Tiki Central / General Tiki
Black Velvet Flag
Pages: 1 46 replies
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Trader Woody
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Fri, Aug 9, 2002 3:38 PM
I've noticed from a number of posts that there must be a fair number of people posting who were heavily into the early 80's punk scene, particularly from California. This begs the question, was the band Black Velvet Flag (Novelty lounge act who covered early HC punk classics in a 'parent-friendly' style) responsible for turning any punker onto the Lounge scene & then onto Tiki? If not, how did so many punks make such a radical leap? Trader 'This is Boston, not LA' Woody |
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thejab
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Fri, Aug 9, 2002 7:05 PM
I think there are several reasons why ex-punks are into tiki. I was a mod a long time ago but I used to go to punk shows in San Diego. Then they would accept you even if you dressed like a mod. People get tired of loud aggressive music all the time so they naturally get into lounge and exotica because it was readily avilable in thrift stores (not so much anymore). A lot of people were into punk for the scene as well as the music so they are attracted to the lounge or tiki scene for the same reasons. Another possible reason is that as we get older we tend to gain weight. Punks and mods are typically skinny. Those slim fitting 60s suits just don't look good on someone with a beer belly. So the aloha shirt is the perfect thing to wear. Same thing for the swing and rockabilly scenes that so many ex-punks were into. The 40s and 50s clothes look good on larger guys and girls. The tiki mugs, exploration of old tiki establishments, and drink making usually comes later. |
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woofmutt
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Fri, Aug 9, 2002 11:17 PM
Most punk style stuff had a retro aspect to it, and the punk aesthetic often included castoffs from previous eras, particulalrly if they were items considered to be kitschy or in bad taste. Many of the people who first began collecting mid century toys and thermoses and et cetera seem to have come from a punk background. I think there was a logical flow from owning some weird Tiki mugs to wondering what the whole former Polynesian pop scene was about (or owning some yellow cowboy boots and looking into old country music). Which reminds me, there's a scene in "Repo Man" where the group is at a bar and the apparently formerly hardcore band is doing a loungey sort of thing. Was the lounge thing already happening in LA when that movie was made or was it a joke that became a reality? (Of course Sid did his version of "My Way" some years before "Repo Man"). I've never really moved from one style of music to another, I've liked some of the stuff most of my life. My grandmother exposed me to Dean Martin and friends, my mom to Elvis, my dad to Hank Williams and pals, and I on my own liked elevator music...I'm a big fan of Muzac (and immitators) and it's another thing that is passing away as stores, restaurants, and elevator farmers go for the awful oldies mix...Made even more awful by the fact that most people know the words to 90% of the songs and think nothing of pushing a shopping cart around Sears singing along with the Beach Boys. |
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Fonduie
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Sat, Aug 10, 2002 12:29 PM
No I wasn't punk. I was your typical overweight goth chick. |
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rch427
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Sun, Aug 11, 2002 4:05 AM
Well, I just got back from a mod allnighter here in San Francisco, and I've got to admit that it's still pretty fun--even for this 39 year-old guy and his XX year-old wife. I was a punk in 81-83 (in Fresno--ugh) and a mod in 83-86, but it was vintage clothes that came before either one. I discovered thrift stores in 1979, when I started to get tired of the numbing conformity of the San Joaquin Valley. Those were the days of $2 sharkskin suits and $5 cashmere crombies. Perhaps it's the refusal to be lumped into the bland masses that is the commonalty here. Tiki/lounge is just another, interesting inflection of the same impulse. No, I don't remember Black Velvet Flag, but I do remember the Circle Jerks playing Fresno in 82 or 83, doing their song "When the Shit Hits the Fan"."Shoobie-do wap-wap, say what man?" Punk/Lounge crossover at its most pungent. |
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Tiki_Bong
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Sun, Aug 11, 2002 8:31 PM
Speaking of retro wear during the late 70's and early 80's, does anyone in LA remember Flip's on Melrose, or Punk is Dead just down the street? I swear as you get older time passes quicker. My 90 year-old grandfater says it seems like breakfast comes every 15 minutes. |
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vintagegirl
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Sun, Aug 11, 2002 11:07 PM
I think you hit it on the nail, rch427. People who once had an affinity for non-mainstream culture usually go on to other things that are also non-mainstream for the present. Whether that is something brand new or rediscovering something good from the past. I, myself don't seem to fit the mold for a Tiki lover since I was not a punk, but in fact a vintage-wearing new waver (gasp!) in the early 80's (and damn proud of it!) And my wearing of vintage came more from economics than anything else. (I still wear the same black taffeta 50's cocktail dress that I bought 16 years ago.) But I think my love for Tiki/Lounge came more from watching a lot of movies of the 50's and 60's growing up. I just always liked the style and sounds of it. [ Edited by: vintagegirl on 2002-08-11 23:13 ] |
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tikifish
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Mon, Aug 12, 2002 7:58 AM
Interesting. I was a punk and later a goth. (if you send me 5 bucks and a S.A.S.E. I'll give you a colour copy of me doing my best Siouxsie Sioux impression on my grade 10 student card). I kinda miss the goth days, at least when your clothes are all black you don't have to worry about what matches. Now dressing myself seems so complicated. I guess I'm no longer a goth cause I'm just too damn cheerful... I was a walking contradiction. |
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Tiki King
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Mon, Aug 12, 2002 9:30 AM
I have pondered this myself, having come from a punk background. (You can see my punk past here: http://noexcuse.iuma.com)I know many Tiki people who came from the same. I think that part of it is, as somewhat said above, "the life" begins to fit poorly as you get older. (I have seen old punk rockers, and it ain't pretty.) but why many of us went Tiki/Exotica is not clear. When I started the Tiki King catalog in '94, I didn't know anyone else was into Tikis, I just thought it was fun to make them |
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TikiMel
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Mon, Aug 12, 2002 10:00 AM
Hmmmm... I was neither punk nor goth, but I agree with the theory that the attraction comes from the fact 'tiki' is not mainstream. I got into tiki when a friend phoned me and said, "a coworker of mine just told me about this bar downtown that serves drinks in big bowls with little plastic neon monkeys hanging from the rims. And get this: they light the drinks on FIRE..." and the rest, as they say, is history. :D |
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atomictonytiki
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Mon, Aug 12, 2002 10:19 AM
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TikiMel
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Mon, Aug 12, 2002 10:26 AM
sure beats a 'mullet'... |
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Tiki King
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Mon, Aug 12, 2002 11:04 AM
So when I said that old punk rawkers ain't pretty, I wasn't speaking in the strictly Hairdo/fashion sense. but more that when you see some leather/spikes/chains festooned kid sparechanging for beer money outside some club, you might call them a Rebel. When said panhandler is closer to 40, well, I just call them a bum. [ Edited by: Tiki King on 2002-08-12 13:30 ] |
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floratina
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Mon, Aug 12, 2002 4:23 PM
I remember Flips on Melrose. Do you remember Retail Slut? That was a great store. Quite the scene. |
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Trader Woody
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Tue, Aug 13, 2002 6:20 AM
Didn't Flips advertise in mags like Trouser Press? I'm sure there was a company in LA which used to sell dozens of 'punk/new wave' sunglasses in each ad. I think they sold those funny pleated check pants too. Anyway, it all looked very 'West Coast' at the time. Most of the East Coast kids took their fashion sense from Ian Mackaye! Trader Woody |
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tiki.head
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Tue, Aug 13, 2002 7:25 AM
I personnally found it a very short jump from X and Peru Ubu to Martin Denny and Les Baxter. Same aesthetic, different times. Plus I was old for a punker when it all happened anyway. |
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bamboo ben
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Tue, Aug 13, 2002 8:12 AM
Can't be agro all your life. You have to relax when you get older and what a better way to do so than in paradise! |
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bamboo ben
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Tue, Aug 13, 2002 8:19 AM
p.s. A good friend of mine back in the day used to do this lounge act in the punk clubs in la/oc. He was playing bass for the Vandals at that time too. Punk Lounge? Mid - late 80's? Does anyone remember his name? 5 points to the winner. |
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Tiki_Bong
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Tue, Aug 13, 2002 9:33 AM
Ben, The '70's fried my memory bank but was it Steve Gonzales? |
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Biotron2000
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Tue, Aug 13, 2002 9:34 AM
Would that be Steve Pfauter? |
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atomictonytiki
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Tue, Aug 13, 2002 11:03 AM
anyway i came to tiki music by the route of combat goth to crusty to tekno crusty (which we'd dance to tekno friday to monday, sleep tuesday, dub and ska wedensday, warm up to drunken lounge sesssions on thursday and repeate for four years) then exposed to stupid amounts of live punk bands for three years. Then when my brain exploded I found a love of cheese music and country-acid-house |
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johntiki
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Tue, Aug 13, 2002 6:34 PM
I would never really say that I was punk - I listened to hardcore (Fear, D.I. and the Descendents were my faves) but I never went all out. I was a skater during that phase of my life and the music just went well at the local half-pipe or derelict skatepark. Being a skater back then was pretty much as far from mainstream as you could go. Even compared to other skaters at the time I wasn't mainstream - when others rode Powell Peralta Tony Hawk's I was riding Alva Bill Danforths and Skull Skates Tod Swanks. Then when I was a senior in high school I got turned on to reggae music - I went for about 6 years without listening to anything besides reggae. Then one year - days before Christmas I came across the Ultra Lounge Christmas CD and was hooked on retro, lounge, exotica music. I think I always had an unexplained love for the 50's. I bought a 1951 Ford when I was 15 years old, right in the middle of my punk phase. My first Heywood Wakefield furniture when I was in the middle of my reggae stage, etc. Now that I think of it...I really can't explain it all...hmmm! :drink: |
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DaneTiki
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Wed, Aug 14, 2002 11:22 AM
[ Edited by: DaneTiki 2009-08-30 19:32 ] |
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Atomic Cocktail
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Wed, Aug 14, 2002 12:33 PM
I don't remember... |
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bamboo ben
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Wed, Aug 14, 2002 9:40 PM
For all of you that aren't around these parts, check our http://www.kroq.com and see the show they have put together. Old punk vs. new punk! |
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Biotron2000
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Thu, Aug 15, 2002 12:26 PM
Hey, Ben, has anyone guessed right yet? |
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bamboo ben
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Fri, Aug 16, 2002 6:56 AM
His name is Chalmer Lumary. I'll try to get in touch with him and see if I can't get a recording. Another band Chalmer was in before the Vandals was the Hated. The old singer Steve Real will be at the Gathering on Sun. He's trying to get it up again now that 1/2 the other members have completed re-hab! Another name that came out of that band was Joe Wood. Anyone know Joe? |
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Trader Woody
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Fri, Aug 16, 2002 7:02 AM
Is Joe Wood the guy who puts out a Tiki internet broadcast or is that another Joe Wood? Trader Woody |
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bamboo ben
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Fri, Aug 16, 2002 7:04 AM
p.s. I think that So. Cal. has Minn. beat on the old punks. I think we're on our 5th generation now. Anyone remember China White? The gee-tar player still lives with his mum down the street form me. H.B. is Lieser "Punk" World! |
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thecardcheat
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Sun, Aug 18, 2002 6:43 PM
Talking about old punk/ hardcore, and skate scenes, did anyone catch the tiki behind Tony Alva in his interviews in "Dogtown & Z- Boys"? I saw a place in Venice, that was a skate shop and sold modern furniture? Wow! Kinda what you guys are talking about here. It was closed, but through the window I could see lots of old Dogtown stuff. Anyone know anything about it? |
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johntiki
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Mon, Aug 19, 2002 10:19 PM
The tiki behind T.A. was an added bonus in this wonderful film. The Dogtown/Z-Boys era was a little before my time but being a skater from years gone by I was able to appreciate it. Just got the film on DVD and it seems to get better with each viewing... Also another tiki related piece of history in Dogtown and Z-Boys - Book of Tiki Pg.196 -the Pacific Ocean Park - I believe that is the surfing spot refered to in the film as the "Cove". If you look carefully in the 2nd small picture in the book, you notice a small round pod and one of the guys interviewed says he remembered making out in them...For those who haven't seen the movie there is also some fleeting shots of the pier in its heyday...It's a must see! :drink: |
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SlovakTiki
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Sun, Sep 1, 2002 6:48 PM
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bamboo ben
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Mon, Sep 2, 2002 6:02 AM
see, 98% of all those bands he just talked about are from So. Cal.. We got any state beat on old punks. |
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Tiki_Bong
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Tue, Sep 3, 2002 11:02 AM
Not only does CA kick @ss regarding old punk, it's home (especially H.B.) to new punk! (you're probably asking yourself how many shots did he fire? Well, punk, you feel lucky?) |
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SlovakTiki
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Mon, Jan 6, 2003 8:50 AM
I was just on the website for the Damned and it made me recall that Captain Sensible made a recording of "Happy Talk" from the musical "South Pacific". I know that that particular musical is not that great but apparently the Captain's single got fairly high on the music charts in England upon its release. |
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Traitor Vic
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Mon, Jan 6, 2003 10:05 PM
Speaking of Captain Sensible's Happy Talk... Ever hear the cover of (Tropical) Heat Wave by James White and the Blacks? |
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SlovakTiki
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Tue, Jan 7, 2003 6:09 AM
In my observations Rock seems to be dying out among the younger set. They all listen to either that cutesy-wootsie funk crap or that awful durgy-grungy metal that seems to be popular with the "rebels". [ Edited by: SlovakTiki on 2003-01-07 06:16 ] |
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Trader Woody
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Tue, Jan 7, 2003 6:26 AM
I have a feeling the Captain's version of 'Happy Talk' got to #1 over here. It's certainly widely available in charity shop 7" bins...The good Captain has been very quiet lately, though. (Damned fans may beg to differ - he's probably been on a 789 date tour of the world for all I know). Brighton's a resort renowned for 'dirty weekends' on the South coast of England, so a trip down there might be a fun day out for Tiki Chris & his wife, even without the presence of Captain Sensible! Trader Woody |
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bigbrotiki
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Tue, Jan 7, 2003 9:36 AM
James White and the Contortions were tooo cool...truly contorted, ala Pere Ubu. |
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TikiGuy
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Tue, Jan 7, 2003 12:23 PM
I remember all the punk shows (I went to) ending with Sinatra or other Rat Packer's music being played over the P.A. to clear the place out. I wonder if that just settled somewhere in our heads and hearts and led to this transition? I also don't know if it so much a transition as it is a surfacing of one genre within us while another sinks, yet is still within. Whoa, that was almost, like, poetic! I've had my punk/metal/goth/prep/jock leanings as well, but nothing seems to fit me, and my life, quite like the tiki/jazz/swing genres. That's my two bits worth.... |
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Shipwreckjoey
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Tue, Jan 7, 2003 12:53 PM
I remember the Contortions first appeared on a compilation album called "No New York" with Teenage Jesus & the Jerks (Lydia Lunch) and a few other similar N.Y. bands produced by Brian Eno. L.A. punks answer was a comp album released shortly thereafter titled "Yes L.A." with the Germs, Bags, etc. on clear vynal with only one grooved side (mustv'e been on a tight budget) which proclaimed on the face of the disc "NOT produced by Brian Eno". I think this pretty well summed up L.A. punk attitude in the late 70's/early 80's. |
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Traitor Vic
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Tue, Jan 7, 2003 11:46 PM
Yep! "Yes L.A." was a great record, too. Hell. They BOTH were. |
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Shipwreckjoey
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Sun, Jan 12, 2003 1:17 AM
O.K. you guys, the numero uno James Chance (White) record is without a doubt James White & the Blacks "off white" on ZE records (a boutique label of Arista) serial #ZEA 33-003 SA,1979. Best track - side one, track 2, Stained Sheets, followed by 2nd best track Tropical Heat Wave! |
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SlovakTiki
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Sun, Jan 12, 2003 8:09 AM
Hey, that sounds like a great record, Joey. Actually I remember seeing ads for it when it came out. Is that available on CD or is it out of print? I went on to the website for James Chance/White and I was surprised to see that he is still going. |
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Shipwreckjoey
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Sun, Jan 12, 2003 2:36 PM
SlovakTiki |
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SlovakTiki
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Tue, Jan 14, 2003 9:56 PM
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Traitor Vic
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Tue, Jan 14, 2003 11:18 PM
Damn, Shipwreck! That was the Greatest Description of That Record (perhaps ANY RECORD) that I've ever read! It only confirms what I've been thinking since this thread began... We have some GREAT VINYL!!! We could, probably, move to a VinylCentral chat forum and leave very few behind. |
Pages: 1 46 replies