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Dennis Montgomery wrote: > Zappa. I really miss his presence as a musical satirist during these > bush years. He had the audience and independent clout to speak out. > Kinda disappointing that the major musical voice of dissension this > millenium has been The Dixie Chicks :-) I still remember vividly stumbling upon Zappa's music for the very first time: I grew up (5-16 years old) in a small town of less than 500 people and babysat for a few families to make some extra $ (guess this small town was enlightened enough even back in the 1980s to realize that guys can be good babysitters as well as girls). Anyway, this family whom I had never babysat before called me at the last minute because their regular sitter was sick. Usual routine until the kids had been put to bed and I noticed they had a big record collection (a first for families I babysat; the others had little to no vinyl). I went through those records voraciously and devoured the covers and sounds: Zappa (those covers, those song titles, those songs!), Genesis (back when Peter Gabriel was still a member), Tangerine Dream, and on and on. Unfortunately I never got to babysit for that family again (they had a regular sitter, after all), but I can look back on that twist of fate as a delicious entryway into new sounds. Andrew -- Andrew Duke scoring/sound design/source http://andrew-duke.com http://myspace.com/andrewduke Cognition Audioworks label [Andrew Duke, Foal, Clinker, Granny'Ark] http://cognitionaudioworks.com