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Beastie Boys: Rap's Elder Statesmen Go Back In Time
http://www.npr.org/2011/05/09/136061894 ... ck-in-time
He now writes and tours his own music as "The Goldberg Sisters" and (according to the interview):I was a huge Elvis Costello fan and still am.
Perhaps he'll cover a song from PFM one day?The spirit and sound of Bacharach echo through Goldberg's music, layer upon layer of audio tracks producing sonically lush results.
Lose the mango and its sounds pretty good.scielle wrote:Apologies if this has already been posted, but new to me - here's what just popped up on Twitter:
I've cut and pasted well beyond the Elvis bit to cover the earlier Everton victory, sadly on Saturday history most definitely did not repeatAfternoon all: Seven 3pm kick-offs in the Premier League brings a retro feel to the day. "History repeats the old conceits/ The glib replies the same defeats/ Keep your finger on important issues/ With crocodile tears and a pocketful of tissues," wrote Elvis Costello which came to mind when I had a peek at the history of some of today's fixtures.
The full top-flight programme is:
Arsenal v Everton
Bolton v Aston Villa
Liverpool v QPR
Man Utd v Wolverhampton
Norwich v Newcastle
Swansea v Fulham
West Brom v Wigan.
I've been looking at three of them and the fortunes of the away sides. Wolves's last victory at Old Trafford came in a 1-0 win in February 1980 when Mel Eves scored the only goal. A fair few of the previews have suggested Wanderers will feel the backlash of Manchester United's Champions League exit this afternoon. Everything today and for the rest of the season depends on United getting their central midfield to dominate again.
Arsène Wenger has never lost a home game against Everton and the visitors last victory at Highbury came in January 1996 when Bruce Rioch managed the Gunners. I've found the line-ups for that game and Arsenal's, in particular, has reminded me of a player I haven't thought about for 15 years, Adrian Clarke.
Here they are: Arsenal: Seaman; Dixon, Marshall, Linighan, Winterburn; Clarke, Merson, Jensen, Helder; Bergkamp, Wright.
Everton: Southall; Ebbrell, Watson, Short, Ablett; Kanchelskis, Parkinson, Horne, Stuart; Amokachi, Ferguson.
Ian Wright opened the scoring before Graham Stuart and Andrei Kanchelskis scored the second-half goals that won the game
Colin Top BalconyAfter a few drinks, I think I tried to tell Meryl that I was of the Tramp the Dirt Down persuasion, but I wasn't, at that stage, sure if she knew the Elvis Costello song.
I know absolutely nothing about soccer, but that is an awesome use of a lyric there.Top balcony wrote:Excerpt from the Guardian's online football preview (if it was in the paper then I missed it) this Saturday :
I've cut and pasted well beyond the Elvis bit to cover the earlier Everton victory, sadly on Saturday history most definitely did not repeatAfternoon all: Seven 3pm kick-offs in the Premier League brings a retro feel to the day. "History repeats the old conceits/ The glib replies the same defeats/ Keep your finger on important issues/ With crocodile tears and a pocketful of tissues," wrote Elvis Costello which came to mind when I had a peek at the history of some of today's fixtures.
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Colin Top Balcony
Neil. wrote:At a Clerkenwell gig last night (with Verbal), the band Larkin Poe played a storming 'Blame It On Cain'.