smoe.org mailing lists
ivan@stellysee.de
From | "Jaimie Vernon" <bullseyecanada@hotmail.com> |
Subject | Gimme a Tim... |
Date | Wed, 04 Aug 2004 01:11:42 -0400 |
[Part 1 text/plain (1.5 kilobytes)]
(View Text in a separate window)
At Date: Wed, 04 Aug 2004 01:03:27 Stewart wrote:
>At 08:49 PM 8/3/2004 -0700, Barry S. wrote:
> >Gee Jaimie, you have such great things to say . . . usually. These
> >however make no sense to me at all.
> >
> >> 1) It was Pink Floyd's "Dark Side Of The Moon" that was sent up in the
> >> Voyager explorer to the other side of the galaxy....NOT the Beatles.
> >It's
> >> all about frame of reference.
> >
> >So, a couple of dude at NASA liked the irony of that selection, or maybe
> >they actually liked the record. That says zero about history.
>
>Historical Accuracy Dept: It's "Johnny B. Goode" that was on the Voyager,
>along with bits of Mozart's "The Magic Flute," a bunch of native folk
>musics, natural sounds and, most interestingly for me, Blind Willie
>Johnson's "Dark Was the Night, Cold Was the Ground." No Beatles, no Floyd.
Mia faux pas. But I did correct myself on the Chuck Berry entry.
> >I am no more a seer than you are, so you could be right. Richard and
> >Howe were hardly cultural touchstones (at least in the US), so Gretzky's
> >catapulting over them in hockey's recordbooks is not a good analogy.
>
>I still consider Tim Horton to be hockey's premier cultural touchstone.
>Screw the Leafs, gimme an apple fritter and a large coffee to go.
What, no Stan Mikita's?!? :-)
Jaimie Vernon,
President, Bullseye Records
http://www.bullseyecanada.com
Author, Canadian Pop Music Encyclopedia
http://www.canoe.ca/JamMusicPopEncycloPages
For assistance, please contact
the smoe.org administrators.