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YOUR ANNIVERSARY
Lolita: Oh I know a good question, how ’bout—if you had a choice,
who would you like to go see a show with, Rita or Lolita? Rita:
That’s terrible. Lolita: Why? Because everyone would pick me? Rita:
Your ego is making this closet feel awfully small. Okay, you can ask
that question—but you have to word it like this: the Noise celebrates 28 years of covering the music
of New England and T MAX’s high school band, MR. TIMOTHY CHARLES
DUANE, just celebrated 40 years of adolescence. Tell us about an anniversary
that you have celebrated recently. Lolita: Okay, but that doesn’t sound at all like
my question. Hey Mr. Curt! Will you answer that question that Rita just
asked? MR. CURT (Mr. Curt Ensemble): In 2009, Ms. Donna and
I celebrate 40 years as a couple of lovebirds. We had met the previous
year and now the courting began in earnest. One of our first dates (which
her parents had to approve) was taking her to the Boston Tea Party in
May to see one of my favorite bands, the Who (with Rashaan Roland Kirk
opening—whoa!). A few months later, I convinced her to venture to
upstate New York to check out this outdoor festival called Woodstock.
She and some friends had to go with older chaperones on Friday. We met
up at 8:30am Saturday, sat around in the sun and rain, saw a buncha
bands, and then she left because her chums thought there were a bit
too many people there; my friends and I didn’t leave until late Sunday
night. Thus began our life together dedicated to love and music. Yahoo
and hooray for heritage! *** VALERIE
THOMPSON (Goli/ Fluttr Effect):
In the future (a.k.a. October), I will be celebrating my 20th anniversary
of playing the cello. I’ll probably celebrate by having a beer and
playing the cello. *** KEN
FIELD (Revolutionary Snake
Ensemble/ Birdsongs of the Mesozoic): August 19th was the 7th anniversary
of the first broadcast of the New Edge, my weekly radio show of interesting
instrumental music Tuesdays from 2-4pm on WMBR (88.1 fm). *** JOHNNY ARGUEDAS (Arguedas Photography/ the Sneaks): I am celebrating five years since
I opened my photography business and can’t imagine doing anything
else. Also coming up is the two-year anniversary of my band, the
Sneaks. A new CD is in the works. Life is pretty kickass.
*** DARRON BURKE (Makeshift Studio): Just yesterday (August
4) I celebrated one year of working for Harvard Audio Preservation Services.
I ate a chocolate bar with sea-salt encrusted almonds. Salty goodness.
Happy 28th to the Noise! *** TIM
MUNGENAST (… & His Preexisting
Conditions): Congrats on 28 years of the Noise! In June my wife and I celebrated our own
anniversary... 17 years! *** D-TENSION (Los Wunder Twins del Rap): First of all, congratulations
on 28 years! That has to be a record of some kind. I recently celebrated
the 20th anniversary of my turning 18. Every teenager tells his parents
that he/she will move out and do whatever they want when they turn 18.
They start saying that at around 12 and don’t stop until they’re
18 when they realize they have no money and need to stay at home. But
since my mom decided to raise me in a cult on a David Koresh style compound,
I moved the fuck out minutes after turning 18. While I miss the gorp
and being paddled by my pastor... oh wait, I only miss the gorp. Happy
anniversary to me! 20 years gone! *** HOLLY
BREWER (HUMANWINE): Happy Anniversary!
On May 1st, 2009 M@ (HUMANWINE) and I celebrated six years of
marriage by heading to the middle of the woods just outside of Eugene
Oregon, taking mushroom tea prepared by a bunch of witches (handed out
to about 400 people) for the Maypole ceremony. Luckily we successfully
avoided a disco inferno dance party that was happening in the mess hall
barn and got to spend some real time in the woods during a storm that
was so massive it toppled trees in a neighboring town. *** CARL BIANCUCCI
(the Slumlords): I can’t believe I’m saying this, but it’s (gulp!)
40 years ago this year that I started playing guitar (I switched over
to bass the following year). Learned a few things from a songbook by
some new group at the time called the Led Zeppelins (did they ever go
anywhere?) *** SAMMY MIAMI (Houndstone): 2009 marks my twentieth year
of gigging in Boston. A lot has changed since Tuesday nights at the
Channel, and as far as I’m concerned, not much of that change has
been for the better either. RIP WCOZ and WBCN. But hey, what goes up
must come down, and what comes down must bounce back! “Long live rock,
be it dead or alive.” *** PETER
RINNIG (QRST’s): When my
wife and I celebrated out 10th anniversary we went to Vegas for a week
and renewed our vows in front of Elvis with our daughter as the flower
girl! It really was Elvis—if you squinted really really hard. *** DANA COLLEY
(Morphine): It’s been ten years this July since Mark Sandman passed
away in Palestrina, Italy at the Nel Nome Del Rock festival (In the
Name of Rock). Orchestra Morphine toured the U.S. and returned to Italy
to pay homage in 2000. This July we went back as a trio with Jerome
Deupree, Jeremy Lyons, and myself to perform as Members of Morphine.
We were joined by our families: India Colley, Elias Colley, Kate Williams,
Luciana Lyons, Lisa Deupree, Linda Veins, Sabine Hrechdakian, Carolyn
Kaylor, and Mark Hamilton. Two film crews each doing documentaries on
Mark and Morphine were in attendance. We spent the better part of a
week at the festival, set at the base of the ancient town eating and
drinking with our Italian hosts who have in the years following Mark’s
death become our extended family. It is still hard to comprehend the
loss we in Boston have experienced when Mark died. He was at the center
of our musical universe. Much has changed in the world and in our lives
in the past ten years. But what remains crystal clear is that our life
riches are not compiled in dollar amounts. It is in the people who touch
us and bring us closer together. Thank you Mark for the music you left
us and for the relationships brought together by the intangible power
of music. Lolita: Go to the Mark Sandman Memorial Concert on
Saturday, 9/26 at Mark Sandman Square (on Brookline Ave. between the
Middle East and T.T. the Bear’s)—the concert is free, but consider
donating to the Mark Sandman Project.
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