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May 3, 2008 at 12:27 PM #198622May 3, 2008 at 12:52 PM #198627stockstradrParticipant
By the way I have listened to the links others have posted, such as
Antoine Dufour
The Swell Season
Andrew WhiteI agree they are all very good. I would definitely pay to see any of them when they visit the Bay Area.
In particular, I’m finding Antoine Dufour’s acoustic pieces to be very catchy. I’m not saying his music is marketable on a national level, but as a (amateur) guitarist myself, it is amazing to see what a pro like Antoine can do with that guitar.
May 3, 2008 at 12:52 PM #198715stockstradrParticipantBy the way I have listened to the links others have posted, such as
Antoine Dufour
The Swell Season
Andrew WhiteI agree they are all very good. I would definitely pay to see any of them when they visit the Bay Area.
In particular, I’m finding Antoine Dufour’s acoustic pieces to be very catchy. I’m not saying his music is marketable on a national level, but as a (amateur) guitarist myself, it is amazing to see what a pro like Antoine can do with that guitar.
May 3, 2008 at 12:52 PM #198588stockstradrParticipantBy the way I have listened to the links others have posted, such as
Antoine Dufour
The Swell Season
Andrew WhiteI agree they are all very good. I would definitely pay to see any of them when they visit the Bay Area.
In particular, I’m finding Antoine Dufour’s acoustic pieces to be very catchy. I’m not saying his music is marketable on a national level, but as a (amateur) guitarist myself, it is amazing to see what a pro like Antoine can do with that guitar.
May 3, 2008 at 12:52 PM #198678stockstradrParticipantBy the way I have listened to the links others have posted, such as
Antoine Dufour
The Swell Season
Andrew WhiteI agree they are all very good. I would definitely pay to see any of them when they visit the Bay Area.
In particular, I’m finding Antoine Dufour’s acoustic pieces to be very catchy. I’m not saying his music is marketable on a national level, but as a (amateur) guitarist myself, it is amazing to see what a pro like Antoine can do with that guitar.
May 3, 2008 at 12:52 PM #198656stockstradrParticipantBy the way I have listened to the links others have posted, such as
Antoine Dufour
The Swell Season
Andrew WhiteI agree they are all very good. I would definitely pay to see any of them when they visit the Bay Area.
In particular, I’m finding Antoine Dufour’s acoustic pieces to be very catchy. I’m not saying his music is marketable on a national level, but as a (amateur) guitarist myself, it is amazing to see what a pro like Antoine can do with that guitar.
May 3, 2008 at 1:11 PM #198603stockstradrParticipantAs for McCarley, one story for you.
When we first saw her play, backed by band, in a coffee shop in San Diego…the place was packed standing room only with several hundred people. Before she came on stage, nobody was paying attention. The audience was all chatting noisily in various groups.
When she hit the first couple notes with her voice, everyone in the audience stopped talking and turned towards her, totally transfixed. It was as if, in that moment, nothing else mattered for that audience except listening to her sing.
When she paused between songs, everyone in the audience all spontaneously appeared to turn to nearby friends and say something along the lines of: “DAMN! She’s incredible. She’s going to be a national act and were gonna be bragging to our friends that we used to see her play coffee shops in San Diego.”
It was a feeling that we were all seeing a very exceptional performer, and we were of the lucky few to see her intimate coffee shop performances before she got discovered and went national, and put San Diego coffee shops far behind her.
May 3, 2008 at 1:11 PM #198693stockstradrParticipantAs for McCarley, one story for you.
When we first saw her play, backed by band, in a coffee shop in San Diego…the place was packed standing room only with several hundred people. Before she came on stage, nobody was paying attention. The audience was all chatting noisily in various groups.
When she hit the first couple notes with her voice, everyone in the audience stopped talking and turned towards her, totally transfixed. It was as if, in that moment, nothing else mattered for that audience except listening to her sing.
When she paused between songs, everyone in the audience all spontaneously appeared to turn to nearby friends and say something along the lines of: “DAMN! She’s incredible. She’s going to be a national act and were gonna be bragging to our friends that we used to see her play coffee shops in San Diego.”
It was a feeling that we were all seeing a very exceptional performer, and we were of the lucky few to see her intimate coffee shop performances before she got discovered and went national, and put San Diego coffee shops far behind her.
May 3, 2008 at 1:11 PM #198669stockstradrParticipantAs for McCarley, one story for you.
When we first saw her play, backed by band, in a coffee shop in San Diego…the place was packed standing room only with several hundred people. Before she came on stage, nobody was paying attention. The audience was all chatting noisily in various groups.
When she hit the first couple notes with her voice, everyone in the audience stopped talking and turned towards her, totally transfixed. It was as if, in that moment, nothing else mattered for that audience except listening to her sing.
When she paused between songs, everyone in the audience all spontaneously appeared to turn to nearby friends and say something along the lines of: “DAMN! She’s incredible. She’s going to be a national act and were gonna be bragging to our friends that we used to see her play coffee shops in San Diego.”
It was a feeling that we were all seeing a very exceptional performer, and we were of the lucky few to see her intimate coffee shop performances before she got discovered and went national, and put San Diego coffee shops far behind her.
May 3, 2008 at 1:11 PM #198731stockstradrParticipantAs for McCarley, one story for you.
When we first saw her play, backed by band, in a coffee shop in San Diego…the place was packed standing room only with several hundred people. Before she came on stage, nobody was paying attention. The audience was all chatting noisily in various groups.
When she hit the first couple notes with her voice, everyone in the audience stopped talking and turned towards her, totally transfixed. It was as if, in that moment, nothing else mattered for that audience except listening to her sing.
When she paused between songs, everyone in the audience all spontaneously appeared to turn to nearby friends and say something along the lines of: “DAMN! She’s incredible. She’s going to be a national act and were gonna be bragging to our friends that we used to see her play coffee shops in San Diego.”
It was a feeling that we were all seeing a very exceptional performer, and we were of the lucky few to see her intimate coffee shop performances before she got discovered and went national, and put San Diego coffee shops far behind her.
May 3, 2008 at 1:11 PM #198642stockstradrParticipantAs for McCarley, one story for you.
When we first saw her play, backed by band, in a coffee shop in San Diego…the place was packed standing room only with several hundred people. Before she came on stage, nobody was paying attention. The audience was all chatting noisily in various groups.
When she hit the first couple notes with her voice, everyone in the audience stopped talking and turned towards her, totally transfixed. It was as if, in that moment, nothing else mattered for that audience except listening to her sing.
When she paused between songs, everyone in the audience all spontaneously appeared to turn to nearby friends and say something along the lines of: “DAMN! She’s incredible. She’s going to be a national act and were gonna be bragging to our friends that we used to see her play coffee shops in San Diego.”
It was a feeling that we were all seeing a very exceptional performer, and we were of the lucky few to see her intimate coffee shop performances before she got discovered and went national, and put San Diego coffee shops far behind her.
May 4, 2008 at 10:23 AM #198878dharmagirlParticipantIsnt that how the singer Jewel got her start, too? At Jungle Java in Ocean Beach? That’s what I’ve heard…
I’m looking forward to McCarley’s album.
One more acoustic, girlband recommendation: The Velvet Janes. They are an Aussie group with a fierce sound: http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=77442049
Good stuff…
May 4, 2008 at 10:23 AM #198918dharmagirlParticipantIsnt that how the singer Jewel got her start, too? At Jungle Java in Ocean Beach? That’s what I’ve heard…
I’m looking forward to McCarley’s album.
One more acoustic, girlband recommendation: The Velvet Janes. They are an Aussie group with a fierce sound: http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=77442049
Good stuff…
May 4, 2008 at 10:23 AM #198944dharmagirlParticipantIsnt that how the singer Jewel got her start, too? At Jungle Java in Ocean Beach? That’s what I’ve heard…
I’m looking forward to McCarley’s album.
One more acoustic, girlband recommendation: The Velvet Janes. They are an Aussie group with a fierce sound: http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=77442049
Good stuff…
May 4, 2008 at 10:23 AM #198970dharmagirlParticipantIsnt that how the singer Jewel got her start, too? At Jungle Java in Ocean Beach? That’s what I’ve heard…
I’m looking forward to McCarley’s album.
One more acoustic, girlband recommendation: The Velvet Janes. They are an Aussie group with a fierce sound: http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=77442049
Good stuff…
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