From: owner-exotica-digest@lists.xmission.com (exotica-digest) To: exotica-digest@lists.xmission.com Subject: exotica-digest V2 #220 Reply-To: exotica-digest Sender: owner-exotica-digest@lists.xmission.com Errors-To: owner-exotica-digest@lists.xmission.com Precedence: bulk X-No-Archive: yes exotica-digest Monday, October 5 1998 Volume 02 : Number 220 In This Digest: (exotica) DeWolfe Factory Freakout (exotica) Trikont-label Re: (exotica) 60's genres (exotica) Young Girls of Rochefort (exotica) tiki zombie halloween at bahooka's (LA) (exotica) Gainsbourg book Re: (exotica) Young Girls of Rochefort (exotica) Secret Museum of the Air (exotica) Exotica listers DJing (exotica) vaguely exotica content RE luke vibert (exotica) [cuthulu: Re: John Peel] (exotica) Hollywood Studio Orchestra and Buddy Faro (exotica) Antiquing (exotica) Sale List Re: (exotica) Hollywood Studio Orchestra and Buddy Faro Re: (exotica) Hollywood Studio Orchestra and Buddy Faro (exotica) Buddy Faro (exotica) Pat Cooper's Spaghetti Sauce & Other Hits (exotica) Mary Roos and her dedicated admirer (exotica) And another one (exotica) And another one (exotica) Mary Roos and her dedicated admirer (exotica) Lorraine Bowen Re: (exotica) Buddy Faro (exotica) Now that you mention Crime Story... ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sun, 4 Oct 1998 19:48:39 +0100 From: "Robbie Baldock" Subject: (exotica) DeWolfe Factory Freakout Just spotted this new release: V/A - Freakout at the Facsimile Factory "From the vaults of DeWolfe Music Library comes this compilation of psychedelic experiments utilized in "swingin' London" films of the 60s! Fab stuff with phasing, sitars, reverb, the lot! Limited to 1000 copies 190g vinyl." ! If anyone would like a copy, please get in touch... Robbie - ---------------------------------------------------------- ** ** ** * Spaced Out - the Enoch Light Website * ** ** ** ** ** ** * http://www.rcb.easynet.co.uk/light/ * ** ** ** - ---------------------------------------------------------- # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 4 Oct 1998 20:47:59 +0200 From: "Arjan Plug" Subject: (exotica) Trikont-label The German Trikont-label was mentioned a couple of weeks ago. You can check out their website at www.trikont.de (German only alas) for some nifty compilations about American yodelling, the three volumes of covers of La Paloma and 3 volumes of Dead and Gone which contains funeral & death music in all different sizes. Arjan # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 4 Oct 1998 18:08:38 EDT From: LTepedino@aol.com Subject: Re: (exotica) 60's genres In a message dated 10/4/98 10:23:03 AM EST, tribute@dircon.co.uk writes: << Go-go Was this a 60's dance craze in the same way that disco came along in the 70's? There seem to have been albums by many artists with the title a-go-go, and films show people - not necessarily young people - gyrating in noisy crowds with women in parrot cages around. Was there a distinct gap between the twist and go-go? >> The twist was one type of dance. "Go-go" was an all-enveloping term for the style of music or club that played music you could twist, frug or do what ever kind of groovy dance you wanterd to. Ashley # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 4 Oct 1998 19:25:42 EDT From: DJJimmyBee@aol.com Subject: (exotica) Young Girls of Rochefort OK, I spoke to one of my dearest friend's wife who is 44 and grew up in France during the 60's and early 70's. She reports that "Umbrellas of Cherbourg" and "Young Girls of Rochefort" were made as anti-message films which were the stock-in-trade of "respectable" French cinema in the 60's. Additionally, most French films were evidently made in Paris, so a statement was intended to say "This is NOT Paris" She reports that Rochefort and another small and nearby French city were competitors in gaining a "place on the map" The other city--I forget the name--was a more popular town with tourists apparently, so Rochefort, a little nothing city, was chosen as the place to shoot this spectacular fantasy romance/musical. I suspect it would be somewhat akin to a film here called "The Young Girls of Dayton" (no offense to Dayton). Anyhow, along comes this movie, made in Rochefort, which apparently was painted brightly from top to bottom for this movie. It was, after all, their 15 minutes and they wanted to shine. To this day, Rochefort retains an identity based upon the making of that film, and not much else! Further info? Elisabeth? # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 03 Oct 1998 16:06:04 -0700 From: kevin lee Subject: (exotica) tiki zombie halloween at bahooka's (LA) in case anyone is interested, the la cacophony society is holding a haloween party at bahooka's, the legendary tropical theme restaurant located in san gabriel valley, california. i believe, correct me if i'm wrong, that they shot a scene there for "fear and loathing in las vegas"...? speaking of las vegas, when i was last there a few weeks ago, i saw cook e. jarr listed again, i hadn't seen him listed to play (at the continental) for a long time. lotsa fun. for info on the cacophany thing: http://home.earthlink.net/~cacophonyla/oct98.html # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 4 Oct 1998 17:57:53 -0700 (PDT) From: tosh@loop.com (Tosh) Subject: (exotica) Gainsbourg book For those of you on the list who may have some questions about the Gainsbourg novel, please backchannel them to me. I will be traveling for the next three weeks. Take care list, best, - ----------------- Tosh Berman TamTam Books - ---------------- # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 4 Oct 98 22:37:02 -0400 From: Elisabeth Vincentelli Subject: Re: (exotica) Young Girls of Rochefort >To this day, Rochefort retains an identity >based upon the making of that film, and not much else! The city's even produced a very nice brochure indicating where major scenes of the movie took place. So you can go there on a pilgrimage and check out the cafe, the school, and of course the main square. They also gave the key to the city to Agnes Varda (Demy's widow) and Catherine Deneuve for the 25th anniversary of the movie. Varda made a documentary titled Les demoiselles ont 25 ans (The Young Girls Turn 25). MoMA showed it as part of their Varda retrospective last year. This flick is a real cottage industry now! And to think that just 10 years ago you'd be mocked in France for saying you liked Demy... He was considered horribly cheesy. Another of Demy's musicals is relatively easy to find on video in the US (they have it at my local Brooklyn store, which is saying a lot): Donkey Skin, aka Peau d'ane. Deneuve is in it, and it's one of the most bizarre movies ever made. It doesn't have enough songs, I feel, but the few that are there are too strange for words. Elisabeth # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 05 Oct 1998 01:53:58 -0400 From: Irwin Chusid Subject: (exotica) Secret Museum of the Air The Secret Museum of the Air, a weekly radio show of the world's rarest {1890-1965} 78s and cylinders, announces our winter 1998 schedule: 11/4 Herds and Pastures II - Pastoral music around the world, literally. 11/11 The Pacific Rim - Islands and countries in coastal Asia. 11/18 East Africa - Amazingly diverse sounds, many cultures. 11/25 Europe 1920 - 1940 - Mmmmmm, Eurocentric! 12/2 Manges (Athens, 1920s) - Roots of Rebetika; drugs, gangsters, bouzouki. 12/9 Children - Not just kiddie records.... 12/16 Black American Gospel - Quartets, preachers, soloists. Rare! 12/23 Songs of Faith - NOT JUST Christmas music! Sacred music worldwide. 12/30 By Request - Requests from listeners and our favorites. The Secret Museum of the Air is a series of hour-long programs exploring recorded sounds from across the Earth on 78s and cylinders made from 1890 through the 1960s. The curator, Pat Conte, is a noted researcher, archivist and collector, with a personal library of over 100,000 recordings. He is the editor and anthologist of the widely acclaimed "Secret Museum of Mankind" CD reissue series on Yazoo records. Each Secret Museum radio show is compiled from the same vast collection as the reissue CDs, with the same care and documentation, but the radio shows are thematic. A show could be about a specific country (Madagascar, Italy, Turkey) or region (Eastern Africa, The Asian Steppes, Europe 1920 - 1940, the Pacific rim), a musical genre (Calypso, Roots of Afro-Pop), a style of music (diphonic throat singing, yodeling), a specific instrument (the clarinet, the violin, the guitar, Hawaiian guitar but no Hawaiians); or have a seasonal theme (herds and pastures, the harvest, May Day). Some shows are of a broader scope (songs of faith, children and their music, 20th Century classical western composers and the music that influenced them, American Black performers playing country music, great non-Western classical singers, special requests). Once a week the Secret Museum explores the misty and obscure origins of modern music, taking the original shellac, lacquer, and glass recordings, carefully transferring them to a digital format, and restoring and remastering each one; most of these records have never been reissued in any form, and are presented to a wide audience for the first time in half a century. Details about the recordings and background material is presented by Pat Conte and Citizen Kafka in an informal and informative way, recorded live at the Secret Museum. The Secret Museum of the Air was listed in a 1995 New York Times survey of the best radio in New York (by Jon Pareles). The Secret Museum of the Air is broadcast every Wednesday from 7 to 8 PM on listener sponsored, non-commercial WFMU-FM. WFMU is an independent freeform radio station broadcasting at 91.1 MHz FM stereo in the New York City area, at 90.1 Mhz FM in the Hudson Valley, and with a live Realaudio stream on the Web. The web address for the station is http://www.wfmu.org and the direct address for the live broadcast is http://www.wfmu.org/ssaudionet.shtml (a RealAudio transmission). Citizen Kafka, the technical producer of the Secret Museum of the Air, is an audio restoration engineer and archivist, a collector of obscure recordings, and a 20+ year veteran of public radio in New York City as a broadcaster and producer. Major funding for the Secret Museum of the Air is provided by the Shirah Kober Zeller Foundation, in loving memory of Arthur and Margaret Kober. For more information about upcoming shows and the Secret Museum, please email back to Citizen Kafka Enjoy the show! - -- Citizen Kafka, Producer, "The Secret Museum of the Air" every Wednesday, 7 to 8 PM EST WFMU-FM 91.1 FM & WXHD Mt. Hope (Hudson Valley) 90.1 FM http://www.megasaver.com/page2/smradio.html http://wfmu.org/ssaudionet.shtml # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 05 Oct 1998 13:00:49 +0000 From: Moritz R Subject: (exotica) Exotica listers DJing Munich 3.10.98 The "ultraschall", favorite nightclub for music enthusiasts in Munich, was the set for DJ performances of Bernd "The Sound of Munich" Hartwich and Jill Mingo"go". Just to watch her lip-sync perform rather than only play her often female vocal records shure made an impression. Very positive with a rare sense of humor. Bernd played new finds of his typical universe of hard-to-find sequential melodic 70s electronic disco pieces. I had the pleasure to supply an altar of psychedelic Tiki decoration to give a proper frame to the superb music performances that lasted until 7 o'clock in the morning. I was most impressed by a track of the latest Korla Pandit album that Jill played and pieces of Bruce Haack, who was discussed in this list recently, played by Bernd Hartwich. Mo # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 5 Oct 1998 13:53:03 +0100 From: dan hill Subject: (exotica) vaguely exotica content RE luke vibert sorry if this isn't exotica enough but RE recent mention of luke vibert aka wagon christ ... astralwerks website has a very cool wagon christ radio mix which has a nice across-the-board approach taking in the (old) bbc tomorrows world theme and a couple of JJ Perrey tracks ("what's up duck?" and "doc tequila") as well as vibert himself, aphex twin, tribe called quest etc. @ http://www.astralwerks.com/wagonchrist/mix.html (real audio) and the raft website (virgin records UK) has a luke vibert/wagon christ site which showcases the new album "tally ho!" and has some exclusive unreleased tracks @ http://raft.vmg.co.uk/wagonchrist/ cheers, dan. ps. very cool record fair in a village hall in shepherd's bush, london yesterday morning - mainly black music of all flavours, though i came away with morton subotnick "silver apples ...", that shirley bassey album everyone's got w/ "light my fire" on etc., airto moreira "return to forever" and wayne shorter "super nova" ... then a trip to intoxica on portobello road in which i restrained myself to "the man with the golden arm" (worth it for the cover alone), a UK original of zappa's "hot rats", and a new company flow 12 ... - ---+ dan hill [state51] ---+ new reviews on motion [5.10.98]: < low res | dumb type | seth josel | :zoviet*france: | disinformation | pole | sonic subjunkies > http://www.state51.co.uk/motion/ +--- # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 5 Oct 1998 15:14:11 +0100 From: Peter Hipwell Subject: (exotica) [cuthulu: Re: John Peel] > On Tue, 22 Sep 1998, Peter Hipwell wrote: > > > Um, I guess you mean BBC Radio 1, rather than the TV channel. I'm sure > > he has a Radio 1 show still. But I haven't the faintest idea which > > day(s) (although probably evening, round about 10pm). I haven't > > listened for a good few years. For my money, the best music show on > > the BBC is actually on Radio 3 -- "Mixing It" at 10.45pm on > > Mondays. New series just started. They play ANYTHING and EVERYTHING, > > so long as it's abnormal and interesting. > > Hmmm. The reason I asked is because I'd like to listen to some > of it on the shortwave. I can't find a decent BBC shortwave > schedule (and I can hear you saying shedule when it should be > pronounced skedule) anywhere. Thanks for the tip; I'll see > if I can tune it in. Hi -- been away. Anyway, I believe JP is on Radio 1 FM from 8.30pm on Tues, Weds and Thurs. No shotwave schedule that I could see. (PS -- I think we switch from BST to GMT pretty soon, but not sure quite when). > > You know, even though I make fun of you brits quite often, > I have a short, shameful confession: I am an unabashed fan > of Brit Pop. > After years of despising chart/radio music, I found myself enjoying some "Brit Pop" over the last few years (e.g. Portishead, Pulp, Blur, Divine Comedy). I find most of it too derivative, though. And too conducive to jaw movement. Seems like now we're into the 4th cyclical anti-backlash backlash against the backlash against the Glam Revival which hasn't started yet. - -- P. # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 05 Oct 1998 12:16:52 -0700 From: Nat Kone Subject: (exotica) Hollywood Studio Orchestra and Buddy Faro Picked up one of those apparently purposeless LP soundtrack compilations, this one called "Golden Motion Picture Themes and Original Soundtracks" on United Artists. Everything from "Charade" by Ferrante and Teicher to "From Russia with Love" by John Barry himself. Anyway... there's a version of the "Pink Panther" theme by an aggregation with the likely name of HOLLYWOOD STUDIO ORCHESTRA. And just when you thought you've heard that tune enough to last a lifetime, along comes this version which gives it a "Watemelon Man" vibe and everything old is new again. So, does anyone know? Is the Hollywood Studio Orchestra actually an identifiable bunch with other records or is it as faceless a group as I think it might be. If there were whole records with transformations like they perform on the Pink Panther Theme, that would be worth checking out. On a completely different theme, since I haven't heard anyone mention it, there's the new TV series BUDDY FARO. I doubt it'll last long so maybe you should catch it while you can. Friday nights at nine. Catch it for the music, not for the "content". It's about a seventies private eye restored to his former glory in the present day. He's got a cool bachelor pad etc etc. The music spans everything from cool fifties quasi-crime jazz right through to seventies cliches like fake blaxploitation music with stops on the way for music meant to ape Hawaii Five-O or Mannix themes. It's got two cool actors in Dennis Farina and Frank Whalley but the novelty of the set-up felt old inside of the first ten minutes of the pilot and by the second episode it was just tiresome. Still, the music is pretty cool. They do a good job of capturing most of the themes they're trying to ape. By the way, is it my imagination or has there been a dearth of postings about crappy old records here lately? Hasn't anyone been to a thrift store lately? Have I become outnumbered here by the CD compilation buyers? Is the exotica list now more about Air than it is about Esquivel? (And what is this new Esquivel CD called "Loungecore"?) Does anyone know anything about a record - or a group - called OAK ISLAND TREASURY DEPARTMENT? They appear to be Canadian but the record is on Columbia. They're a "unison singing group" like any number of groups with the word "Singers" in their name. They're not Christian or Up-with-People-ish but they don't do covers either (like the Living Voices or someone). Maybe you Ray Conniff Singers fans can help me with this one but I doubt it. I tried. Nat # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 5 Oct 1998 12:38:53 -0400 From: "Rajnai, Charles, NPG NNAD" Subject: (exotica) Antiquing Just for you, Nat, and anyone else who cares: Three decent scores this weekend: Viva! with Sergio Menendez, Billy May, Guy Lombardo and a few other dudes. (I don't have it with me right now) Has a swingin version of Spanish Flea by Billy May and a good sampling of jazz-oriented orchestrated stuff. Pretty lush. Very clean vinyl, cover not awful. Enoch Light "Far Away Places With Exotic Percussion" I love this one. Calcutta and lots of ohhs and ahas, and that trademark Enoch pop-bang percussion. Love it, love it, love it. Average vinyl, decent gatefold cover. And my fave...Si Zentner "The Swinging Eye!!!!!!!!!" Saw this and I almost exploded. Who is it here that has their radio show named after this album? I was very psyched to get this. Very clean vinyl, cover busted on 2 sides. These three records were owned by a woman recently deceased that was also into 101 strings and Mantovani like everyone else her age seems to have been. Total cash outlay: $1.50 surfing the chaos, Charlieman # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 05 Oct 1998 09:53:25 From: Brad Bigelow Subject: (exotica) Sale List A recent estate sale haul forces me to make room on the shelves. If you are interested in getting a copy of my list of exotica and space age pop LPs for sale, please email me at spaceagepop@earthlink.net. You can also find the list online at: http://home.earthlink.net/~spaceagepop/sale.txt Brad # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 5 Oct 1998 13:15:17 EDT From: Rcbrooksod@aol.com Subject: Re: (exotica) Hollywood Studio Orchestra and Buddy Faro In a message dated 98-10-05 12:21:01 EDT, Nat wrote: << (And what is this new Esquivel CD called "Loungecore"?) >> If this is the one with the orangeish colored picture of a bachelor pad I got it. It is not bad and was "budget" priced at about $ 12.00. There is a fair amount of vocal cuts on this CD. Like Mucho Muchacha, etc. It is worth a listen but still not as good as the "two-fers" prev. discussed here. Robert # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 5 Oct 1998 13:21:31 EDT From: Rcbrooksod@aol.com Subject: Re: (exotica) Hollywood Studio Orchestra and Buddy Faro In a message dated 98-10-05 12:21:01 EDT, you write: << He's got a cool bachelor pad etc etc. The music spans everything from cool fifties quasi-crime jazz right through to seventies >> I caught the show this past weekend. Yeah, it won't last but is kinda fun. The bachelor pad is really, really cool. Clean and organized and not campy like the rest of the show. The song "Potluck" played during the "tour" of the pad. Really cool with the vocals do-doing and schwah-schwahing (I can't remember the group name off the top of my head but it is on the Bottoms Up UL CD). I will probably watch it again. I'll post if anything significant happens. Robert # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 5 Oct 1998 12:24:02 +0000 From: "Darrell Brogdon" Subject: (exotica) Buddy Faro I'll second what others have said about Buddy Faro! By all means, check it out before it gets flushed by CBS. The theme music is a great pastiche of early '60s crime jazz and there are lots of swingin' bachelor pad tunes tossed in, too. As Bob mentioned earlier, the John LaSalle Quartet did "Potluck" on last week's episode, along with Nancy Wilson (maybe Dinah Washington, not sure) with "Destination Moon". Great ambience, crummy scripts and one of my favorite actors, Dennis Farina! Anyone here remember him in Crime Story a few years back? Another cool retro crime thriller, set in Vegas and Chicago. Seek it out on video--you won't be disappointed! Darrell Brogdon The Retro Cocktail Hour KANU FM 91.5 Broadcasting Hall The University of Kansas Lawrence, KS 66045 dbrogdon@ukans.edu http://www.ukans.edu/~kanu-fm/retro.html Listen to The Retro Cocktail Hour at: http://www.ukans.edu/cwis/units/kanufm/public_html/retro/retrolisten.htm # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 05 Oct 1998 11:15:12 -0700 From: The Davidsons Subject: (exotica) Pat Cooper's Spaghetti Sauce & Other Hits Found a record advertised on another record's paper sleeve that looks interesting - "Pat Cooper - Spaghetti Souce & Other Hits", United Artists UAL-3548. The cover is a parody of Herb Alpert's Whipped Cream cover, with a topless man looking seductively at the camera, covered in spaghetti. Songs: Spaghetti Sauce & Other Delights, Pepperoni Kid, And then the Sun Goes Down, Poppa's Home Made Wine, Lu Zampogna, and Little Red Scooter. Anyone heard it? Is it all an Alpert parody, or is it comedy, or both, or neither? Thanks, Dave # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 5 Oct 1998 09:37:16 +0100 From: "Charles Moseley" Subject: (exotica) Mary Roos and her dedicated admirer I know its early Monday morning but I still had a chuckle at some nutty German. On a search of the web for Mary Roos (featured on the German Get Easy collection), I turned up her biggest fan's website. All that I found there was a psychotically repetitive signed photo of Mary and the poem below, translated into English by the Altavista translator. If you're interested (and I know you are), http://www.physik.uni-regensburg.de/~sck04136/schlager/nur.die.liebe.html MARY ROOS: ONLY THE LOVE LOAD US LIVES Only the love lets us live, Days in the bright sunshine only it can give alone us only who loves, will be lonely never. We wait and we hope and we dream, the day passes and carries the dreams forward. The night is long and you is not with me, but my heart, it finds its way to you. Only the love lets us live, everything forget and verzeih'n, then everyone is assigned to you, only who loves will be lonely never. Only the love lets us live, Days in the bright sunshine only it can give alone us, only who loves, will be lonely never. I knew that the ways, which we go, it verworren is and that there are tears. That does not count no more you that did not see, you become the road of your longing geh'n. Only the love lets us live, everything forget and verzeih'n, then again one assigns to you, only who loves will be lonely never. Only the love lets us live, Day # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 5 Oct 1998 09:53:08 +0100 From: "Charles Moseley" Subject: (exotica) And another one I just found another one about Hildegard Knef If you're interested (and I know you are), http://www.physik.uni-regensburg.de/~sck04136/schlager/1.1.2.html HILDEGARD KNEF: ONE AND UNITY POWER TWO One and one, make two, drum kiss and do not think not thereby, because think harms the illusion. Everything turns, turns in the set, and you come times from the track, war's evenly experience instead of revealing, what makes that already? Humans are lonely actually and remains abandoned back, one does not look oneself up together a small piece of the luck. The luck, which one with feet a whole life long stepped, which one also a few kisses suddenly at home has. One and one, make two, a heart always participates, and if you have luck, then there two. The prescription will not invent, that will fathom none. Times bleibt`s fuer's lives and times it remains evenly only Liebelei. Humans are actually cowardly and is ashamed for his feeling. That it only none shows, because the moral wants it so. But if in the case of the case he in the dark hides himself, the left # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 5 Oct 1998 09:53:08 +0100 From: "Charles Moseley" Subject: (exotica) And another one I just found another one about Hildegard Knef If you're interested (and I know you are), http://www.physik.uni-regensburg.de/~sck04136/schlager/1.1.2.html HILDEGARD KNEF: ONE AND UNITY POWER TWO One and one, make two, drum kiss and do not think not thereby, because think harms the illusion. Everything turns, turns in the set, and you come times from the track, war's evenly experience instead of revealing, what makes that already? Humans are lonely actually and remains abandoned back, one does not look oneself up together a small piece of the luck. The luck, which one with feet a whole life long stepped, which one also a few kisses suddenly at home has. One and one, make two, a heart always participates, and if you have luck, then there two. The prescription will not invent, that will fathom none. Times bleibt`s fuer's lives and times it remains evenly only Liebelei. Humans are actually cowardly and is ashamed for his feeling. That it only none shows, because the moral wants it so. But if in the case of the case he in the dark hides himself, the left # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 5 Oct 1998 09:37:16 +0100 From: "Charles Moseley" Subject: (exotica) Mary Roos and her dedicated admirer I know its early Monday morning but I still had a chuckle at some nutty German. On a search of the web for Mary Roos (featured on the German Get Easy collection), I turned up her biggest fan's website. All that I found there was a psychotically repetitive signed photo of Mary and the poem below, translated into English by the Altavista translator. If you're interested (and I know you are), http://www.physik.uni-regensburg.de/~sck04136/schlager/nur.die.liebe.html MARY ROOS: ONLY THE LOVE LOAD US LIVES Only the love lets us live, Days in the bright sunshine only it can give alone us only who loves, will be lonely never. We wait and we hope and we dream, the day passes and carries the dreams forward. The night is long and you is not with me, but my heart, it finds its way to you. Only the love lets us live, everything forget and verzeih'n, then everyone is assigned to you, only who loves will be lonely never. Only the love lets us live, Days in the bright sunshine only it can give alone us, only who loves, will be lonely never. I knew that the ways, which we go, it verworren is and that there are tears. That does not count no more you that did not see, you become the road of your longing geh'n. Only the love lets us live, everything forget and verzeih'n, then again one assigns to you, only who loves will be lonely never. Only the love lets us live, Day # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 05 Oct 1998 14:03:02 -0500 From: "Mark D. Head" Subject: (exotica) Lorraine Bowen Elisabeth Vincentelli wrote: >I just got the new Japanese (as opposed to their Emperor Norton release) >CD by Fantastic Plastic Machine, Luxury. Lorraine Bowen sings Eurythmics' >"There Must Be an Angel". As sexy as "Julie Christie": I'm in love! >Apparently she has 2 CDs out: Greatest Hits 1 and 2. I have been looking for releases by Lorraine Bowen since getting the Gentle People-compiled "Music To Watch Comets By." Cannot find anything! Any direction you could offer would be great! Mark D. Head _________________________________________________ TANSTAAFL! # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 5 Oct 1998 18:24:50 -0400 From: "m.ace" Subject: Re: (exotica) Buddy Faro > my favorite actors, Dennis Farina! Anyone here remember him in Crime > Story a few years back? Yes -- I'm one of the few who watched "Crime Story", and for my money it put the brass knuckles to "Buddy Faro" in the retro crime show sweepstakes. I watched the pilot of "Buddy Faro", and it was pretty good for network tv -- lots of stylish camera-work. But then I watched some of the second episode, and for me at least, it crashed down to the typical grind-it-out tv look with a rather heavy thud. To describe "Crime Story" briefly (for those who never heard of it), it ran for two seasons in the mid-80s and displayed a real "pulp" sensibility long before Quentin Tarentino. It was a cops vs. gangsters epic that took the characters through continuing changes, rather than the stasis common to most shows. It started off set in Chicago, then migrated to Las Vegas in the middle of the first season. Set in the early 60s, it was consistently stylish throughout its run. Lots of cool architecture and furniture. Much of the music was written specially for the show, mostly in a noir or period vein. I think Todd Rundgren scored one or two episodes. Del Shannon cut a slightly altered (lyrically) version of "Runaway" for the opening theme. It was a show that always kept you on your toes, in that it had a measure of depth to it, but could also get extremely outlandish at the drop of a spiffy hat. There aren't many shows that are capable of mood swings from Scorcese to the Three Stooges. Also -- Dennis Farina really was a Chicago cop before he became an actor, and one of the crooks, John Santucci, was a genuine ex-con. Yeah, I got your "method" right here, ya mug! m.ace ecam@voicenet.com OOK http://www.voicenet.com/~ecam/ # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 05 Oct 1998 18:56:35 -0400 From: Brian Phillips Subject: (exotica) Now that you mention Crime Story... >Also -- Dennis >Farina really was a Chicago cop before he became an actor, and one of the >crooks, John Santucci, was a genuine ex-con. Yeah, I got your "method" right >here, ya mug! If you go farther back, there was "Toma" based on a real NYC undercover policeman who had a flair for disguise. The running gag of the series was that the REAL David Toma was in each episode in a different disguise. The TV Toma, Tony Musante, left the series (he was on the cable series Oz, apparently) and was replaced by Robert Blake, at which time they reworked the show into "Baretta", who also had a flair for disguise. FURTHER useless information: "Electra Glide in Blue" 's (with Robert Blake) poster is framed in Capt. Frank Furillo's office on "Hill Street Blues". It is silver and it says above Blake's head "Did you know that me and Alan Ladd are the same height?" I am told that "Gibbsville" had that forties feel to it, too. It ran for about a month in the seventies. Anyone see it? It got lost along with "Snip" starring David Brenner (a Shampoo parody). C. Clavin # Need help using (or leaving) this mailing list? # Send the command "info exotica" to majordomo@lists.xmission.com. # To post, email exotica@lists.xmission.com; replies go to original sender. ------------------------------ End of exotica-digest V2 #220 *****************************