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bouche

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Everything posted by bouche

  1. I guess that I just don't play this setlist game. I go to a Slip show...enjoy the music and I'm usually just blown away at how the band has played. That's the part I can't comprehend.
  2. bouche

    Dexter

    ah...good to hear that it's on TMN. I wasn't sure if we had to wait for Showcase.
  3. bouche

    Dexter

    Did anyone happen to catch the season premiere of Dexter? It is a Showtime show, and I'm not sure if it's aired in Canada yet. But, I did want to see it and found a torrent on Mininova.org The lead is played by Michael C. Hall (David from Six Feet Under). It's a pretty dark and chilling show, and my dreams were VERY dark last night thanks to the show. When I woke up at 4 AM, I realized that what I had dreamed of, would eventually become a sick thriller/horror had I been a filmmaker. Instead, I went back to sleep.
  4. I knew a guy when I worked at Toys R Us that ate the bones too when he got himself KFC. We all laughed at him. It was so disgusting.
  5. due to your direct response to my response to the 97 video, i thought you meant the '97 vid numbnutz.
  6. Which one of you guys are actually going to see the Slip night after night? I don't see the point of aching over setlists that people aren't experiencing. I can see being dissapointed visiting a Slip show every night only to witness the same tunes (mostly), but is it really The Slip's fault? They're not making anyone follow them. That's beside the point because you guys aren't following them around. I've got the show, and I'll keep seeding it until Luke gets on the BT Train
  7. One day after a workout at the gym, I went to put on my work clothes after the shower. WHen I went to put on my pants, I noticed that I couldn't put them on over my tied up shoes. I realized that my routine had, I suppose, "SLIPPED" a bit as I have never before had put on socks, shoes, and tied them before putting on my pants. But here was the first, and hopefully last time. My theory is that they just found a domain name that wasn't used up, and named the band after it. www.theslip.com
  8. I think there's more to what they play...like HOW they play it? I don't know how you guys can complain. Yeesh! 10 bucks says you're already downloading this so-called cookie-cutter set.
  9. Hux was there? What's a Queen's kid doing in THunder Bay?
  10. Just contact the band/agent to start. It should be pretty easy from there if you know your budget.
  11. holy shit! Jumping without TRAMPOLINES!
  12. we were waiting for chicken feet on sunday....and they wouldn't come around. Then, after we were stuffed...we heard "CHICKEN FEET!" everybody there goes nuts for Chicken Feet.
  13. bouche

    Tapas

    sounding good to me.
  14. funny. Sharon made a yummy one last night, and I have leftovers for lunch. that one looks pretty tasty too!
  15. for some reason, I thought that show was for tonight. can't wait to hear the recordings.
  16. I can't pimp this software enough. It's cheap, and works great for everything...aside from SHN. Total Audio Convertor
  17. What are we gonna do when we run out of these drugs?
  18. how would they know the answer to that? That's stupid.
  19. I always thought that the Dead needed a board game, but it would need a CD with snippets from tunes with guestions like...what song is this jam going to? Also with Name that Tune style questions where people bid on how many seconds they can well....name that dead tune. Still, this game posted looks like it would be fun to watch certain Dead know-it-alls play for big bucks!
  20. Phish is anything but 'Dead' band June 30, 1994 - The Ottawa Citizen by Lynn Saxberg And don't call fans 'Phishheads' The cluster of fans who follow the Vermont-based band Phish will descend on Ottawa in the next few days in anticipation of the band's performance at the Ottawa Congress Centre on Tuesday. The phenomenon is a lot like a small-scale version of the Grateful Dead's following of Deadheads -- neo-hippies in vans travelling the continent to see their favorite band. Just don't call them Phishheads, advises Phish bassist Mike Gordon. "I guess I'm not supposed to call them Phishheads. That sort of connotates Deadheads, he says. Though Phish avoids being tagged a "Dead band, there are similarities, most notably in both bands' approach to their live shows. Both groups make every concert different, never using the same set list and never playing a song exactly the same way twice. Spontanaeity is what keeps it interesting for audiences night after night. "It's important to plan some things out, to have a basis or structure to start from (in concert), Gordon says. "But the fruit of it is that spontanaeity -- it ends up being a real celebration of life. Anyone who's seen any of the sold-out Phish shows in Montreal or Toronto in the past two years will understand. The quartet delivers exuberant, lengthy concerts, highlighted by the band members' amazing instrumental abilities and a palpable sense of fun, with on-stage antics that include trampoline bouncing and vacuum-cleaner soloing. Gordon uses a metaphor from Carlos Santana to describe the scene: "It's like Carlos talking about the music already existing, sort of hovering in the air. What he said was the audience is a bed of flowers, music is the water and we're the hose. The best thing we can do is get out of the way and let it flow. Phish's problem in the past has always been capturing that live energy on album. With the latest Paul Fox-produced disc, Hoist -- the most accessible, song-oriented album of the band's five-disc career -- the difficulties were overcome. "The main difference (with this album) was that we waited until it was time to record before we learned the songs. We hadn't played the songs live, with the exception of one or two of them. "It's significant because after playing songs on stage for a long time and making arrangements that are longer and that feed off the crowd energy, then to take those songs and record them in a studio is always a let-down. This way, the best versions of the songs to date would be recorded on tape for the album. Phish -- which also includes guitarist Trey Anastasio, keyboardist Page McConnell and drummer Jon Fishman -- also made its first video for the song Down With Disease , as well as a 25-minute video called Tracking, about the making of Hoist . It will be available through the band's mailing list in about two months, Gordon says. Tickets for Tuesday's Phish show are $ 20, on sale in advance at TicketMaster outlets, Shake Records and Records On Wheels. For phone orders, call 755-1111. Surcharges are applied to TicketMaster purchases. The first of two sets starts at 8 p.m. sharp.
  21. Co-Produced by The SLIP and Matthew Ellard (Elliot Smith, Billy Bragg & Wilco, Morphine) and with additional engineering by good friend and fellow Montre-alien Drew Malamud (Stars, Metric, The Dears) That seems like to me like you gots nothing to worry about.
  22. That was a really fun 2 hours of radio. I really enjoyed that.
  23. thx for the link Greg. weird. i swear I heard Ringo. aw well. it was obviously too good to be Ringo.
  24. well....what was it? I don't have a setlist.
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