19.9.07

An aural supplement, episode 8

Running Time: 1:09:03 | File Size 79 MB
Download:
.mp3
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The end of the season is all upons and the air is getting crispy along with the grass. Crank up the mower one last time and let us keep you company as we empty hand our way through another installment of an aural supplement. Another fine supper time chock full of steak, cake and vegetables. The grub's on us and we're open all night.

1. Michelle Shocked “Can't Take My Joy”
2.
Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band “Radio Nowhere”
3.
Paul Simon “Learn How to Fall”
4.
The Beach Boys “Vegetables”
5.
Jim Gaffigan “Steak & Salad”
6.
Josh Ritter “Rumors”
7.
Cold War Kids “Saint John”
8.
Elliott Smith “I Don't Think I'm Ever Gonna Figure It Out”
9.
Pixies “Here Comes Your Man”
10.
Monty Python “Rock Notes”
11.
Crowded House “Mean to Me”
12.
Colin Hay “Maggie”
13.
Taj Mahal “Cakewalk Into Town”
14.
Joel Rockey “Too Little, Too Soon (Live)”
15.
Counting Crows “Omaha”
16.
R.E.M. “Monty Got a Raw Deal”
17.
Bob Dylan “Down in the Flood”
18.
The Kinks “End of the Season”
19.
Eddie Vedder w/ Corin Tucker “Hard Sun”
20.
Bruce Springsteen “Open All Night”

17.9.07

Brew monkies

In celebration of post number one hundred of A Rockey Home Companion, we are pleased to announce the birth of the newest member of the Strange Brew coffee house family delivered by the Mustard Room!

Stayed tuned for episode 8 of An Aural Supplement.

4.9.07

The empty hand

Perhaps one of the greatest stories of personal angst and the triumph over one's own demons can be found in the masterpiece of american cinema titled The Karate Kid. I have - with no shame - seen this film more times than I could dream of calculating. There is no doubt that I owe much of who I am today to the mystic wisdom of the tiny man known as Miyagi. Imagine my joy when uncovering this treasure from the secret cavern of read-along. It is part one of the story which has been given the name "The Empty Hand". Prepare to be dazzled as a couple of possibly australian kids and a handful of presumed inebriated adults awkwardly interpret the first half of this great tale through the lost art of read-along story telling.