-- Topica Digest --
        
        RE: those nuggets albums
        By [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        
        RE: those nuggets albums
        By [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        
        RE: those nuggets albums
        By [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        
        RE: those nuggets albums
        By [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        
        RE: those books
        By [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        
        RE: those nuggets albums
        By [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        
        Reminder - The Congregation - This Saturday - Philadelphia
        By [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        
        RE: those books
        By [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        
        RE: those nuggets albums
        By [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        
        RE: those nuggets albums
        By [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        
        RE: those nuggets albums
        By [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        
        RE: those books  
        By [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        
        RE: those books
        By [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        
        RE: those nuggets albums
        By [EMAIL PROTECTED]

------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Fri, 16 Aug 2002 04:01:38 -0700 (PDT)
From: Arriva Dorellik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: those nuggets albums


Currently listening to that Girls Don't Come comp
(a.k.a. Here Come the Girls, Vol. 10), delighted to
have at hand, say, Julie Grant's "Stop," which I'd
known only via a French recording by the very
wonderful Pussy Cat.  That Cellarful of Motown
rarities comp earlier.  Hit and miss, perhaps, but the
hits hit hard enough, so ...

So do keep in mind that "Northern Soul" is no more (or
less) "mod" than anything else likely to come up here,
esp. as it emerged as a genre of sorts after the
(first) decline/demise of mod.  But there's no point
to insisting on any sort of "purism" here, given the
vicissitudes of "mod," modern jazz giving way to soul
and R&B picking up beat/bluebeat/freakbeat along the
way, and so forth ...

That Graham Lentz book, The Influential Factor,
despite some of its self-published, er, "charms,"
seems nonetheless an eminently useful account of the
ever-changing moods of mod.  See also, for another
recent account, Paolo Hewitt's "oral history," The
Soul Stylists ...

In the meantime, make mine ye-ye, Motown, girlgroup,
beat, ska, freakbeat (a particularly post hoc
category, by the way, of recent coinage), Tropicalia,
yr better vintage sdtks., boogaloo, bossa nova,
working that Japanese Group Sounds thing lately,
trying to catch up on Stax/Volt/Atlantic, whatever,
and that's only the sixties, so ...

--- AndyBB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>  
> When a woman is tired of northern Soul she is tired
> of life. For there is bla bla bla ...
> 
> Why do you need to listen to anything else? Nothing
> else comes close and every kind of voice, tempo and
> emotion are catered for....

Anxiety?  Paranoia?  Utter desolation?  Let me know ...

__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
HotJobs - Search Thousands of New Jobs
http://www.hotjobs.com





------------------------------

Date: Fri, 16 Aug 2002 12:39:50 +0100
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: those nuggets albums


Thanks!
Can you recommend any more books I can read, just to get a handle on this
whole 'Mod' thing?
I don't think I was arguing that Northern Soul is more "Mod" than any other
form of music (although I do seem to be spending a lot of time being accused
of saying that these days).

And what do I care for the ever-changing moods of Mod? I only care about the
ever-changing moods of this mod in particular.

Your list of music tastes suggests that you're 'into the sixties' rather
than Mod though, no?

Andy


-----Original Message-----
From: Arriva Dorellik [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 16 August 2002 12:02
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: those nuggets albums


Currently listening to that Girls Don't Come comp
(a.k.a. Here Come the Girls, Vol. 10), delighted to
have at hand, say, Julie Grant's "Stop," which I'd
known only via a French recording by the very
wonderful Pussy Cat.  That Cellarful of Motown
rarities comp earlier.  Hit and miss, perhaps, but the
hits hit hard enough, so ...

So do keep in mind that "Northern Soul" is no more (or
less) "mod" than anything else likely to come up here,
esp. as it emerged as a genre of sorts after the
(first) decline/demise of mod.  But there's no point
to insisting on any sort of "purism" here, given the
vicissitudes of "mod," modern jazz giving way to soul
and R&B picking up beat/bluebeat/freakbeat along the
way, and so forth ...

That Graham Lentz book, The Influential Factor,
despite some of its self-published, er, "charms,"
seems nonetheless an eminently useful account of the
ever-changing moods of mod.  See also, for another
recent account, Paolo Hewitt's "oral history," The
Soul Stylists ...

In the meantime, make mine ye-ye, Motown, girlgroup,
beat, ska, freakbeat (a particularly post hoc
category, by the way, of recent coinage), Tropicalia,
yr better vintage sdtks., boogaloo, bossa nova,
working that Japanese Group Sounds thing lately,
trying to catch up on Stax/Volt/Atlantic, whatever,
and that's only the sixties, so ...

--- AndyBB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>  
> When a woman is tired of northern Soul she is tired
> of life. For there is bla bla bla ...
> 
> Why do you need to listen to anything else? Nothing
> else comes close and every kind of voice, tempo and
> emotion are catered for....

Anxiety?  Paranoia?  Utter desolation?  Let me know ...

__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
HotJobs - Search Thousands of New Jobs
http://www.hotjobs.com





------------------------------

Date: Fri, 16 Aug 2002 07:36:47 -0700 (PDT)
From: Arriva Dorellik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: those nuggets albums


The short list includes ...

Barnes, Richard.  Mods!
Barnes, Richard.  The Who: Maximum R&B
Cohen, Stanley.  Folk Devils and Moral Panics.
Cohn, Nik.  Awopbopaloobop Alopbamboom.
Hall and Jefferson, eds.  Resistance Through Rituals.
Hebdige, Dick.  Hiding in the Light.
Hebdige, Dick.  "The Style of the Mods."
Hewitt, Paolo, ed.  The Sharper Word: A Mod Reader.
Hewitt, Paolo, ed.  The Soul Stylists.
Lentz, Graham.  The Influential Factor.  
Rawlings, Terry.  The Story of Mod.
Wolfe, Tom.  "The Noonday Underground"

Barnes, Lentz, Rawlings and that Sharper Word reader
might be particularly good starting points.  And see
as well any number of biographies (The Who, Small
Faces, The Kinks, The Jam, et al.) and/or sociologies
(e.g., Jonathon Green's All Dressed Up) ...

Andrew Loog Oldham's Stoned and Simon Napier-Bell's
You Don't Have to Say You Love Me are interesting and
eminently entertaining memoirs of the era, and see
perhaps as well Howard Baker's modsploitation novel,
Sawdust Caesars ...

On NS, see, e.g., ...

Brewster and Broughton.  Last Night a DJ Saved My
Life.
Nowell, David.  Too Darn Soulful.
Roberts, Kev.  The Northern Soul Top 500.
Winstanley and Nowell.  Soul Survivors.

And, yes, I've been caught red-handed doing actual
hardcore academic research.  It's a fair cop ...

Quality will vary, of course, when it comes to pop
cultural literature, and some of the above might be
too acdemic for some, some might be too fannish for
others, but ...

But my comments on the vicissitudes of mod and NS (and
so forth) were intended to point out that there's no
point to being a purist, 'cos there was never a point
at which any of it was pure, was allowed to remain as
such.  Perpetual r/evolution and appropriation, right
on down to the length of one's side vents.  Perhaps
one might freeze one's aesthetic, one's collection, 
at some arbitrary point in the past, but ... but mod,
like Northern Soul, was/is a passion for the new, even
if it is the new old, no?  Hence its "modernism" ...

-- AndyBB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks!
> Can you recommend any more books I can read, just to
> get a handle on this whole 'Mod' thing?  I don't
> think I was arguing that Northern Soul is more "Mod"
> than any other form of music (although I do seem to
> be spending a lot of time being accused of saying
> that these days).
> 
> And what do I care for the ever-changing moods of
> Mod? I only care about the ever-changing moods of
> this mod in particular.

Well, there you go, then.  That seems the spirit, at
any rate.  Breeding your own new dig.  Though it is
rewarding to get a dancefloor off and running ...

> Your list of music tastes suggests that you're 'into
> the sixties' rather than Mod though, no?

No purist I (and rememeber that the "original" mods
had long since moved on by the time Quadrophenia-style
modism had set in).  The classically mod is my focus,
but I'm open to, say, French and Italian and Japanese
New Wave cinema (not to mention their soundtracks and
clothes and pop music), or, more recently, films and
bands attuned to the style (St. Etienne, or CQ) ...

I've already been unsurprised to find, say, Northern
and/or neo-soul fans here, so ...

Mod, of course, was/is itself a hybrid affair: Italian
suits and scooters, French film, haircuts and
literature (not to mention "Blues"), American soul and
R&B, Jamaican bluebeat, all ultimately ironically to
be wrapped in the Union Jack and presented as somehow
quintessentially British (!).  My interest is
exploring and expanding and perhaps even exploding the
canon, is all.  Breeding my own new dig.  Mod to
postmod, perhaps ...

But see what I mean?  Exchange of information.  As
always, further recommendations and insightful
(constructive, deconstructive, whatever) criticism not
only appreciated, but encouraged ...

__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
HotJobs - Search Thousands of New Jobs
http://www.hotjobs.com





------------------------------

Date: Fri, 16 Aug 2002 18:16:08 +0200
From: "bi polarbear" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: those nuggets albums


So, about those nuggets albums everybodys "obviously" so concerned 
about......heh.
Why do people waste time with taking the piss? Well, it's because lists for 
the most part can be pretty boring. Sometimes they are legitimatly helpful 
though too.....and this is not one of those times so,...Geddes is a 
fuckerpants:) For some reason I picture you to look like Rick Moranis with a 
thick thesarus attached to your waistline at all times.

Your turn...

>From: AndyBB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: RE: those nuggets albums
>Date: Fri, 16 Aug 2002 12:39:50 +0100
>
>Thanks!
>Can you recommend any more books I can read, just to get a handle on this
>whole 'Mod' thing?
>I don't think I was arguing that Northern Soul is more "Mod" than any other
>form of music (although I do seem to be spending a lot of time being 
>accused
>of saying that these days).
>
>And what do I care for the ever-changing moods of Mod? I only care about 
>the
>ever-changing moods of this mod in particular.
>
>Your list of music tastes suggests that you're 'into the sixties' rather
>than Mod though, no?
>
>Andy
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Arriva Dorellik [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: 16 August 2002 12:02
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: RE: those nuggets albums
>
>
>Currently listening to that Girls Don't Come comp
>(a.k.a. Here Come the Girls, Vol. 10), delighted to
>have at hand, say, Julie Grant's "Stop," which I'd
>known only via a French recording by the very
>wonderful Pussy Cat.  That Cellarful of Motown
>rarities comp earlier.  Hit and miss, perhaps, but the
>hits hit hard enough, so ...
>
>So do keep in mind that "Northern Soul" is no more (or
>less) "mod" than anything else likely to come up here,
>esp. as it emerged as a genre of sorts after the
>(first) decline/demise of mod.  But there's no point
>to insisting on any sort of "purism" here, given the
>vicissitudes of "mod," modern jazz giving way to soul
>and R&B picking up beat/bluebeat/freakbeat along the
>way, and so forth ...
>
>That Graham Lentz book, The Influential Factor,
>despite some of its self-published, er, "charms,"
>seems nonetheless an eminently useful account of the
>ever-changing moods of mod.  See also, for another
>recent account, Paolo Hewitt's "oral history," The
>Soul Stylists ...
>
>In the meantime, make mine ye-ye, Motown, girlgroup,
>beat, ska, freakbeat (a particularly post hoc
>category, by the way, of recent coinage), Tropicalia,
>yr better vintage sdtks., boogaloo, bossa nova,
>working that Japanese Group Sounds thing lately,
>trying to catch up on Stax/Volt/Atlantic, whatever,
>and that's only the sixties, so ...
>
>--- AndyBB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>wrote:
> >
> > When a woman is tired of northern Soul she is tired
> > of life. For there is bla bla bla ...
> >
> > Why do you need to listen to anything else? Nothing
> > else comes close and every kind of voice, tempo and
> > emotion are catered for....
>
>Anxiety?  Paranoia?  Utter desolation?  Let me know ...
>
>__________________________________________________
>Do You Yahoo!?
>HotJobs - Search Thousands of New Jobs
>http://www.hotjobs.com
>
>




_________________________________________________________________
MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos: 
http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx





------------------------------

Date: Fri, 16 Aug 2002 17:15:58 +0000
From:  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: those books


Uh, yeah.  I think he was being sarcastic about the books.
But hey, it gave you another opportunity to expound.  Gives
the newbies a starting point, and makes you feel ever so clever.

Dan

Arriva Dorellik wrote:
> The short list includes ...
> 
> Barnes, Richard.  Mods!
> Barnes, Richard.  The Who: Maximum R&B
> Cohen, Stanley.  Folk Devils and Moral Panics.
> Cohn, Nik.  Awopbopaloobop Alopbamboom.
> Hall and Jefferson, eds.  Resistance Through Rituals.
> Hebdige, Dick.  Hiding in the Light.
> Hebdige, Dick.  "The Style of the Mods."
> Hewitt, Paolo, ed.  The Sharper Word: A Mod Reader.
> Hewitt, Paolo, ed.  The Soul Stylists.
> Lentz, Graham.  The Influential Factor.  
> Rawlings, Terry.  The Story of Mod.
> Wolfe, Tom.  "The Noonday Underground"
> 
> Barnes, Lentz, Rawlings and that Sharper Word reader
> might be particularly good starting points.  And see
> as well any number of biographies (The Who, Small
> Faces, The Kinks, The Jam, et al.) and/or sociologies
> (e.g., Jonathon Green's All Dressed Up) ...
> 
> Andrew Loog Oldham's Stoned and Simon Napier-Bell's
> You Don't Have to Say You Love Me are interesting and
> eminently entertaining memoirs of the era, and see
> perhaps as well Howard Baker's modsploitation novel,
> Sawdust Caesars ...
> 
> On NS, see, e.g., ...
> 
> Brewster and Broughton.  Last Night a DJ Saved My
> Life.
> Nowell, David.  Too Darn Soulful.
> Roberts, Kev.  The Northern Soul Top 500.
> Winstanley and Nowell.  Soul Survivors.
> 
> And, yes, I've been caught red-handed doing actual
> hardcore academic research.  It's a fair cop ...
> 
> Quality will vary, of course, when it comes to pop
> cultural literature, and some of the above might be
> too acdemic for some, some might be too fannish for
> others, but ...
> 
> But my comments on the vicissitudes of mod and NS (and
> so forth) were intended to point out that there's no
> point to being a purist, 'cos there was never a point
> at which any of it was pure, was allowed to remain as
> such.  Perpetual r/evolution and appropriation, right
> on down to the length of one's side vents.  Perhaps
> one might freeze one's aesthetic, one's collection, 
> at some arbitrary point in the past, but ... but mod,
> like Northern Soul, was/is a passion for the new, even
> if it is the new old, no?  Hence its "modernism" ...
> 
> -- AndyBB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Thanks!
> > Can you recommend any more books I can read, just to
> > get a handle on this whole 'Mod' thing?  I don't
> > think I was arguing that Northern Soul is more "Mod"
> > than any other form of music (although I do seem to
> > be spending a lot of time being accused of saying
> > that these days).
> > 
> > And what do I care for the ever-changing moods of
> > Mod? I only care about the ever-changing moods of
> > this mod in particular.
> 
> Well, there you go, then.  That seems the spirit, at
> any rate.  Breeding your own new dig.  Though it is
> rewarding to get a dancefloor off and running ...
> 
> > Your list of music tastes suggests that you're 'into
> > the sixties' rather than Mod though, no?
> 
> No purist I (and rememeber that the "original" mods
> had long since moved on by the time Quadrophenia-style
> modism had set in).  The classically mod is my focus,
> but I'm open to, say, French and Italian and Japanese
> New Wave cinema (not to mention their soundtracks and
> clothes and pop music), or, more recently, films and
> bands attuned to the style (St. Etienne, or CQ) ...
> 
> I've already been unsurprised to find, say, Northern
> and/or neo-soul fans here, so ...
> 
> Mod, of course, was/is itself a hybrid affair: Italian
> suits and scooters, French film, haircuts and
> literature (not to mention "Blues"), American soul and
> R&B, Jamaican bluebeat, all ultimately ironically to
> be wrapped in the Union Jack and presented as somehow
> quintessentially British (!).  My interest is
> exploring and expanding and perhaps even exploding the
> canon, is all.  Breeding my own new dig.  Mod to
> postmod, perhaps ...
> 
> But see what I mean?  Exchange of information.  As
> always, further recommendations and insightful
> (constructive, deconstructive, whatever) criticism not
> only appreciated, but encouraged ...
> 
> __________________________________________________
> Do You Yahoo!?
> HotJobs - Search Thousands of New Jobs
> http://www.hotjobs.com
> 
> 
> 





------------------------------

Date: Fri, 16 Aug 2002 17:25:34 +0000
From:  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: those nuggets albums


I had a conversation with my two year old nephew recently about the 
correct use of the spoon.  Unfortunately his only response was to
laugh and smear food into his hair.  I'm not worried, someday
he'll learn.  In the meantime though, he sure looks funny!

Dan

PS...re: Nuggets 2.  Contains the BASICS you should know.  Merely a 
starting point.  Obvious stuff for long-term 60s/mod fans, but a godsend 
for new folks.  Talk about one stop shopping!  No need to buy
endless comps, or search out now very expensive originals.  Start there, 
check out the Rubble series, and find your own path through the forest.  
BTW, you can also simultaneously do the same thing with soul,
jazz or whatever.  It doesn't have to be an either/or proposition.
And you don't have to look and/or dress like the musicians you listen 
to!  You can like psych and have short hair for instance!  (duh)


bi polarbear wrote:
> So, about those nuggets albums everybodys "obviously" so concerned 
> about......heh.
> Why do people waste time with taking the piss? Well, it's because lists 
> for 
> the most part can be pretty boring. Sometimes they are legitimatly 
> helpful 
> though too.....and this is not one of those times so,...Geddes is a 
> fuckerpants:) For some reason I picture you to look like Rick Moranis 
> with a 
> thick thesarus attached to your waistline at all times.
> 
> Your turn...
> 





------------------------------

Date: Fri, 16 Aug 2002 15:33:11 EDT
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Reminder - The Congregation - This Saturday - Philadelphia



Brothers and Sisters Rise Up!
Hand in hand, lets go to ...
The Congregation
60s. Soul. Psych. Garage.
DJs : Chetana. Beat Neat O. Darshana
Live Performance : The Phobes!
Saturday Aug. 17th.
Silk City Lounge. 5th & Spring Garden St. Philadelphia.
10 pm. $5.





------------------------------

Date: Fri, 16 Aug 2002 23:50:19 -0700 (PDT)
From: Arriva Dorellik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: those books


Detected no sarcasm there myself, Mr. Geddes, and I 
still don't, but I'll let Andy clarify for himself if
he so desires.  You presume to speak for an awful lot
of people who don't necessarily appear to have given
you their proxy to vote, Daniel ...

Should of course have mentioned those Colin MacInnes
novels, though I imagine most here are familiar at
least with Absolute Beginners.  Kevin Pearce's
Something Beginning with O, the Paul Weller essay on
mod in Cool Cats (there's a documentary as well),
Keith Badman and Terry Rawling's Empire Made ...

For anyobody actually interested ...

http://www.modculture.co.uk/visuals/fact.html

http://www.bomp.com/BompbooksMod.html

http://www.soul-a-go-go.demon.co.uk/sbooks.html

So where'd you get all your information from, then, M.
Geddes?  Don't seem quite mature enough to have been
there, done that the first time 'round--though which
first time?  The original mods, modern jazz
enthusiasts, would have had no interest in the
subsequent subcultures which took up the name ...

Indeed, the 'mod' we (think we) know and love--the
records, the clothes, the scooters, et al.--appears
actually to have been the popularized, mainstreamed,
even, aftermath of the 'genuine' subculture.  Which
makes it nonetheless worthy of our love, our
knowledge, but ...

But the point is, there'll always not only be somebody
who'd been there, done that before you, there'll also
be somebody who'd avoided there, disdained that as
well, and s/he's not even intrested in having your
number, so don't get to cocky, old cock ...

--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Uh, yeah.  I think he was being sarcastic about the
> books.  But hey, it gave you another opportunity to
> expound.  Gives the newbies a starting point, and
> makes you feel ever so clever.

Anybody can look this stuff up, I just already have
happened to have done the legwork, not to mention the
reading, is all.  Does make me feel helpful, at least,
not to mention hopeful that the effort has not gone,
will not go to waste ...  

But does it make you feel NOT so clever, to the point
you need to compensate by being a complete, not to
mention uninteresting (and there's your worst offense,
Daniel, insisting on being so thoroughly NOT clever,
so thoroughly boring) bastard?  Do let us know ...

__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
HotJobs - Search Thousands of New Jobs
http://www.hotjobs.com





------------------------------

Date: Fri, 16 Aug 2002 23:56:59 -0700 (PDT)
From: Arriva Dorellik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: those nuggets albums


To whom are you speaking here, er, Bi?  Do let us know
as well.  Clarity ...

--- bi polarbear <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> For some reason I picture you to look like Rick
> Moranis with a thick thesarus attached to your
> waistline at all times.
> 
> Your turn...

But you missed a golden oppertunity to quote Booker T.
and the MG's here, I'm afraid ...

__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
HotJobs - Search Thousands of New Jobs
http://www.hotjobs.com





------------------------------

Date: Sat, 17 Aug 2002 00:11:06 -0700 (PDT)
From: Arriva Dorellik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: those nuggets albums


Now exactly how have we disagreed here ...

--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>  
> PS...re: Nuggets 2.  Contains the BASICS you should
> know.  Merely a starting point.  Obvious stuff for
> long-term 60s/mod fans, but a godsend for new
> folks.  Talk about one stop shopping!  No need to
> buy endless comps, or search out now very expensive
> originals.  Start there, check out the Rubble
> series, and find your own path through the forest.

We haven't, not much, at any rate, it suddenly seems. 
"BASICS" I'd quibble with, as there are some unusual
moments on that compilation. And, in any case, I'd
recommend first that 4CD Polydor In Crowd box set,
which is specifically intended to be an introduction
and/or overview to/of mod, but ...

But EVERYONE, Dearest Daniel, has to start somewhere,
and the point is, there's no point to being sniffy
about the fact that everyone starts at different
points, at different times, with different resources,
with different opportunities.  Still, the question
remains, Mr. Geddes, what ELSE to listen to ...
  
> BTW, you can also simultaneously do the same thing
> with soul, jazz or whatever.  It doesn't have to be
> an either/or proposition.  And you don't have to
> look and/or dress like the musicians you listen 
> to!  You can like psych and have short hair for
> instance!  (duh)

Sanity at last then here?  Civility, even, at least
for an all-too-brief moment?  Very well then ...

__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
HotJobs - Search Thousands of New Jobs
http://www.hotjobs.com





------------------------------

Date: Sat, 17 Aug 2002 18:22:29 +0200
From: "bi polarbear" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: those nuggets albums


Relax it wasn't you, I assure you.

>From: Arriva Dorellik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: RE: those nuggets albums
>Date: Fri, 16 Aug 2002 23:56:59 -0700 (PDT)
>
>To whom are you speaking here, er, Bi?  Do let us know
>as well.  Clarity ...
>
>--- bi polarbear <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > For some reason I picture you to look like Rick
> > Moranis with a thick thesarus attached to your
> > waistline at all times.
> >
> > Your turn...
>
>But you missed a golden oppertunity to quote Booker T.
>and the MG's here, I'm afraid ...
>
>__________________________________________________
>Do You Yahoo!?
>HotJobs - Search Thousands of New Jobs
>http://www.hotjobs.com
>
>




_________________________________________________________________
Chat with friends online, try MSN Messenger: http://messenger.msn.com





------------------------------

Date: Sat, 17 Aug 2002 18:33:57 +0100
From: "David Walker" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: those books  


Hello,
"For anyobody actually interested ...

http://www.modculture.co.uk/visuals/fact.html";

Thanks for mentioning my page - an ideal opportunity to say that I am on the
verge of putting up a new books section, containing around 10 times as many
books, each with it's own page, and possibly cover scan/review if I have
time. Might be done to some degree by the middle of next week, after which I
sod off to the Margate rally for a few days of mindless buffoonery.

Also, re the Bomp page you mention - hopefully they've changed the wording
on there. In parts it was a 'word for word' copy of my initial page, but
they assured me it would change.

Anyway (as Ronnie Corbett says), I digress....

David W
Find the Mod scene online at Modculture.com...
http://www.modculture.com
Have your say in the Modculture forums...
http://www.modculture.co.uk/forum/


Runner Up: Best Arts And Music Site
Yell.com UK National Website Awards





------------------------------

Date: Sat, 17 Aug 2002 14:51:21 -0700 (PDT)
From: Arriva Dorellik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: those books


You're very welcome.  It's an excellent source ...

--- David Walker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> Thanks for mentioning my page - an ideal opportunity
> to say that I am on the verge of putting up a new
> books section, containing around 10 times as many
> books, each with it's own page, and possibly cover
> scan/review if I have time....

The question then, no doubt, will be, will I have the
money to follow up on all of it?  Esp. as I pursue all
the films listed as well.  I haven't come across all
too much more than what you've got up right now, so am
eagerly anticipating further listings.  And do indeed
...

> Find the Mod scene online at Modculture.com...
> http://www.modculture.com
> Have your say in the Modculture forums...
> http://www.modculture.co.uk/forum/

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------------------------------

Date: Sat, 17 Aug 2002 14:51:57 -0700 (PDT)
From: Arriva Dorellik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: those nuggets albums


Naturellement ...

--- bi polarbear <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Relax it wasn't you, I assure you.

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