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 Thursday, February 28, 2008
Ray's Return
Posted by peter

424444.jpgGod, I really am getting old. I was a couple of years out of college when I was seduced by the jangly indie-pop sweetness of The Lemonheads' It's A Shame About Ray, the album that served notice that Evan Dando was way more than just a pretty face. Released in 1992, it's one of the albums I keep going back to every couple of years or so to get a taste of its wistful romanticism, lithe acoustic sway and good-natured, sun-baked vibes.

On March 25, Rhino will put out a special CD/DVD Collector's Edition of It's A Shame About Ray. A promo copy of it landed on my desk this week, and, in typical Rhino fashion, it's a remarkable package. Along with a remastered version of the original album, it includes a slew of rough, skeletal demos that provide fascinating insight into the evolution of gems like "Rockin' Stroll," "My Drug Buddy" and "Kitchen" and create an intimate relationship with these songs you don't get from the album versions. The DVD, titled "Two Weeks In Australia," sprinkles in live footage and videos in a tour diary conducted by Dando.

One of the landmark albums of the '90s, It's A Shame About Ray signaled a change in direction for The Lemonheads. No longer the noisy little brother of American underground giants Dinosaur Jr. and The Replacements, The Lemonheads had matured into a brightly colored pop three-piece, capable of producing melancholic beauty (the sublime title track, plus the hopeful "Rudderless"), jaunty power-pop with barbed hooks ("Confetti," "Rockin' Stroll," and "Alison's Starting to Happen"), bittersweet acoustic strum ("My Drug Buddy") and a punked-up, whip-smart cover of Simon & Garfunkel's "Mrs. Robinson." And, as a bonus, you got Juliana Hatfield backing up Dando on "My Drug Buddy" with vocals that were pretty and biting — see her yelling "I just want a bit part in your life!" at the beginning of "Bit Part."

Though it didn't completely erase their punk past, It's A Shame About Ray was more about sunny, laid-back melodies that also tugged at your heartstrings, Gram Parsons-influenced country ("Hannah & Gabi") and lyrics that took a light-hearted, but sometimes painful, look at relationships and dysfunctional adulthood.

For more information on this release, visit www.rhino.com. Two years ago, The Lemonheads came back strong with a self-released effort on Vagrant Records. To learn more about it and to see what else the band's been up to lately, visit www.thelemonheads.net/
  

 



 




2/28/2008 1:03:20 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, February 25, 2008
Magnetic merger
Posted by peter


m_7ddad0bed148b0d235b67639de597bdd.jpgEvery so often, Swervedriver guitarist Adam Franklin surfaces from hiding, like a wanted man the authorities have been chasing for years. Now comes word the space-rock champion is teaming with Interpol drummer Sam Fogarino on a new project called Magnetic Morning.

Their self-titled EP, recorded with Claudius Mittendorfer, who engineered Interpol's latest release, Our Love to Admire, will fall to earth on April 19 — or as independent retailers call it, Record Store Day — and undoubtedly burn on re-entry.

8645.jpgA wizard with effects and distortion during his days with Swervedriver, the most rock-oriented of all the shoegazer bands of the early '90s, Franklin's otherworldly guitar work is one of the great hidden treasures of the music world. Do yourself a favor and pick up Raise or Mezcal Head, two of the best albums the '90s produced.

With Magnetic Morning, Franklin and Fogarino explore a dreamworld of ethereal, expansive soundscapes that unfold in astounding, cinematic beauty — "Don't Go To DreamState," "Cold War Kids Get Claudius," The Kinks cover "The Way Love Used To Be" and "Yesterday's Flowers" are highlights. To hear a taste of Magnetic Morning's debut, which comes out on the new L.A. indie label DH, visit www.myspace.com/magneticmorning.

Tour dates will be forthcoming. As for Fogarino, the guy's working overtime. In addition to extensive touring with Interpol, he's done some remixing for Nine Inch Nails. Dude really needs a hobby.




2/25/2008 10:40:39 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, February 21, 2008
Treatment for No Depression
Posted by peter

73-170.jpgNews of the demise of No Depression, the magazine synonymous with the alt.-country music movement, came as quite a shock around here.

Though No Depression was a competitor, I, for one, viewed the publication as a giant within the music magazine industry and will miss it greatly, as I know others will as well.

After putting to bed its 75th issue, the May-June 2008 edition, No Depression will turn out the lights for good. A lengthy letter explaining the reasons for the abrupt ending can be found at www.nodepression.net.

Take a moment to read them. The factors they discuss as reasons for its departure speak to the fragile state of the music industry and the challenges print publications like No Depression, and Goldmine for that matter, face in trying to survive in this brave new world of digital downloads, declining CD sales and the disappearance of brick-and-mortor record stores from the retail landscape.

200px-UTND.jpgThe first issue of No Depression arrived in September 1995 and it trumpeted a roots-rock revolution. Son Volt was on the cover — no surprise really considering Jay Farrar's old group, Uncle Tupelo, released an album called No Depression in 1990 that put alt.-country on the map.

Over time, a number of huge artists have appeared on its covering, including Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash, Wilco, the Drive-By Truckers and Elvis Costello & Allen Toussaint. Its music coverage was beyond reproach. The writing was amazing and it worked tirelessly to champion the cause of alt.-country, one of the only genres around that truly respects traditional music while offering a whole new take on it.

No Depression ... you will be missed. R.I.P.




2/21/2008 9:52:03 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, February 15, 2008
Band of brothers
Posted by peter

tad-press-cover2.jpgThe fact that Seattle is still standing after the onslaught of grunge is a minor miracle. Tad alone must have leveled its fair share of city blocks with its groove-oriented metal mayhem.

Undoubtedly, the heaviest and loudest of all the grunge acts spewed from the sewers of the great Northwest, Tad — with songs like "Behemoth" and "Wood Goblins," and albums like God's Balls, Inhaler and Infrared Riding Hood — and was led by Tad Doyle, a mountain of a man who looked like a lumberjack about to go on a killing spree. Tipping the scales at 300 pounds, Doyle was a powerful performer with explosive guitar riffs, the comic timing of a stand-up comedian and amazing energy.

A new DVD documentary, titled "Busted Circuits And Ringing Ears," from MVD Visual will be released Feb. 19, and it pulls no punches in telling the story of Tad. Look for a review in the March 14 edition of Goldmine.

Now working on material with a new band called Brothers Of The Sonic Cloth, Doyle looks back fondly on his days with Tad, even though major-label neglect, substance abuse and a revolving-door lineup ended its existence too early.

For his part, Doyle didn't mind that Tad's label, the iconic Sub Pop, chose to market him and the band as a group of psycho woodsmen.

"We were rednecks, but we were educated rednecks," jokes Doyle, who admitted in a recent interview that growing up in Idaho he did cut wood and that he does know how to use an axe.

Writing lyrics from the band's fevered imagination and real-life experiences, Tad came up with songs that were more than a little unsettling.

"We focused on deviant behavior and explored the underbelly of American society," says Doyle.

What people don't know about Tad is that, despite the violence, raw power and the sheer volume of its music, the band, according to Doyle, was heavily influenced by, and had a "sincere respect" for, Motown and early funk. Without that background, Tad would have been just another loud, angry metal band. With it, they had booty-shaking grooves that made their music so much more than just metal or punk.

For the lowdown on the new Tad DVD, visit www.mvdb2b.com.

To hear a podcast with Doyle, watch the podcast section of the www.goldminemag.com site for it to be posted. A feature story is planned for a later edition of Goldmine.

Brothers Of The Sonic Cloth does have a myspace page. Unfortunately, I can't get the link to work right now. But, just Google it, and you'll get there.

Also, go to www.subpop.com and view Tad's artist page at http://www.subpop.com/artists/tad




2/15/2008 5:26:24 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Blue Cheer's lesson learned
Posted by peter

bluecheer.jpg"We were just angry young men expressing our outrage at the war and poverty." So says Dickie Peterson, the bassist for proto-metal godfathers Blue Cheer, of the band's humble beginnings.

Ah, but Blue Cheer was, and still is, so much more than that. In 1968, the band that put the word "power" in power trio wreaked apocalyptic devastation with Vincebus Eruptum, an unrelentingly loud, mind-altering brew of sludgy, psychedelic heavy metal that would scare the living daylights out of everybody within earshot and lay the groundwork for the grunge revolution of the early '90s and today's vibrant stoner metal scene.

Not everybody was impressed with Blue Cheer back then, especially their fellow musicians. "A lot of musicians put us down," recalls Peterson.

One time in particular still weighs heavy on his mind. The band was opening for Electric Flag and Jimi Hendrix, and Peterson says, "I admired Electric Flag so much, not to mention Hendrix. We were so psyched to be on that bill with people that we put on a pedestal."

Some of the members of Electric Flag didn't feel the same way about Blue Cheer. Buddy Miles was the exception, according to Peterson.

While Blue Cheer was laying down some serious noise, whipping up storms of distortion against bulldozing rhythms and an impenetrable wall of volume, a few Electric Flag members walked around onstage and, as Peterson says, "chastised" the band.

blue_cheer-band.jpgWhen Blue Cheer had finished, Peterson says, "I put my bass down and just walked off. I had tears in my eyes."

He learned a valuable lesson that night, and that was to never treat fellow musicians that way. Now, though, with legions of young fans taking to Blue Cheer in a big way, especially after their much-lauded 2007 album What Doesn't Kill You ..., " ... the people who put us down make sure they have a photo op with us" and try to make sure Blue Cheer sticks around.

Still a monster live band, Blue Cheer, now in the midst of a grueling tour with an EP of live and unreleased material that's gone straight to college and metal radio, has had the last laugh.

To listen to a podcast of Goldmine's recent interview with Dickie Peterson go to www.goldminemag.com/Default.aspx?tabid=2366, and stay tuned to Goldmine radio for a broadcast of our chat.

For more on all things Blue Cheer, including a list of tour dates, go to www.bluecheer.us/ or www.myspace.com/bluecheer





2/12/2008 10:25:57 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, February 08, 2008
'Sex Bomb' baby, yeah!
Posted by peter

dr-4528.jpgLike snowflakes, but nowhere near as delicate or pristinely beautiful, no two Flipper shows were ever the same. Some, as drummer Steve DePace remembers, would devolve into 45 minutes of inner band fighting — he recalls guitarist Ted Falconi and bassist Bruce Loose wrestling on stage on one particular night — and 10 minutes of the group riffing off its best-known song, "Sex Bomb."

Then, there was the time that a woman walked up onstage while singer Bruce Loose had his back turned and kicked him square between the legs, setting off a huge fight that reminded DePace of a saloon melee in a Western movie. Stranger still, there was another show where two punks had sex right in front of DePace's drum kit as Flipper played on. It was just all part of the Flipper experience for DePace.

"A lot of people would complain, and I'd hear them say, 'Flipper sucks,' and then they'd be back the next night," laughs DePace.

Made up of ex-Negative Trend members DePace and bassist/vocalist Will Shatter, plus bassist/vocalist Bruce Loose and guitar phenomenon Ted Falconi, Flipper existed from the late '70s to 1993. In between, the band lost the enigmatic Shatter to a heroin overdose but now, it has gained ex-Nirvana bassist Krist Novoselic, as Flipper is back up and running with a new DVD and a flood of unreleased material just waiting to see the light of day.

The DVD set, from MVD Visual, is called "Flipper Live: Target Video 77 1980-81" and it contains two distinctly different shows that reveal, in graphic detail, just how distinct each Flipper show was from every other show the band ever put on. The first took place at Berkeley Square in 1980 and was a sloppy, drunken hootenanny that, purportedly, proudly boasts the only footage of Flipper playing its classic "The Wheel."

The second sees Flipper opening for industrial giants Throbbing Gristle at San Francisco's Kezar Pavillion, where the NBA's San Francisco Warriors once played, and here, Flipper rumbles its way, in nihilistic fashion, through a doom-laden concert that is both ugly and beautiful, and utterly hypnotic to witness.

DePace recalls it being "a very chaotic show" and credits Joe Rees of Target Video and Klaus Flouride for cleaning up the video and what was initially terrible audio quality from it in order to make this DVD.

Notorious for its false starts, wrong notes and surreal shows, Flipper was the punk band "everybody loved to hate," says DePace. And yet Flipper had some famous fans. Nirvana's Kurt Cobain cited them as an influence, and DePace says that Henry Rollins once told him that Negative Trend impacted him as a youth growing up in Washington, D.C. And Moby once joined a reconstituted Flipper for a rendition of "Sex Bomb" at a Paper magazine party.

Watch for a story on the band in Goldmine magazine and on www.goldminemag.com in the coming weeks. Believe me, you don't want to miss it. DePace and company have some great stories.

To learn more about Flipper, visit www.myspace.com/flipper, or go to www.mvdb2b.com to get the DVD set, which is due out Feb. 19. The day before the release, on Feb. 18 at 6 p.m., the band will play an in-store at the legendary Amoeba Records in San Francisco. Visit www.amoeba.com to get the lowdown.





2/8/2008 9:29:59 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, February 07, 2008
Traveling in style
Posted by peter

The Allman.jpgBorn ramblin' men, the Allman Brothers Band will always be ramblin' men. And a ramblin' they will go in 2008, the venerable Southern rock institution's 39th year as a barnstorming tour act.

Led once again by the sage Gregg Allman on keyboards and vocals, the Allman Brothers Band kick off its tour by hosting its own Wanee Festival in Live Oak, Fla. Then, it's off to New York for a 15-show residency — "Mayhem in Manhatten" as it's called — at the Beacon Theatre that starts May 5. After that stretch of shows, the Allman Brothers Band will perform at the Bonnaroo Festival June 14, followed by a summer full of show dates. Tickets to the Beacon Theatre shows go on sale this Saturday, Feb. 9. The residency has become an annual thing for the Allmans, who started doing it in 1989.

The present lineup includes Butch Trucks on drums and tympani, Jaimoe on drums, and the twin-guitar tandem of Warren Haynes on vocals and lead and slide guitar and Derek Trucks on lead and slide guitar. Oteil Burbridge on bass and Marc Quinones on congas percussion round out the band.

image001.gifFormed March 26, 1969 in Jacksonville, Fla., the Allman Brothers Band, members of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, is, simply put, one of the best live acts in rock history.

This year's Wanee Festival sports a great lineup. Gov't Mule will be there, as will Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi's "Soul Stew Revival," Levon Helm, Oteil & The Peacemakers, Bob Weir & Ratdog, moe and JJ Grey & Mofro.

For more information, go to www.waneefestival.com. And for the latest news on the Allman Brothers, including tour news, visit www.allmanbrothersband.com.






2/7/2008 9:50:20 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, January 31, 2008
Doughboys return
Posted by peter

Untitled1.pngThe "Black Sheep" of the Goldmine family has returned from exile in the form of The Doughboys, the stomping garage-rock combo from New Jersey that featured acclaimed singer-songwriter Richard X. Heyman.

Several years ago, the band reunited and now, they have a new album called "Is It Now?" From that highly anticipated release comes "Black Sheep," a single touted by underground tastemaker and former Sopranos goon Little Steven Van Zandt as "the coolest song in the world." For proof, see the Underground Garage site at http://www.littlestevenundergroundgarage.com/homepage.html and then genuflect at the altar of his amazing show.

Van Zandt isn't the only Sirius DJ championing The Doughboys. Take it from Kid Leo, the Mighty Manfred, Genya Ravan, Bill Kelly and Andrew Loog Oldham, this song is pure nitroglycerine. And Oldham — the old Rolling Stones producer — should know a thing or two about red-hot bluesy garage-rock.

Looking for an RIYL recommendation? "Black Sheep" is what a street fight between The Pretty Things and The Stooges would sound like. It's got hooks as sharp as switchblades, and it'll cut you if you look at it funny.

Here's a little history: the Doughboys count among its members one Myke Scavone, who went on to front Ram Jam, who begat the classic "Black Betty," which begat Ezekial, who begat Abraham ... all right, so the Old Testament isn't my thing.

Go back through your issues of the last couple of years and you'll find a Goldmine feature on Ram Jam. Or, you can read it here at www.richardxheyman.com or www.myspace.com/richardxheyman.

Word is getting out about The Doughboys resurgence. They recently headlined the Stone Pony in Asbury Park, N.J., a performance that was carried live on the radio station "The Hawk" in Atlantic City. In May, they'll play with none other than The Electric Prunes in Philadelphia.

Here's the roll call for The Doughboys: In addition to Heyman and Scavone, there is Mike Caruso on bass and Gar Francis, also known as Plainfield Slim (dude played on Billy Idol's recording of "Mony, Mony").

To see some live footage of the band, go to www.myspace.com/rrnj. Tell 'em Goldmine sent you. You'll be glad you did.




1/31/2008 4:38:38 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, January 25, 2008
The sons of Aerosmith also rise
Posted by peter

tab.jpgLiving proof that there is a whole lot of truth in the adage "the apple doesn't fall far from the tree," the barnstorming, bluesy power trio Tab The Band are set to write their own chapter in rock history.

On Monday, Tab, featuring brothers Tony and Adrian Perry, whose dad is none other than Aerosmith guitarist Joe Perry, drop the breakneck, dirt-devil LP Pulling Out Just Enough to Win on North Street Records. And believe me, the boys of Tab more than lives up to the legend of their father.

Reminiscent of early Aerosmith, with heavy doses of slide guitar from guitarist Tony and a relentless rhythm section, Tab, also propelled by drummer Ben Tileston, is also drawing comparisons to a wide range of classic and contemporary rock heavyweights, channeling everyone from Deep Purple and The Stooges to Guns & Roses and The White Stripes on ballsy songs like "Le Colonelle" and "The Continental." Getting down and dirty, and shaking the shit right off their shoes, Tab launches into "Chuckles," seemingly pulled right out of a lost Rolling Stones session for Exile On Main Street, an album the boys of Tab unabashedly love.

Hastily recorded in about a week's time, with another record on the way due out  later in 2008, Pulling Out Just Enough to Win is full of relatable stories about life's shameful little foibles, told with a cheeky grin.

To get a taste of what these guys are all about, take a listen to Secretary’s Day by going to http://www.northstreetrecords.net/secretarysday.mp3

And keep on the lookout for an interview with Tony and Adrian on the Goldmine web site, www.goldminemag.com, or stayed tuned to Goldmine radio for portions of the conversation and to hear tracks off the threesome's new record.




1/25/2008 9:00:17 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Radio, radio
Posted by peter

image.png"So, you had better do as you are told/You better listen to the radio" — Elvis Costello

images1.jpegToday, Goldmine enters a whole new era as the magazine you grew up with begins airing its own Internet radio station. So, do as Elvis says and tune in, or he'll come over to your house with The Brodsky Quartet and give you the beating of a lifetime.

We're still in the planning stages regarding programming but look for a radio show run by yours truly coming soon. It'll feature interviews with artists from today and yesterday, perhaps a review or two of some new releases, and some hopefully enlightening conversations with vinyl record dealers and other hobby experts. We'll get 'em to provide some hot tips on what various records are worth and what to look for when doing some serious crate digging.

As far as the music goes, we're going to be presenting an eclectic roster of songs, with the focus set squarely on the classic rock we all grew up with. Unlike commercial radio, we're going to be going deep into albums to get the best cuts, not just the ones spoon fed to you on your radio dial. Expect a mix of blues, prog-rock, a smattering of punk, and, of course, the great classic-rocks cuts you love. Just go to www.goldminemag.com, and find the logo above.

So, give us a listen, and feel free to send me your comments or thoughts on what we can do to make the experience more enjoyable for you.




1/23/2008 12:03:14 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Supersuckers be trippin'
Posted by peter

31510004.jpgSo many bands have laid claim to the title "greatest rock and roll band in the world" that the words have lost all meaning. And, really, does anyone think for a second that there's been another band in the last, oh say, 30 years that can, without laughing, make such a boast?

Enter the Muhammad Ali of grunge-flavored, politically incorrect punk: The Supersuckers (pictured at right).

Viciously funny, with growling, down-and-dirty grooves, alley-cat guitars and a lead singer named Eddie Spaghetti who's pretty damn special, The Supersuckers are the antidote for the sickness that pervades today's tepid rock scene. And the proof is in a live DVD/CD package from 2b1 Multimedia, issued back in June, that simply scorches the earth.

It comes with a ringing endorsement from none other than Motorhead's Lemmy Kilmeister, who's been quoted as saying, "If you don't like The Supersuckers, you don't like rock 'n' roll."

Now comes word the band, which celebrates its 20th anniversary this year, is preparing to unleash a new, as yet untitled, album this spring on Mid-Fi Recordings.

This will be the band's first full-length outing since 2003's Motherf**kers Be Trippin' and to support the cause, The Supersuckers will be touring throughout January and February. Starting Jan. 24 in Hillside, Ill., Spaghetti will perform solo sets with Jordan Shapiro prior to the full-band Supersuckers shows that will take the band from Seattle to New York City and back.

EPs have been The Supersuckers stock in trade since that 2003 effort. Eddie explains why. "Yeah, I pretty much thought we were done making full-length records. But the somewhat anemic response to our Paid EP sort of got me to re-think the whole EP concept. So, when we got in the studio this last time, we just threw everything we had at the tape machine, and we saw that we had enough for a full-length."

As for the new record, expect a more, dare I say, "adult" outing from the Supersuckers. "It's a little different than our previous records," says Eddie. "I almost hate to say this, but it's a little bit more mature. An ugly word to use to describe what we do, but I think it fits this time around. But it's an awesome record and I'm really proud of the way it's turned out."

2007 was a huge touring year for the band, and they filmed "Supersuckers Fan Club DVD #2" in Belgrade, Siberia in March. The DVD will be made available to members of the band's fan club, 1,000 rock 'n' rollers strong. A clip can be viewed at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KZeYQv3Ur2k

For more on The Supersuckers, a band that's backed Willie Nelson, Eddie Vedder, Steve Earle and Kelly Deal of The Breeders, visit www.supersuckers.com. Tour dates are listed there. Go out and see 'em!

You got any other news of some super new releases coming down the pike that you're just itching to hear? Let me know about 'em and we'll talk.




1/16/2008 4:13:23 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, January 09, 2008
Snowed in
Posted by peter

LONESOME COVER.jpgCabin fever was epidemic among The Rosewood Thieves. A winter storm left the roots-oriented young band, often compared to — ahem — The Band, snowed in for three days in a cabin in the Pocono Mountains.

That gave them more than enough time to record their new EP, Lonesome, a quiet, hushed blend of country-rock and '70s AM radio pop that moves at a nice, slow pace.

Lithe vocal harmonies, a hint of pedal steel howl in the distance and the delicate interplay of softly spun acoustic gold make tracks like "California Moon," "A Bullet Painted Red" and "Honey, Stay Awhile" are made for adult snow days. Did being shut-in for all that time influence the sound of the EP?

"It had everything to do with it," says Erick Jordan. "We weren't in a normal recording studio, just in a basement. So, we were all relaxed and had time on our side. We are constantly doing home recordings but more in the demo sense. We were all so happy with how these all turned out that we really wanted to take it a little further. We went to L.A. to have Thom Monahan mix it, and it's always nice to work with him."

DECKER COVER.jpgThe Rosewood Thieves are Jordan on vocals and guitar, Mackenzie Vernacchio on organ and Wurlitzer, Paul Jenkins on guitar and bass and Mark Bordenet on drums. Along with Lonesome, the Thieves are also reissuing a previous EP, From The Decker House, with three unreleased tracks. A more freewheeling, rollicking record, in the tradition of The Band and Bob Dylan, From The Decker House is another winner from The Rosewood Thieves you should check out.

To learn more about The Rosewood Thieves, visit www.myspace.com/therosewoodthieves. To read the entire interview with Jordan, stay tuned to www.goldminemag.com.




1/9/2008 3:52:40 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]