Monday, December 05, 2005
more shipping
Well I’m starting to clear my head of this cold and trying to gather the energy for some shopping. Yesterday, the last of my Fall Sale on ebay ended to push the total sold to just over $3,000. Sounds good, but ebay got another $77 and Paypal is continually taking their 5.5% of the total.
I’m going to mention the repressed Sublime 40 oz. 2x LP again. I got my copies and it’s a fantastic package for about $25. Available here. Even though you are probably not cool enough to “get it”, buy one for your kid to give them in 10 years so they won’t have to pay ridiculous prices on ebay.
Next on the agenda is the first release from 75orless Records and should be going to press real soon. On top of that The Staggering Statistics received the CEA (Cincinnati Entertainment Awards) Critical Achievement Award as Best New Artist of 2005, linked here. Get ready to rock.
The CEA states: Frontman Austin Brown's laconic voice and tales of the hard life hit even harder when paired with this Cincy trio's bluesy, sinuous raucous, marked by a rhythm section that could anchor a battleship. The melodic shagginess of early Pavement often comes to mind, yet SS possess a genuinely dark undercurrent that's entirely their own.
I’m going to mention the repressed Sublime 40 oz. 2x LP again. I got my copies and it’s a fantastic package for about $25. Available here. Even though you are probably not cool enough to “get it”, buy one for your kid to give them in 10 years so they won’t have to pay ridiculous prices on ebay.
Next on the agenda is the first release from 75orless Records and should be going to press real soon. On top of that The Staggering Statistics received the CEA (Cincinnati Entertainment Awards) Critical Achievement Award as Best New Artist of 2005, linked here. Get ready to rock.
The CEA states: Frontman Austin Brown's laconic voice and tales of the hard life hit even harder when paired with this Cincy trio's bluesy, sinuous raucous, marked by a rhythm section that could anchor a battleship. The melodic shagginess of early Pavement often comes to mind, yet SS possess a genuinely dark undercurrent that's entirely their own.