Thursday, February 17, 2005
Free iPod update
Wednesday, February 09, 2005
Please help me get a free iPod Photo
- Step 1: Provide an email address and create a password
- Step 2: Provide your mailing address
- Step 3: Click through about a half-dozen Yes/No questions
- Step 4: Select one of the offers (compare them here)
- Step 5: Cancel the offer as soon as you can, or stick with it if you like it
I chose the RealRhapsody music service (ironic since the promotion is tied in to Apple iPods), which has a free 14-day trial. And you can cancel without ever paying a penny. You get credit immediately.
Then you have to get 10 other people to do the same thing. So this is where I need your help. And you can do the same thing to get your own free iPod. I'll even help you through my blog once I have my 10 referrals.
So, if you want to join in, use this link: http://www.freephotoiPods.com/?r=15016589.
The gmail account is one of my alternate emails. (Also, while we're at it, let me know if you want a gmail address since we now have 50 referrals to distribute.)
Let me know if you have questions or need convincing of the program's legitimacy.
Thanks! And I'll keep you posted on the progress....
Tuesday, February 01, 2005
RRB wins big at Gruene With Envy Awards
Three songs per Monday night = one cool album
Nature's Assembly Line, a collection of 15 new songs by Jack Logan and The Monday Night Recorders, is Logan's first album in over 5 years. The album was recorded in Athens, Georgia over the course of 2003 by Logan and a revolving cast of some of the best musicians in town including Kevin Lane (The Possiblities), Rob Veal (Dashboard Saviors), Patterson Hood (Drive-By Truckers), William Tonks and John Neff (Barbara Cue), Aaron Phillips (Liquor Cabinet) and more. Calling themselves the Monday Night Recorders, the group got together every Monday night at various houses with the goal of writing and recording 3 new songs. Each night after the songs were mixed down, the original tracks were erased. At the end of the year, 94 songs were completed, which the band whittled down to the 15 songs that comprise Nature's Assembly Line. The songs run the gamut from quiet acoustic to cacophonous rockers to middle-eastern flavored psychedelic meanderings.Check it out if you're at all intrigued. This album rocks.























