The Pump Panel – Ego Acid!
MISSILE 5
Underground Resistance – Punisher
UR-017
I bought them at a shop in San Diego during the summer of 1995. I've never looked back. Still spinning underground house, techno, breaks, and hardcore after all these years. Underground forever \nn/
-KLH
Visit DJF's Beginner's MEGA thread and drop by my Facebook Fan Page.
I've read the books like How to DJ right... to learn about... beatmatching, phrasing w/e , Speed Test Scrabble Word Finder Solitaire but when I go to mix...
One day I was turning up at a gig, and this was the gear they had setup for me on a dining table, instead of the actual gear and PA built in at the venue. I gave them a choice of I am doing the gig using the stuff I was expecting to get, or there is no gig. The hall owner made a long face but had no choice...
i can't remember what it was. Had to be Lumidee - Never leave you, or Andrea Martin - Let me Return the favor.
This signature has been censored. - PCWO
My first ever record was Inner City's "Good Life". It was a single and I've been hooked with records since. It's also when I started to DJ.
I've had a collection of 45s & 78s for as long as I can remember. I do remember the first new record I ever bought.
I saw it at the local five and dime. (Woolworths?)
The Ventures' Batman Theme album released in 1966.
It took what seemed like months to save up enough for it. (I'd ask my mom for money to buy candy & not buy candy.) But was probably weeks, not months. I probably bought it around 1968 or 1969. Because I was only 4 years old in 1966 and wouldn't have been able to read "Batman Theme".
2:20
But the number of US Supreme Court judges was always 6.
Then it was 5, then 6, then 7, then 9, then 10, then 7, and then 9.
I forgot about that. They also sold comic-books (minus the front cover) that way. My parents had a thrift shop so the records that I didn't like I gave to them to sell in the store. The comic-books went into the trash because nobody wants a used comic-book that's missing the front cover.
There were also cutout LPs usually 10 LPs for a dollar. They had a hole or a bandsaw cut in the corner or the corner was cut off. So stores could not return them for credit.
But the number of US Supreme Court judges was always 6.
Then it was 5, then 6, then 7, then 9, then 10, then 7, and then 9.
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