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In our last Letters column, we informed you
how our music was bombing with today's fifth graders. We don't believe
this letter came in reply, but it does suggest
that two years make quite a difference. Brian Daignault writes:
i am a seventh grade english teacher, and
this year, i put a stereo in my room — i plan a lot of activities/assignments
that involve silence on the
part of
the kids, and music adds a nice touch — everything from aphex twin/eno
to
phish/the dead… mostly instrumental stuff. anyway, your music
gets played quite a bit
— this class we're listening to "night falls on hoboken" —
which is a favorite to some, though a few weeks ago, one of my students
who is
overly
shy actually worked up the courage to come over and tell me to turn it
off because it was driving her nuts —"mr. daignault, it never
changes!" i
tried to explain why some people like that, but the venture out of her
shell was brief.
also big hits are a few of the sounds of science tracks and the danelectro
e.p. so, hopefully in six years, you'll have a huge contingent of young
and eager
college fans in central new york on program planning boards lining your
pockets with that filthy college activities fund money. anyway, thanks
for the music.
Letter #2 —
But then again, perhaps it's wrong to put an
age to incomprehension. Reagan from Austin, Texas writes:
The following is an excerpt of an e-mail sent
by a buddy of mine who works as a cameraman for videos/commercials
in Los Angeles:
worked with britney a week ago or so. she
didn't understand my yo la tengo shirt. she asked what it meant
while i
was about to
slate. i said "I got it." she
said "what? you got what?" "no britney, that's what yo
la tengo means. i have it. i got it. They're a good band. You should
check em
out." Britney
said "Oh." then went back to ignoring me.
Letter #3 —
Has Bobby caught Oscar® fever,
particularly in the category Animated Feature Film, or are we just
looking for a context for his long-ago
received
question? In either case, he asks:
Of the numerous Disney princesses, who is
your favorite? Snow White? Cinderella? Sleeping Beauty? That mermaid
from
The Little Mermaid?
I have no problem coming up with some of
my favorite princes: Prince's Hot Chicken, Steven Prince, Prince
Lasha, and of course Freddy
Prince Jr., but
for the life
of me, I can't think of a single princess that matters to me,
including all of the above. Grace Kelly? Well, she did her best
work pre-coronation.
As
a youngster,
I appeared in a children's theater production of Snow White and
the Seven Dwarfs as one of the dwarfs. In what must be ascribed
to either
a cost-cutting
move
in the licensing department, or an attempt to torture the parents
in the audience, it was not the Disney version that was mounted.
There
was no whistling
while
we worked or hi-ho hi-ho'ing, and as such the dwarf I portrayed
was your favorite and mine: Flick.
And finally, twin cautionary tales
from correspondents who one assumes don't know each other:
John Waddington reports that he neglected to
switch the alarm on his clock from cd to Morning Zoo and as a result
found himself not
awakened
but plunged
into
dream by the slow version of "Big Day Coming" that leads
off Painful. He generously tries to convince us that the dream was
a pleasant
one, but I wonder
if his teacher or boss would agree when he finally got out of bed.
Meanwhile, in another part of town, and
not so lucky, Joseph Coram was trying to fall asleep when he put
on And Then Nothing Turns Itself Inside-Out. So when "Night
Falls on Hoboken" did the trick, that wasn't the bad part. The
bad part was the nightmare that ensued, which began with Joseph meeting
the
band, and
proceeded to get even worse. He woke up before 5 a.m. and one imagines
he would have been better off with Sominex or C-SPAN (not an endorsement
— we don't touch
the stuff, either of them).
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