Waiting waiting
Jun. 18th, 2002 08:33 pmI have rented the Maltese Falcon but am not allowed to watch it until 10 p.m. when my boy is off work. I feel like the kids in the psych experiment where they have to sit in a room with a marshmallow for five minutes and can't eat it, and if they resist for the whole five minutes, they get TWO marshmallows. A lot of them would sing little songs to themselves, or turn around so they could ignore the marshmallow.
In the meantime, I'm doing "work." Here is what's going to be going on. There's a lot of art parties and things before this, too, but this is my special project.
A French man, a working man, and a woman with an accordion celebrate
BASTILLE DAY at THE FLUX FACTORY
Saturday, July 13th , doors at 7, show at 8, $7
Join us for an evening of music, liberty, equality & fraternity.
Kirk Kelly, the Lower East Side folksinger the Los Angeles Times dubbed "New York's answer to English folk-punk troubador Billy Bragg" joins the Violent Femmes' Brian Ritchie in an exciting new combo they call Paddy on the Railway. Drawing heavily on the traditional Irish and American roots the name would suggest, Paddy on the Railway also seamlessly mix influences as diverse as Cajun and Japanese Classical.
Marni Rice is a singer/songwriter who accompanies herself on accordion
playing original and traditional songs."Rice sings songs of vodka and velvet...the sound of Kurt Weill with a touch of Tom Waits thrown in." - NY Post. “Incorporating French street songs from the 30's, Irish ballads and her own twisted song tales, she has been described as ‘sultry.’” - Paper Magazine.
In the meantime, I'm doing "work." Here is what's going to be going on. There's a lot of art parties and things before this, too, but this is my special project.
A French man, a working man, and a woman with an accordion celebrate
BASTILLE DAY at THE FLUX FACTORY
Saturday, July 13th , doors at 7, show at 8, $7
Join us for an evening of music, liberty, equality & fraternity.
Kirk Kelly, the Lower East Side folksinger the Los Angeles Times dubbed "New York's answer to English folk-punk troubador Billy Bragg" joins the Violent Femmes' Brian Ritchie in an exciting new combo they call Paddy on the Railway. Drawing heavily on the traditional Irish and American roots the name would suggest, Paddy on the Railway also seamlessly mix influences as diverse as Cajun and Japanese Classical.
Marni Rice is a singer/songwriter who accompanies herself on accordion
playing original and traditional songs."Rice sings songs of vodka and velvet...the sound of Kurt Weill with a touch of Tom Waits thrown in." - NY Post. “Incorporating French street songs from the 30's, Irish ballads and her own twisted song tales, she has been described as ‘sultry.’” - Paper Magazine.
no subject
Date: 2002-06-19 01:05 am (UTC)i don't even like you!