a Book at Bedtime on Radio 4 that is well past your bedtime, or Jon Carter mixing on Radio 1's Breezeblock after midnight, it's far easier to miss out on your favourite radio show than it is a TV programme. After all, radio shows don't have countless magazines and newspaper supplements devoted to telling you when they're on, and you're unlikely to tape them to listen to later in the same way as you would with a TV and video recorder. Add in the fact that people tend to be tuned into their station of choice rather than making "appointments to listen" to specific shows and an awful lot of enjoyable and relevant radio content passes most of us by. But for those prepared to listen to the radio on the web (and put up with the attendant loss of quality that this entails), that could all soon change, thanks to a new radio player developed by the BBC's interactive arm, BBCi. It allows web users to listen to any specialist show from across the BBC's national stations over the past seven days, picking and choosing from hundreds of hours of content. Appearing in a pop-up window on your desktop, the simple player - which uses Real Player technology - allows you to choose from two drop-down menus according to either radio station or genre. You then select the show you want to listen to and it plays in the background as long as you remain connected to the web, leaving you free to surf. The simple addition of a list of shows based on musical genre will open up shows to people who would not normally listen to a particular station, believes Chris Kimber, head of BBC Radio Online. "Radio brands work both ways - they probably turn as many people off as they attract," he says. "A lot of people still think that Radio 3 is wall-to-wall classical music, for example. But it's changed beyond all recognition in the last couple of years. Using the player, someone who would never usually tune into Radio 3 might stumble across something they love on Mixing It or the Andy Kershaw show, which they wouldn't otherwise have found." The benefits are clear, and the new feature could particularly benefit Radio 1, believes Kimber. Not only does the station's target audience spend a lot of time on the web, but older listeners who have been put off the station due to its daytime playlist of chart pop and dance music might return to find something of interest among the late-night specialist shows. But why restrict the output to specialist shows? "There's not much value in repeating Sara Cox's breakfast show or other topical shows, but if there's a programme that's on once a week or late at night then there's going to be a lot more interest," replies Kimber. The technology behind the player is far from new but, like much of the BBC's recent new media output, it utilises the vast resources available elsewhere in the corporation to good effect. Many of Radio 4's shows, including Today and The Archers, are already archived, but the introduction of the radio player marks a first for the music-based stations. "It's been my holy grail for three years to offer the specialist shows on demand. I've been dying to do this since 1998 but it's taken until now to get to the point where we can launch it," says Kimber. The sticking point has been in agreeing terms with the record companies who control copyright restrictions on the music played. In a world where the music giants are paranoid about the threat posed by the internet to their industry, it was an arduous task to persuade them to allow shows that often contain records played months before their release to be archived. To mollify them, the BBC has agreed to archive shows for seven days only and to make them available only "as live", and not for download on to a PC. You can skip through the shows in 15-minute chunks, but it is not possible to rewind them to listen to the same track again and again. "We managed to persuade them that it is streaming and not downloading. We're not saying, 'Listen to the new Eminem track over and over again.' It's a bit of an experiment for them, too," says Kimber. In any case, as he points out, if listeners are so desperate to copy a track, they could simply tape it off the radio anyway. Internet radio has travelled a rocky road up until now. While popular with punters, like so much else on the web it has proved almost impossible to make any money out of. Of course, the BBC is unencumbered by such fiscal concerns and can instead concentrate on making the best use of the technology to the benefit of its listeners. Kimber also makes the argument that by redistributing its shows in this way, the BBC is providing better value for its licence-fee payers. "There was a bout of intense competition about two years ago. Now it feels like a lot of that has died down. But we don't want to be ploughing a lone furrow - we want to be one of a number of players," he says. The BBC has been accused in the past of being slow to catch on to the benefits of online radio, initially limiting itself to streaming certain stations while others were experimenting with interactivity and personalised playlists. Yet now that expensive online radio experiments from commercial stations, such as Chrysalis's Puremix, have long ago withered on the vine, the BBC clearly sees its chance. "As a publicly funded body with a steady income, now is the right time for us to be pushing forward, but that will change as the economic cycle turns," says Kimber. Like most others in the industry, Kimber believes that simply streaming stations on the web is very much the thin end of the wedge when it comes to possibilities for online radio. The BBC's radio-on-demand service and others like it are far more likely to be of interest to audiences than the simple replaying, at worse quality, of shows that they can hear elsewhere. Likewise, niche stations such as those broadcast by Capital FM from its kikido.com website and brand extensions such as NME Radio on the NME.com site work because they provide exclusive, web-only service. And stations that are unavailable to most - the BBC's new digital services, such as 6 Music, and Capital Radio's London-only XFM - can benefit greatly from web coverage. Encouragingly for these services, online radio listening is increasing dramatically. More than one in six of the population aged 15 or over tuned in to an online radio service at least once between January and March, according to Rajar, the body that monitors radio listening figures. And with broadband take-up finally reaching meaningful levels, online radio listening is becoming a more mainstream activity and thus perceived less as a "geeky" pastime for web addicts only. When you can have instant high-speed access to the web all day, the idea of using it to listen to the radio while doing other things is a less alien concept. For Kimber, it's all about getting people hooked and, once the fear factor is removed, he believes that the content will speak for itself. "As the BBC we have a job to do in terms of explaining how to download the player and so on. I feel a responsibility for getting people to dabble in audio. If people think something's good enough, they'll make the effort. "This could fundamentally change the way that people listen to radio, and a lot of people have yet to catch on to that." From dainisb@... Wed Jun 19 16:30:37 2002 From: dainisb@... (dainisb@...) Date: Wed, 19 Jun 2002 17:30:37 +0300 Subject: Jakob In-Reply-To: <1024475570.268.55079.m12@yahoogroups.com> Message-ID: <3D10BFBD.24566.193E697@localhost> Today I got "Subsets of Sets" CD by Jakob (New Zealand), which sounds very great. Yes, similar to Mogwai but they have another type of sound, when I listened CD with headphones. All 12 tracks (55:13) on their album are instrumental and have a good music. Dainis http://gd.times.lv/ From les_miller@... Wed Jun 19 16:41:58 2002 From: les_miller@... (Les Miller) Date: Wed, 19 Jun 2002 15:41:58 +0100 Subject: [peel] Jakob Message-ID: <80256BDD.00505D5E.00@...> Where did you order it from (and do they deliver to the UK)? dainisb@... on 06/19/2002 03:30:37 PM Please respond to peel@yahoogroups.com Sent by: dainisb@... To: peel@yahoogroups.com cc: Subject: [peel] Jakob Today I got "Subsets of Sets" CD by Jakob (New Zealand), which sounds very great. Yes, similar to Mogwai but they have another type of sound, when I listened CD with headphones. All 12 tracks (55:13) on their album are instrumental and have a good music. Dainis http://gd.times.lv/ From gez@... Wed Jun 19 21:27:05 2002 From: gez@... (Gez) Date: Wed, 19 Jun 2002 20:27:05 +0100 Subject: [peel] Peel Doing A Webchat Wednesday Night References: <4.3.2.7.2.20020618195707.00c4ea10@...> Message-ID: <058901c217c7$4c2d6790$b8fa403e@gpw> From: "Martin Wheatley" > Since I get the digest someone's probably already posted this but in case not > According to John's web page http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1/alt/johnpeel/ > he's doing a webchat tomorrow night Anyone had any joy with this? The links on the website direct you to chatroom #radio1, which until 8pm was the Chris Moyles free-for-all. Gez. From scooke@... Wed Jun 19 21:43:31 2002 From: scooke@... (Stefan Cooke) Date: Wed, 19 Jun 2002 19:43:31 +0000 (UTC) Subject: [peel] Peel Doing A Webchat Wednesday Night In-Reply-To: <058901c217c7$4c2d6790$b8fa403e@gpw> Message-ID: On Wed, 19 Jun 2002, Gez wrote: > From: "Martin Wheatley" > > Anyone had any joy with this? The links on the website direct you to > chatroom #radio1, which until 8pm was the Chris Moyles free-for-all. > > Gez. Fallnet invasion! It works fine for me - just click on one of the links under the "LISTEN AGAIN" heading and a new window pops up ("BBC Radio Player: Radio on Demand") - after it's finished buffering Peel's show starts. For me anyway. Stefan From gez@... Wed Jun 19 21:48:21 2002 From: gez@... (Gez) Date: Wed, 19 Jun 2002 20:48:21 +0100 Subject: [peel] Peel Doing A Webchat Wednesday Night References: Message-ID: <059301c217ca$444fd370$b8fa403e@gpw> From: "Stefan Cooke" > It works fine for me - just click on one of the links under > the "LISTEN AGAIN" heading and a new window pops up ("BBC > Radio Player: Radio on Demand") - after it's finished > buffering Peel's show starts. For me anyway. No, not the recorded shows, I mean tonight's live webchat; the links all point to http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1/chat/alt/livechat.shtml but nothing's happening... Gez. From scooke@... Wed Jun 19 21:54:40 2002 From: scooke@... (Stefan Cooke) Date: Wed, 19 Jun 2002 19:54:40 +0000 (UTC) Subject: [peel] Peel Doing A Webchat Wednesday Night In-Reply-To: <059301c217ca$444fd370$b8fa403e@gpw> Message-ID: On Wed, 19 Jun 2002, Gez wrote: > From: "Stefan Cooke" > > > > It works fine for me - just click on one of the links under > > the "LISTEN AGAIN" heading and a new window pops up ("BBC > > Radio Player: Radio on Demand") - after it's finished > > buffering Peel's show starts. For me anyway. > > > No, not the recorded shows, I mean tonight's live webchat; the links all > point to > > http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1/chat/alt/livechat.shtml > > but nothing's happening... > I think you want the #r1event chat room - John's in there. Stefan From dainisb@... Thu Jun 20 17:16:43 2002 From: dainisb@... (dainisb@...) Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 18:16:43 +0300 Subject: Jakob In-Reply-To: <1024560209.232.4883.m12@yahoogroups.com> Message-ID: <3D121C0B.12084.1302896@localhost> I did an interview with Jeff Boyle of Jakob and got the CD as a promo from their label. Ask "Midium Records" who is their distributor in the UK. Dainis From stardust822@... Wed Jun 26 09:03:58 2002 From: stardust822@... (stardust822) Date: Wed, 26 Jun 2002 07:03:58 -0000 Subject: Read This For More Cash $$$$$ Message-ID: I heard about this and I thought you guys would like to know about it as well. I found this on a bulletin board and decided to try it . Alittle while back, I was browsing through newsgroups, just like you are now, and came across an article similar to this that said you could make thousands of dollars within weeks with only an initial investment of $6.00! So I thought, "Yeah right, this must be a scam", but like most of us, I was curious, so I kept reading. Anyway, it said that you send $1.00 to each of the 6 names and address stated in the article. You then place your own name and address in the bottom of the list at #6. Post the article (with your name in the #6 spot) in at least 200 newsgroups. (There are thousands). No catch, that was it. So after thinking it over, and talking to a few people first, I thought about trying it. I figured: "what have I got to lose except 6 stamps and $6.00, right?" Then I invested the measly $6.00. Well GUESS WHAT!? Within 7 days, I started getting money in the mail! I was shocked! I figured it would end soon, but the money just kept coming in. In my first week, I made about $25.00. By the end of the second week I had made a total of over $1,000.00! In the third week I had over $10,000.00 and it's still growing. This is now my fourth week and I have made a total of just over $42,000.00 and it's still coming in rapidly. It's certainly worth $6.00, and 6 stamps, I have spent more than that on lunch!! Let me tell you how this works and most importantly, WHY it works... Also, make sure you print a copy of this article NOW, so you can get the information off of it as you need it. I promise you that if you follow the directions exactly, that you will start making more money than you thought possible by doing something so easy! Suggestion: READ THIS ENTIRE MESSAGE CAREFULLY!! Print it out or download it. Follow the simple directions and watch the money come in! It's easy. It's legal. And, your investment is only $6.00 (Plus postage) IMPORTANT: This is not a rip-off; it is not indecent; it is not illegal; and, it's 99% risk- free. Best of all-- it really works! If all of the following instructions are adhered to, you will receive extraordinary dividends. PLEASE NOTE: Please follow these directions EXACTLY, and $50,000 or more can be yours in 20 to 60 days. This program remains successful because of the honesty and integrity of the participants. PLEASE CONTINUE IN ITS SUCCESS BY CAREFULLY ADHERING TO THE INSTRUCTIONS. You will now become part of the Mail Order business. In this business your product is not solid and tangible, it's a service. You are in the business of developing Mailing Lists. Many large corporations are happy to pay big bucks for quality lists. However, the money made from the mailing lists is secondary to the income which is made from people like you and me asking to be included in that list. Here are the 4 easy steps to success: STEP 1: Get 6 separate pieces of paper and write the following on each piece of paper "PLEASE PUT ME ON YOUR MAILING LIST." Now get 6 US $1.00 bills and place ONE inside EACH of the 6 pieces of paper so the bill will not be seen through the envelope (to prevent thievery). Next, place one paper in each of the 6 envelopes and seal them. You should now have 6 sealed envelopes, each with a piece of paper stating the above phrase, your name and address, and a $1.00 bill. What you are doing is creating a service. THIS IS ABSOLUTELY LEGAL! You are requesting a legitimate service and you are paying for it! Like most of us I was a little skeptical and a little worried about the legal aspects of it all. So I checked it out with the U.S. Post Office (1- 800-725-2161) and they confirmed that it is indeed legal. Mail the 6 envelopes to the following addresses: #1) Baby Doll Productions 12703 Francis Lane Missouri City, TX 77489 #2) James Myers 1122 Daisy St., Darlington, SC 29532 #3) Alex Lavoie 1200 N. 45th Drive, Show Low, AZ 85901 #4) Jacop Reddick, P.O. Box 425, Adel, GA. 31620 #5) Rebekah Ross, 2765 Eastport Circle, Conway, AR 72034 #6) Carisa Lee, 6605 Grand Canyon Drive, Rocklin, CA 95765 STEP 2: Now take the #1 name off the list that you see above, move the other names up (6 becomes 5, 5 becomes 4, etc...) and add YOUR name as #6 on the list. STEP 3: Change anything you need to, but try to keep this article as close to original as possible. Now, post your amended article to at least 200 newsgroups. (I think there are close to 24,000 groups) All you need is 200, but remember, the more you post, the more money you make! You won't get very much unless you post like crazy. :) This is perfectly legal! If you have any doubts, refer to Title 18 Sec. 1302 & 1341 of the Postal lottery laws. Keep a copy of these steps for yourself and, whenever you need money, you can use it again, and again. PLEASE REMEMBER that this program remains successful because of the honesty and integrity of the participants and by their carefully adhering to the directions. Look at it this way: if you are of integrity and honesty, the program will continue and the money that so many others have received will come your way. NOTE: You may want to retain every name and address sent to you, either on a computer or hard copy and keep the notes people send you. This VERIFIES that you are truly providing a service. (Also, it might be a good idea to wrap the $1 bill in dark paper to reduce the risk of mail theft.) So, as each post is downloaded and the directions carefully followed, six members will be reimbursed for their participation as a List Developer with one dollar each. Your name will move up the list geometrically so that when your name reaches the #1 position you will be receiving thousands of dollars in CASH!!! What an opportunity for only $6.00 - $1.00 for each of the first six people listed above. Send it now, add your own name to the list and you're in business! ---DIRECTIONS ----- FOR HOW TO POST TO NEWSGROUPS------- ----- Step 1) You do not need to re-type this entire letter to do your own posting. Simply put your cursor at the beginning of this letter and drag your cursor to the bottom of this document, and select 'copy' from the edit menu. This will copy the entire letter into the computer's memory. Step 2) Open a blank 'notepad' file and place your cursor at the top of the blank page. From the 'edit' menu select 'paste'. This will paste a copy of the letter into notepad so that you can add your name to the list. Step 3) Save your new notepad file as a .txt file. If you want to do your postings in different settings, you'll always have this file to go back to. Step 4) Use Netscape or Internet Explorer and try searching for various newsgroups (on-line forums, message boards, chat sites, discussions.) Step 5) Visit these message boards and post this article as a new message by highlighting the text of this letter and selecting paste from the edit menu. Fill in the Subject, this will be the header that everyone sees as they scroll through the list of postings in a particular group, click the post message button. You're done with your first one! Congratulations!!! THAT'S IT! All you have to do is jump to different newsgroups and post away, after you get the hang of it, it will take about 30 seconds for each newsgroup! **REMEMBER, THE MORE NEWSGROUPS YOU POST IN, THE MORE MONEY YOU WILL MAKE! BUT YOU HAVE TO POST A MINIMUM OF 200** That's it! You will begin receiving money from around the world within days! You may eventually want to rent a P.O.Box due to the large amount of mail you will receive. If you wish to stay anonymous, you can invent a name to use, as long as the postman will deliver it. **JUST MAKE SURE ALL THE ADDRESSES ARE CORRECT.** Now, each of the 5 persons who just sent me $1.00 make the MINIMUM 200 postings, each with my name at #5 and only 5 persons respond to each of the original 5, that is another $25.00 for me, now those 25 each make 200 MINIMUM posts with my name at #4 and only 5 replies each, I will bring in an additional $125.00! Now, those 125 persons turn around and post the MINIMUM 200 with my name at #3 and only receive 5 replies each, I will make an additional $625.00! OK, now here is the fun part, each of those 625 persons post a MINIMUM 200 letters with my name at #2 and they each only receive 5 replies, that just made me $3,125.00!!! Those 3,125 persons will all deliver this message to 200 newsgroups with my name at #1 and if still 5 persons per 200 newsgroups react I will receive $15,625,00! With an original investment of only $6.00! AMAZING! When your name is no longer on the list, you just take the latest posting in the newsgroups, and send out another $6.00 to names on the list, putting your name at number 6 again. And start posting again. The thing to remember is: do you realize that thousands of people all over the world are joining the internet and reading these articles everyday?, JUST LIKE YOU are now!! So, can you afford $6.00 and see if it really works?? I think so... People have said, "what if the plan is played out and no one sends you the money? So what! What are the chances of that happening when there are tons of new honest users and new honest people who are joining the internet and newsgroups everyday and are willing to give it a try? Estimates are at 20,000 to 50,000 new users, every day, with thousands of those joining the actual internet. Remember, play FAIRLY and HONESTLY and this will really work. WHAT GOES AROUND, COMES AROUND!!! GOD BLESS! From troche@... Sun Jun 30 04:26:42 2002 From: troche@... (Tom Roche) Date: Sat, 29 Jun 2002 22:26:42 -0400 Subject: "John Peel's Archive Things" Message-ID: very strange Peel-related item on E-bay this week. http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=889353817 What are we to make of it? Is it one of a series? tr From festive50@... Sun Jun 30 04:42:11 2002 From: festive50@... (Phil Edwards) Date: Sun, 30 Jun 2002 03:42:11 +0100 Subject: [peel] "John Peel's Archive Things" In-Reply-To: Message-ID: -----Original Message----- From: Tom Roche [mailto:troche@...] Sent: 30 June 2002 03:27 To: peel@yahoogroups.com Subject: [peel] "John Peel's Archive Things" very strange Peel-related item on E-bay this week. http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=889353817 What are we to make of it? Is it one of a series? Peely made reference to this recording in the the last couple of months and he played one of the tracks from it (Zulu miners literally stomping about in wellington boots - this is what the Captain Beefheart track "Floppy Boot Stomp" is derived from. He actually played the 2 tracks back to back. I've actually got this show on tape. If youre interested, I'll dig it out and see what he says about it. Phil E. --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.330 / Virus Database: 184 - Release Date: 28/02/2002 From dainisb@... Sun Jun 30 12:44:45 2002 From: dainisb@... (dainisb@...) Date: Sun, 30 Jun 2002 13:44:45 +0300 Subject: Peel in the USA Message-ID: <3D1F0B4D.20241.6477CC@localhost> Date sent: Sat, 29 Jun 2002 21:58:43 -0700 From: David Cotner To: "A. I." Subject: Turnament - November 8-9, 2002. Hello unto you. This is the preliminary schedule for Turnament, the turntablist festival that I'm producing and arranging at Royce Hall, UCLA, November 8 and 9, 2002, in association with the UCLA Performing Arts Department. Should you have any questions about Turnament, its installations or attendant exhibition "Revolutions", please don't hesitate to ask. Further bulletins as events warrant. Thoroughly, David Cotner, \\\ http://www.turnament.com/ WILL THEY TURN YOU ON? WILL THEY TURN ON YOU? TURNAMENT A FESTIVAL OF TURNTABLISM Royce Hall, UCLA, November 8 – 9, 2002 Exposing the Secrets of People Whose Business is Revolution! WHAT: Turnament: part skratch DJs, part modern art, part hip and / or hop – the common thread? Visionary musicians using turntables and records as instruments in ways you’d never dream possible. We won’t sell you the whole seat – you’ll only need...the edge! WHO: We are proud to announce the partial lineup of performers for Friday, November 8th ? amk – Los Angeles ? The Haters – San Francisco ? Kid Koala – Montreal ? Kool Herc – New York City ? Dummy Run – Brighton / Paris ? Boyd Rice – Denver ? Extended Organ – Los Angeles ? DJ Faust & Shortee – Atlanta ? Your DJs are Baseck & Daedelus (Los Angeles) and L?K?O (Tokyo). and Saturday, November 9th. More to be announced in the coming weeks! ? DJ Smallcock – Sydney ? Grandmixer DXT – New York City ? Ace & Duce – Los Angeles ? KutMasta Kurt – Los Angeles ? John Oswald – Toronto ? A. Stray & DJ Nightmare – Cambridge, England ? GrandWizzard Theodore – New York City ? Project Dark – London ? Your DJs are Skam (Manchester) and John Peel (London – first-ever U.S. festival appearance). Turntable installations, and others, from November 8th through November 9th, by ? DJ I, Robot – Cambridge, Massachusetts ? Evil Moisture – Paris ? Philip Jeck – Liverpool ? Pure – Vienna ? VinylVideo – Vienna ? David Woodard – Los Angeles – exposition of the Brion Gysin Dreamachine WHEN: Friday, November 8th, 2002, and Saturday, November 9th, 2002. Doors open at 7 PM. Live action at 8 PM. WHERE: Royce Hall, on the University of California at Los Angeles campus in Westwood. Visit http://www.cfpa.ucla.edu/event_calendar/events_detail.cfm?id_event=1695526 6 or http://www.turnament.com/ for full information. Tickets are $50 per evening, $20 for UCLA students. ABOUT THE ARTISTS ? amk – Master of the flexidisc record collage and montage. Flexidiscs are cut up, re-assembled and played on old record players at different speeds. Beyond belief! ? The Haters – G.X. Jupitter-Larsen et al, exploring entropy as a neutral force of nature. Their first release, "The Haters", involved the recommended scratching of a blank LP in order to play it; recent work includes the stapling of LPs with amplified staple-guns. ? Kid Koala – Eric San, Montreal's finest, in an action showcasing the latest ninja tunes from his arsenal of scratch mastery that tamed the wild beat. ? A. Stray & DJ Nightmare – The London Musicians' Collective contingent, Alistair Stray and Robert Johnson pioneered "Deconstructed Cinema" in the 1990s. Their DJ'd cinema screenings made chillout rooms of the time even more icebox than usual. ? Kool Herc – Clive Campbell, the founding father of modern hip-hop DJing, emigrated from Kingston, Jamaica in 1967 to bring the beats and breaks to Brooklyn and beyond. ? Dummy Run – Nick Birmingham and Andrew Sharpley, self-professed "cartoon rhythm duo", wield drum'n'bass beats and saucy, sassy samples that more closely approximate the mind of mad (but not angry) genius than any other in their weight class. ? Boyd Rice – Via the nom de guerre Non, this founding father of industrial music released the "Knife Ladder / Mode of Infection" in 1977 with multiple holes in its centre and various locked grooves to create the longest-playing record of all time. ? Extended Organ – Paul McCarthy, Fredrik Nilsen, Joe Potts and Tom Recchion. From the Los Angeles Free Music Society to modern art and beyond. Expect drones, a chopped Optigan and an atmosphere hanging like a heavy coat of inspiration. ? DJ Faust & Shortee – Modern lovers Faust and Shortee pursued a whirlwind romance with the passion of a perfect pop single and all the love it implies. They'll be performing old school hip-hop and rare breaks with a special showcase of tricks all on 4 turntables. ? Baseck & Daedelus – Los Angeles' ambassadors of breakcore and the syncopated slaughter of a million buzz-bombing robotic bees in 17/32. In the foyer, to aid digestion. ? L?K?O – Tokyo's Ko Mitsugi arrives with his own brand of DJing, utilising a laptop to fuse PC plug-in effects with scratching. Omedeto, Mitsugi-san! Also in the foyer. ? DJ Smallcock – Lucas Abela, traveling all the way from Sydney, Australia, performs a short, improvised physical blurt of sound with a sawing machine engine (top speed: 2580 rpm) onto which are bolted a series of 7", 10", and 12" records. It's played with various implements – this time, it's the Elm St. Freddy-type glove with styli attached to each finger. Look out! ? Grandmixer DXT – Formerly known as GrandMixer D.ST, DXT was an original Zulu Nation DJ in the South Bronx during the late 1970s and early 1980s. He performed solo scratches on Herbie Hancock's hit instrumental "Rockit" in 1984. That performance, seen by millions on The Grammy Awards, inspired a whole generation of DJs. ? Ace & Duce – Dennis Duck, Ace Farren Ford, Tom Recchion, Richard Snyder and the elusive Duce. The founders of the Los Angeles Free Music Society ride again, out of nowhere and straight back again, for only the second time in a quarter-century. ? KutMasta Kurt – Producer of records by DJ Spooky, Dilated Peoples, and Kool Keith, his is the fertile hand behind countless remixes and singles in your collection. ? John Oswald – Tireless examiner of art and commerce and a damned good sax player, too. In 1990, Oswald's notorious recording "Plunderphonic" was destroyed by those in the Recording Industry representing Michael Jackson because of massive sample attacks on a man who has since become the visual equivalent of an Oswald piece. ? GrandWizzard Theodore – Theodore Livingston, hassled by his mother as he DJs at home in the summer of 1975, balances the wheels of steel throughout this momentary storm and thereby creates the "scratch". Parents just don't understand! ? Project Dark – Producers of large-scale live video / music shows since 1995. A catalogue of custom sculpted 7" singles is used as a primary medium for generating a unique range of sounds and images. Live video triggering supplies further live sound and video sources allowing additional footage (slow motion exploding decks, a 10,000-volt spark-generating record player) to be mixed with live images. The latest show, "Gramophone De Luxe" incorporates three gramophone DJs alongside giant video projections generated by robotic surveillance cameras and drum-triggered video. ? Skam – Rob Hall and Mike Williamson, direct from Manchester with painfully obscure blasts of rhythm and melody to the foyer and / or yr ass. Consult your physician. ? John Peel – First-ever U.S. DJ appearance of BBC Radio 1's 40-year+ strong living legend, modest enough even to argue about the characterisation “living”. He can play whatever he likes. Please don’t expect him to "scratch" – you will be turned away! Turntable installations, and others, from November 8th through November 9th, by ? DJ I, Robot – Chris Csikszentmihályi and assistants, bringing the DJ I, Robot cybernetic system that plays records at 800 rpm and otherwise freaks Technics™. ? Evil Moisture – British expatriate, inventor of the amplified golf ball and the developer of the first Fisher-Price™ record player ever to spin a load of cream cheese. ? Philip Jeck – Working with old records and record players salvaged from junk shops, turning them to his own purposes, he really does play them as musical instruments, creating an intensely personal language that evolves with each added part of a record. ? Pure – Part of Austria's Mego Records braintrust, Peter Votava uses run-out grooves – the end of vinyl – to create vast soundscapes spiraling out the very heart of a record. ? VinylVideo – Gebhard Sengmüller and Martin Diamant present VinylVideo™, a new development in the history of audio-visual media. VinylVideo™ makes possible the storage of video (moving image plus sound) on analog LP records. In its combination of analog and digital, VinylVideo™ is a relic of fake media archeology; at the same time, VinylVideo™ is a vision of new live video mixing possibilities. ? David Woodard – Lecture and exposition of the Brion Gysin Dreamachine, the first device in history to be looked at with eyes closed. The Dreamachine consists of a perforated cardboard cylinder attached to a turntable, in the middle of which hangs a 100-watt light bulb. When the machine is turned on, the cylinder spins at 78 RPM. One sits in front of the cylinder with eyes shut, and the light reflects through the perforations in the spinning cylinder onto one's eyelids. The experience begins with 15 to 20 minutes of what visually approximates a perpetually metamorphosing Persian rug. As the color spectrum broadens, the symmetrical patterns grow increasingly intricate... # # #