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REMARKABLE MOMENTS IN HISTORY THAT GENERATION X’ERS SAY THEY WILL ALWAYS REMEMBER: |
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JOSH:
“The same day the Berlin Wall fell, my hard drive crashed.” |
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BRITTANY:
“One horrible summer day many years ago in Texas, a power outage assassinated MTV for 2 hours!” |
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LOGAN:
“During the first Gulf War, I saw all those amazing videos of smart bombs in action and I knew that blowing things up was a job I might be able to show up on time for.” |
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Xander X. Xavier
— ex-X'er
"I remember that on 'Hands Across America' Day I got slapped for having my hands across something else."
Whether you're a Baby Boomer reminiscing about Dad bringing home the family's first color TV or a Gen-X'er reminiscing about your first color computer monitor, come back to the present and celebrate ...um... "Hands Across The Earth" Day by checking out some color
Eco Cartoons from Rustle The Leaf ...
Or go to list of jokes
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| SONGS FOR EARTH DAY |
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“Death of Mother Nature Suite” – Kansas, from the album The Kansas Boxed Set (Slipcase) |
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We've strangled all her trees and starved her creatures;
There's poison in the sea and in the air.
But worst of all, we've learned to live without her;
We've lost the very meaning of our lives . . .
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Album Review: Much of Kansas' music dealt with grandeur, myth, and the struggle to find oneself, but these boys also knew how to combine such lofty themes with more down-to-earth topics and music. Most of their best songs are collected here on this two-disc set, The Kansas Boxed Set. There are a number of what might be called "monster tracks" on the album, led by the two songs that propelled Kansas into the world's consciousness—"Carry On Wayward Son" and "Dust in the Wind." Both were huge hits that received copious
amounts of radio play in their time (and still do today). There are also many equally great tracks here—songs that did not receive as much attention but are just as good, if not better. Top on this list is the introspective Steve Walsh track "The Wall," which magnificently frames one's spiritual challenges as a mysterious physical barrier. There are
also grand portrayals of mythological tales and heroic themes, including the soaring, amazing "Icarus - Borne On Wings Of Steel" and the hard-rocking "Mysteries And Mayhem," wisely positioned back-to-back with the majestic sequel to it, "The Pinnacle." Kansas penned and performed a number of excellent songs about the tragic loss of Native Americans' way of life; included here are "Incomudro - Hymn To The Atman," "Song
For America" and "People Of The South Wind." Of course, the album includes the somewhat cheesy hit "Point Of Know Return," as well as a couple other lesser hits—unfortunately at the expense of a few much better songs like "Miracles Out of Nowhere," "Cheyenne Anthem" and "All the World." But that sort of tradeoff is inevitable when a
record company takes on the hard task of providing an overview of a band's career, especially when nearly all the songs from great albums like Leftoverture or Masque are candidates for inclusion on a best-of album. The first five original studio albums that
Kansas did—Leftoverture, Masque, Song For America, Point Of Know Return, Kansas—are all excellent and all worth
owning (in the order listed); and if you have those, there isn't much more here to warrant a purchase. But if you're looking for an overview of this great band's career, The Kansas Boxed Set does an excellent job of presenting you with a couple dozen of Kansas' essential songs.
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For reviews, to hear clips, or to get purchase info, go to Amazon.com . . .
Or search Amazon.com for more
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