In a message dated 02/15/2008 3:47:41 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< There is a wonderful  public domain choral music library on the Internet, 
mostly for long dead  composers, but also for many living ones who, like 
myself, just want to  get our music out there and available to people.  I've 
created a page and  uploaded what I have thus far been able to typeset:  
http://www.cpdl.org/wiki/index.php/Thurlow_Weed    Anyone interested is welcome 
to download and print music for performance  use -- it's free music!  I seem to 
recall we've got not only musicians in  our group, but a few clergy as well.    
Thurlow Weed  Lancaster, Ohio >>

Thanks Thurlow....how interesting!  As we have been having fun with surveys 
lately, your post has made me wonder about how many musicians we have amongst 
us.  As a musician myself, I see many parallels between lace and music (often 
pointing out when demonstrating that lace prickings and diagrams are similar in 
many ways to musical notation)....but then I seem to be able to draw 
parallels between lacemaking and almost anything!   

If you would like to participate in the survey, please email me privately 
what instrument(s) (including voice) you play and where you live and I will 
tally 
the results and post later to the list.  (Way back in 1969, I was the first 
saxophone major at Peabody Conservatory of Music--now part of Johns Hopkins 
University--in Baltimore, Maryland, USA) 

Vicki Bradford
Silver Spring, Maryland, USA  

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