Ripping off Mary Lou Lord...
Friday, December 30, 2005

Fuck the Dick Clark

New Years Eve. Pat's Pub. You Say Party! We Say Die!, Fun 100, The Doers, and Channels 3&4. 4 local bands for $5. I think we're showing up around 9. I think you should too.

NP: Mirah - Sweepstakes Prize

posted by Hanson | 1:22 AM

Wednesday, December 28, 2005

Top 37 of 2005: Part 2

Oops. When I posted the first part of my top 37, I had used an outdated copy of the spreadsheet. As a result, I actually posted my 29th to 38th favourite records of the year. Yeah, my bad. That is the reason you'll see a completely different record at 28 this time around. Just go with me here.

28. The Weekend: Beatbox My Heartbeat
If it weren't for the fact that I absolutely adore Andrea Wasse's voice, this would be a pretty standard pop-punk record.

27. The National: Alligator
A mature and thoughtful rock record that showcases a band at the top of its game.

26. The Boy Least Likely To: The Best Party Ever
Twee as fuck, and I love every minute of it.

25. M.I.A.: Arular
Maybe this just sounds fresh to me because I haven't a clue about the whole dancehall-y grime scene, but fuck if it doesn't get my booty shaking.

24. Giant Drag: Hearts and Unicorns
Cutesy and quirky at the same time, Giant Drag gives the old female-fronted-indie-band formula a unique spin. Plus, Annie Hardy is the shizznit.

23. Architecture In Helsinki: In Case We Die
A child-like innocence permeates this whirlwind of a ride through pop music.

22. Franz Ferdinand: You Could Have It So Much Better... With Franz Ferdinand
I like it as much as their last record, which should say a lot.

21. Nada Surf: The Weight Is a Gift
Like in curling, if you don't have your weight down, you're screwed. Matt Caws and friends have their weight down. (Fuck, what does that even mean?)

20. Orenda Fink: Invisible Ones
Orenda proves there's life after Maria Taylor on this multi-faceted solo release.

19. Ladytron: Witching Hour
Aside from being more rock than synth this time around, this record succeeds because there's more Helena Marnie and less Mira Aroyo.

NP: Mirah - Jerusalem

posted by Hanson | 11:14 PM

Whipped It Good

I did a bit of Boxing Day shopping yesterday. A couple hours and a couple Bordens later, I had me 20 new CDs. Yeah, I went crazy, but 20% off at Scratch was hard to resist. In my stack of purchases was Devo's Freedom of Choice -- you know, the one with "Whip It." It was highly recommended to me by Matt, who's probably the most knowledgeable music person I know. I don't own many albums released on the year of my birth -- zero before yesterday, in fact -- so it should be interesting to hear what my year sounded like.

More linkage goodness! Each Note Secure has a couple of mp3s from the upcoming Elliott Smith tribute album from Portland-based bands. Thanks to the aptly named Everybody Cares, Everybody Understands for the hook up.

NP: (nothing)

posted by Hanson | 1:20 AM

Sunday, December 25, 2005

Jesusmas Pressy

I thought I'd pick Christmas Day, the lowest blog-traffic day of the year, to post my year-end mix. This is as much music as I can fit into a 80-minute CD, and while it doesn't comprise my favourite songs of the year, it does represent the best mix CD I can come up with according to my skewed musical tastes.

Again, I had a method to my madness. First, I grabbed a few songs off each album that I liked, which made up my long list. I then whittled that down to a short list of roughly 50-ish songs -- maximum one per artist -- which was then trimmed one by one until I was down to less than 80 minutes. Once I got that, I rearranged the tracklisting to suit a mix CD. If I found that the mix wasn't quite right -- e.g. too much straight-forward chick pop -- I'd replace a song or two to balance things out. In the end, this is the mix I ended up with.

Download the entire thing in a zip file here. Do you want to waste use up your bandwidth on the mix, you ask? Well, check out the tracklisting:

1. Low - Monkey
2. Metric - Too Little Too Late
3. Jeff Hanson - This Time It Will
4. Sarah Harmer - The Ring
5. The Pale Pacific - Sucker Punch
6. Bright Eyes - First Day Of My Life
7. Architecture In Helsinki - Do the Whirlwind
8. Kathleen Edwards - In State
9. The Decemberists - The Engine Driver
10. The Catch - Afterparty
11. Sufjan Stevens - Casimir Pulaski Day
12. Maria Taylor - One for the Shareholder
13. Iron & Wine and Calexico - He Lays in the Reins
14. Laura Veirs - Galaxies
15. You Say Party! We Say Die! - The Gap (Between The Rich And The Poor)
16. Elliott Smith - Thirteen
17. Ladytron - Destroy Everything You Touch
18. Pony Up! - Matthew Modine
19. Death Cab For Cutie - I Will Follow You Into The Dark
20. (Bonus Track)

By the way, I made another mix CD using the leftover songs. I'll post that in a few days.

NP: (nothing)

posted by Hanson | 11:10 PM

Top 37 of 2005: Part 1

Here we go, finally. This year, I'm keeping by blurbs short in the interest of saving time. The might get longer as I approach #1, but right now, I'm keeping them at a sentence or two.

37. Broken Social Scene: Broken Social Scene
Chaos + K-os make a great combination. No post-break-out slump here -- just post break-out craziness.

36. Shivaree: Who's Got Trouble?
Ambrosia Parsley sells every note with her achingly emotive voice.

35. The Rosebuds: Birds Make Good Neighbors
Married couples make good pop music.

34. Cadeaux: Physical City
From the ashes of Operation Makeout come a record that's better than anything put out by Katie Lapi's old band.

33. John Vanderslice: Pixel Revolt
The follow up to last year's excellent Cellar Door is another solid collection of meticulously produced track that contains some of the most overtly political lyrics of the 'Slice's career.

32. Lou Barlow: Emoh
I've always liked the mellower side of Sebadoh (e.g. "Together or Alone"), and this is basically that.

31. Ben Lee: Awake Is The New Sleep
His Aussie charms are all over this mostly peppy record.

30. The Pale Pacific: Urgency
Yes, they'll remind you of the /other/ band from Bellingham, WA, but this stands on its own as a good, thoughtful indie pop/rock record.

29. My Morning Jacket: Z
What a leap from It Still Moves!

28. The Joggers: With a Cape and a Cane
Its unorthodox guitar work is what makes this such a compelling release.

NP: John Vanderslice - Letter to the East Coast

posted by Hanson | 1:15 AM

Saturday, December 24, 2005

Top 37 of 2005: Prelude

2005 was a pretty good year of music for me. Granted, it's probably the year in which I've bought or listened to the most number of new records, but the amount of music I had to consider when making up my list was at an all time high. My shortlist alone was 80+ records, and that's not even counting EPs, compilations, and reissues, not to mention the stuff I didn't like or felt meh about.

Before I start listing records, let me just talk about my process. As the geekiest music geek I know, I'm not embarrassed to share my total geek-out system. First, I list all the records I've liked this year in an Excel spread sheet. I then give it a score out of 10 a la Pitchfork and do a quick sort. Inevitably, there will be ties, and I break them by reviewing all the tied records and adding on another decimal place to their scores. If a tie still exists, I'll add another decimal place. What I end up with is a sorted list of the records I've liked this year, ordered by my personal rating score. When I get that list, I will review again, this time, making sure that I like every record more than all the records that ranked below it. Naturally, manual tinkering is necessary, but usually not that much. After all the adjustments are done, I'll be left with a ranked list of my favourite records of the year. Simple, eh?

So, instead of jumping right in with my 37th favourite record of the year, I thought I'd post the also-rans, i.e. non EPs, compilations, and reissues first released in 2005 that received a rating greater than or equal to 7.5 but did not make my top 37. In order, they are:

Clap Your Hands Say Yeah: Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
Tracy Bonham: Blink the Brightest
Catlow: Kiss The World
P:ano: Brigadoon
Devendra Banhart: Cripple Crow
Wolf Parade: Apologies To The Queen Mary
Dar Williams: My Better Self
The Raveonettes: Pretty In Black
Kate Earl: Fate Is The Hunter
Aimee Mann: The Forgotten Arm
Alaska!: Rescue Through Tomahawk
Nedelle: From The Lion's Mouth
Controller.Controller: X-Amounts
Low: The Great Destroyer
Anna Nalick: Wreck of the Day

Starting soonish, my actual top 37 of 2005, but before that, my year-end compilation and well as its b-sides companion.

NP: (nothing)

posted by Hanson | 12:35 AM

Friday, December 23, 2005

Metablogging

In their year-end readers' poll, Stereogum posed a very Maxim/FHM-esque question: who's the #1 indie rock hottie (female) of 2005? Almost every marginally good-looking woman in an "indie" rock outfit got a vote, including personal faves like Charlotte Froom (as part of The Like), Amanda Tannen (stellastarr*), Lara Meyerratken (of Ben Lee and Crooked Fingers), various members of Tilly and the Wall, Maria Taylor, Kathleen Edwards, and Gemma Hayes. Special congrats to Amy Millan (Stars) who came in tied for 16th, Annie Hardy (Giant Drag) in 15th, Joanna Newsom in 13th, and Eleanor Friedberger (The Fiery Furnaces) in 11th.

In the top 10, you'll find your usual suspects. With a whopping 32% of the top 10 votes and 496 overall, the winner is Jenny Lewis. I approve! Feist came in 2nd. Here's a case when hot music actually made the musician seem even hotter. MIA was 3rd, followed by Neko Case at 4th. Emily Haines took 5th, while the basket case that is Chan Marshall (aka Cat Power) grabbed 6th. My vote, Annie, came in a respectable 7th, just a spot ahead of model-cum-Sufjan-backer-upper, Katrina Kerns. Rounding out the top 10 are the combination of Sleater-Kinney and Fiona Apple, at 9th and 10th, respectively.

If I were to guess beforehand, I would've probably guessed that 6 or 7 of the names in the top 10. Personally, I think 3 or 4 of them would've made my top 10. And I suppose I could've just posted the list instead of writing it out in a paragraph, but that wouldn't be much fun, now would it?

NP: Franz Ferdinand - Eleanor, Put Your Boots On

posted by Hanson | 12:13 AM

Thursday, December 22, 2005

Nothing To Say

The DVD of Serenity came out on Tuesday. I didn't buy it since it has been strongly hinted that I /might/ be getting it for Jesusmas. If I were you, I'd buy it. After all, it's be best movie of the year.

It seems everybody has posted their year-end lists. Soon, it'll be my turn. Am I going to go overboard and try to write blurbs about all 37 records? Maybe. You'll just have to see.

NP: Wolf Parade - Shine A Light

posted by Hanson | 1:03 AM

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Short Stuff

It's really hard to compare EPs with LPs, so instead of trying to include them in my Top 37, I'm just going to list my Top 5 EPs of this year instead. Why just 5? Hell, even I'm not crazy enough to do a Top 37 for EPs. So here it is, in alphabetical order by artist name (yes, I'm trying to sort all my lists differently):

Colin Meloy: Colin Meloy Sings Morrissey
Iron & Wine/Calexico: In the Reins
Math And Physics Club: Movie Ending Romance
Maplewood Lane: Golden Skies
Pony Up!: Pony Up!

For lunch today, I got a veggie burger with bacon. Serious dude -- it's really good!

This has to be the best thing SNL has done in years. I love this like McAdams loves Gosling.

NP: (nothing)

posted by Hanson | 11:21 PM

Show Me the Moment

My top ten shows of 2005 based purely on the musical experience, sorted chronologically:

Jan 14th: Ben Gibbard, James Mercer, and David Bazan @ The Showbox (Seattle)
Feb 14th: Ted Leo/Pharmacists, The Joggers, The Yoko Casionos @ Richard's
Apr 30th: The Decemberists, Christa Min @ The Commodore
May 10th: LCD Soundsystem, M.I.A. @ The Commodore
Jun 01st: Kathleen Edwards, Danny Michel @ The Commodore
Jun 16th: Rilo Kiley, The Brunettes, Michael Ruinon @ Richard's
Jul 24th: Sufjan Stevens, Liz Janes @ Richard's
Sep 24th: Architecture in Helsinki, Wolf Parade, Dr. Dog @ Artspace
Nov 20th: Sarah Slean, Jean-Paul Maurice @ The Van East Cultural Centre
Nov 30th: Pretty Girls Make Graves, You Say Party! We Say Die! @ The Red Room

Death Cab are doing ferkin' SNL on January 14th. Scarlett Johansson will be hosting. Gee, I wonder if I'm going to watch that?

NP: You Say Party! We Say Die! - The Gap

posted by Hanson | 12:24 AM

Monday, December 19, 2005

Wake Me Up When Monday Comes

Two nights of drinking -- well, one and a half -- plus a lack of (good) sleep meant that I fell asleep while watching my first episode of Desperate Housewives. Well, you have to go out when there's a reason to go out; you're only in your twenties once (albeit the stretch is ten years).

I'm contemplating hitting up Toronto in February to check out Sarah Slean's art exhibit. The upsides: potentially seeing Sarah Slean live again, checking out her art and the city, and visiting with friends. The downside: it's Toronto in February, smack dab in the middle of winter. Also under consideration is SXSW, which has the likes of Annie, Belle & Sebastian, Neko Case, and Cat Power in its line up. Hmmmm. Decisions...

NP: (nothing)

posted by Hanson | 12:40 AM

Friday, December 16, 2005

Easy Way Out

I wish I could do a longer post, but this week's schedule left me very little time to hammer out a proper "Best Of..." spiel. Instead, I'll list my ten favourite Canadian albums this year, in a completely randomized order. Oh yes. I didn't just put them out of order; I used my nifty hacking skills to approximate randomness using my computer. I truly put the geek in music geek.

Ho's Top Ten Canadian Albums Released in 2005 in Random Order:

Catlow - Kiss The World
Cadeaux - Physical City
The New Pornographers - Twin Cinema
The Weekend - Beatbox My Heartbeat
Broken Social Scene - Broken Social Scene
P:ano - Brigadoon
Metric - Live It Out
You Say Party! We Say Die! - Hit The Floor!
Kathleen Edwards - Back To Me
Sarah Harmer - I'm A Mountain

In other news, I found vinyl CD-Rs today. Woohoo!

NP: Cadeaux - Show Me the Moment

posted by Hanson | 12:15 AM

Thursday, December 15, 2005

King Size Post

King Kong. Holy fuck. Go see it. Please.

NP: (nothing)

posted by Hanson | 1:10 AM

Wednesday, December 14, 2005

End to the Weekend

The rest of my weekend on the island was spent in Duncan, a town about an hour north of Victoria. Danica's parents live in a rural-ish area. They have a farm-like property big enough to have a barn that houses five horses. Along with the horses, they had three dogs and two cats, which meant that animal hair would be an unavoidable souvenir for me to take home. I had a great time there, petting the cat while watching SNL and curling. I ended up finishing second in Lord of the Rings Risk, but that was only due to my stupid mistakes brought on by fatigue. Ah well. I'll win the next time we're back.

King Kong tomorrow! I just got my tickets a few minutes ago. It's going to be great. I just know it!

NP: (nothing)

posted by Hanson | 1:03 AM

Tuesday, December 13, 2005

Weekend, Pt 2

On Thursday, Danica and I hopped onto the 11 AM ferry to Victoria, thus beginning our 4 day jaunt. We spent a couple days in Victoria, and then we headed up island to visit her parents in Duncan. In Victoria, we went around town, did dim sum in Chinatown, had dinner with some of her friends, as well as visited with the family whose kids she used to nanny for. (Oh, they were a pair of incredibly adorable kids.)

The bed & breakfast we stayed at was pretty pimp. Our room got upgraded because the one we wanted wasn't available for the entire duration of our stay, and because it was the off season, we basically paid about half of what the room would've cost normally. Boy do I love deals, especially when they come with a Jacuzzi.

While in Victoria, I picked up new issues of Harp, Paste, and Magnet. As well, I found The Joggers' With A Cape and A Cane at the downtown A&B Sound, a record I couldn't find any where in Vancouver. What are the odds? They didn't have the new Talulah Gosh EP, though, but I can forgive them for that. I also had my first cup of hot coffee from Starbucks. Man, I used to not drink coffee, but all these early mornings I've been having lately have taught me that massive doses of caffeine can be your friend. Damn you, early mornings. (The rest of the weekend -- to be continued.)

I used to love Hickory Sticks. I had my first bag in years today, and it seems the magic is gone. Now, I just find them cumbersome to eat. Oh, I yearn for the days when strips of potato chips brought me so much joy.

Pitchfork has reported that the Decemberists have signed to Capitol Records. I suppose that's inevitable, but I doubt they'd be able to achieve the kind of mainstream success that Modest Mouse and Death Cab had once they jumped to the big leagues. Well, here's hoping they'll keep on churning out awesome records.

Top N lists have been popping up all over the blogosphere. I've been working on my albums list for a few weeks now, and it should be ready some time soon. And as of today, I've got a preliminary tracklisting for my year end CD. That should be ready soon too.

NP: (nothing)

posted by Hanson | 12:58 AM

Monday, December 12, 2005

Showing Off

How can I possibly sum up 4+ jam-packed days in a reasonable-sized post? I can't, so I won't try. Oh, what the hey -- lets try. I won't finish, but I'll at least start.

On Wednesday night, before heading off on a weekend-plus trip with Danica over to Vancouver Island, I checked out The Like/Giant Drag/Catlow show at Richard's. I got there at 8:45, thinking it'd be safe, but much to my dismay, Catlow had started at the unusual time of 8:30. WTF? I caught about 20 minutes of their/her set, and predictably, I liked what I saw. I'm not sure if Kiss the World will make my overall favourite records of 2005 list, but my local/Canadian version will definitely have a place for it.

Next was Giant Drag. Their lead singer, Annie, threw out interesting, awkwardly-cute stage banter while introducing songs with names like "You Fuck Like My Father" and "My Dick Sux." Their tunes were solid, their musicianship capable. She was disgustingly cute to boot -- waify, straight brown hair, with a pre-Tom Katie Holmes thing going on -- which always scores points with me. I enjoyed their set very much, even though Annie didn't sing the "meow meow meow" part during "Kevin Is Gay."

The headliners, The Like, played a pretty safe set -- enjoyable, but not spectacularly so. The one thing that stuck out in my mind was their bassist, Charlotte, who happens to share genes with Giant Drag's Annie. Built much like her older sister, Charlotte was also disgustingly cute. On Wednesday night, she wore these boots that went up to her knees together with some really short jean shorts and tights that went up to the middle of her thigh. What resulted was a pair of impossibly long legs baring a couple inches of skin just beneath the shorts. That, IMO, was one of the hottest things I've ever seen. Now, I know I'm inching towards -- perhaps passing into -- creepy-blogger-land with that description, but I just can't help myself. So. Effing. Hot. Amanda Tannen: you now have a rival for the title of Hottest Bassist in Rock.

I'm getting tired now. I'll talk more about the trip tomorrow. It'll even have some music-geek content. But right now, I need to catch up on some sleep.

Oh, before I go, let me say this: Kleibrink is the new Jennifer Jones. Hate you hate you hate you! Stefanie, you'll represent Canadian in 2010. And Brad Gushue -- way to go!

NP: (nothing)

posted by Hanson | 12:06 AM

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Hot In Therre

Tomorrow will likely be my last show of the year, but there are worse year-enders than The Like, Giant Drag, and Catlow. One thing that's guaranteed is that hotness will be in the house.

Speaking of hotness, Stefanie Lawton's at 5-1! I don't want to jinx anything, but this definitely bodes well for them going into the final 3 games. In other news, Randy Ferbey falls to 2-4, all but eliminating his chance of qualifying for the Olympics. Ditto Colleen Jones. This is equivalent to stealing 4 in the last end to tie the game up -- it's possible, but unlikely. Could it be a set of young'uns finals in the Trials, with Stefanie Lawton vs. Kelly Scott and Brad Gushue vs. John Morris? With the way these guys are playing, I wouldn't bet against it.

I'll be out of town over the next few days, so updates will be sparse. But when I come back on Sunday, there should be stories a-plenty.

NP: (nothing)

posted by Hanson | 12:40 AM

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

'Suking Bands Up

It's an exciting time for Seattle's Barsuk Records. Armed with its fancy-ass new website, it has recently signed four new acts -- Rocky Votolato, Mates of State, The Starlight Mints, and Viva Voce. Rocky's Makers will be out on January 24th, Mates of States' Bring It Back will be out March 21, 2006, The Starlight Mints' as yet untitled album will be out in April, while Viva Voce's will be out sometime later in 2006. See, there /is/ life after Death Cab.

Stefanie Lawton is at 4-1 now after beating the Joneses Colleen and Jennifer 10-3 and 8-5, respectively. She sits atop the leader board with Kelly Scott, her vanquished foe from Sunday. In the sole men's draw, Randy Ferbey's powerhouse rink lost again, falling to 1-3, this time to Glen Howard. After a disappointing 5-4 at the previous Olympic trials in 2001, Ferbey faces another crushing defeat. I'd make a choking sound, but I have more tact than that. Oh, who am I kidding... *choking sound*

NP: Belle & Sebastian - Another Sunny Day

posted by Hanson | 12:14 AM

Sunday, December 04, 2005

Rocking and Rolling (Behind the Guard)

If you didn't catch any of the Canadian Curling Olympic Trials this weekend, you've missed out on some great house rocking action. It's not too late, though, as the finals aren't until next weekend. FYI, Stefanie Lawton's rink, the team I'm cheering for in the women's draw, has a piece of second place, sharing a 2-1 with four other teams -- the Joneses Colleen and Jennifer (grr!), as well as BC's Kelly Scott and fellow Saskie Sherry Anderson. The only team undefeated team is Sherry Middaugh's rink, sitting pretty at 3-0. On the men's side, the Newfie kid Brad Gushue, with the legendary Russ Howard calling the game and throwing second stones, is the sole undefeated team. At 50, this is probably Howard's last crack at the Olympics, so I'll be cheering for them too. If they have a TV in the new lunch room, I'll definitely be watching curling while eating.

(Aside: On how many other mostly-music blogs are you going to find a post about curling results? None, that's how many :-)

Mint Records, Vancouver's indie stalwart, is celebrating Christmas with an awesome show at the Cambrian Hall on Saturday Friday, December 9th. On the bill are The Organ, Carolyn Mark, Young & Sexy, Immaculate Machine, Buttless Chaps, and a whole bunch more Mint-affiliated acts. If I were in town that day, I'd definitely go.

NP: (nothing)

posted by Hanson | 11:49 PM

Friday, December 02, 2005

Going Places

We're moving offices at work tomorrow. As much as I'm looking forward to the new environment, I know I'm going to miss the building we're currently in. From the scary elevator to the water-damaged brick walls, its character cannot be replicated. You know when you want and don't want something at the same time? This is that time.

Pop Matters has a pretty good article on the late George Best, perhaps the best footballer to have come out of the UK. If there ever was a life story to deter people from excessive drinking, his is it.

Now, for the obligatory music tidbit: on Valentines Day, 2006, Mint Records will be releasing Vancouver popsters Young & Sexy's third LP, Panic When You Find It. You can read all about it on their website.

NP: (nothing)

posted by Hanson | 12:18 AM

Thursday, December 01, 2005

(More Than) One Definitive Moment

I wasn't going to post tonight, but I feel compelled me. What made me do it? A fucking awesome show, that's what.

Pretty Girls Make Graves. Previously, their live shows are often hit and miss due to their loud, twin-guitar and pounding percussion assault that cries out for a good sound guy. In the absence of one (or if the venue is shitty), Andrea' vocals would be completely drowned out, spoiling an otherwise great performance. However, this time around, the band's line-up shuffle changed all that. Out was Nate's jarring guitar, and in its place, we get Leona's sweet keyboards. The result is significantly different sounding band, one that doesn't rely too much on a perfect sound set-up.

The new sound of Pretty Girls Make Graves is a richer, more mature one. Their new line up produces a moderated heaviness, the raw guitar-and-bass power tempered by the preciseness of the keyboard sound. Without a second guitar, Andrea's vocals are clearly audible, and the keys bring out a new dimension to their now-familiar old songs. On the new tracks -- which all sound great -- they broke out a melodica, a saxophone, and a freakin' accordion, clearly an indication of the direction they are heading on the new record.

Whie this show lacked the unadulterated energy and power of their set at Richard's in January of 2004, it more than made up for it in the sound and quality of the music itself. I think I prefer this incarnation of the band to the previous one -- and not just because Leona is hot. I think that with this new line-up, they're capable of doing so much more and exploring a much more diverse sound. Given what I heard tonight, I simply can't wait to for their new record. It's going to be super-fantastic!

The openers tonight, You Say Party! We Say Die!, were quite good too. Right now, they're a bit rough around the edges, but all the ingredients of a great live band are there. In a couple years, they're going to be so completely kick-ass. I am looking forward to seeing their evolution live in person.

NP: (nothing)

posted by Hanson | 1:18 AM

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