I mentioned earlier that I had a bane to my existence. It was called Everyday Music. It is located on Capitol Hill in Seattle, across from the Dick’s Burgers, and next to the Jack In the Box. It has everything you’d every desire, musically; and it even offers a staggeringly wide range of vinyl, cassette tapes and DVDs.
In the Front Row, from left to right are:
Iron & Wine - The Creek Drank the Cradle
Sufjan Stevens - Greetings from Michigan
Travis - The Invisible Band
Calexico - Garden Ruin
The Flaming Lips - At War with the Mystics
The Middle Row, are:
The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, widescreen edition
This is Spinal Tap, collector’s edition
Confessions of a Reformission rev. by Mark Driscoll
The Radical Reformission by Mark Driscoll
And finally, in the Back row are:
Ben Folds - Songs for Silverman
The Restaurant at the end of the Universe by Douglas Adams
Not pictured - two Coca-Cola Blaks; the carbonated fusion beverages. (basically coffee and coke)
All but the three books and Spinal Tap were purchased at EM.
Tap was bought at a Fred Meyer, when my pal Grant went to buy a frisbee. His frisbee came with an instructional DVD.The Douglas Adams book was purchased at a quaint little used bookshop in Pike’s Place Market, and the two Mark Driscoll books were purchased at Mars Hill Church in located in the Ballard neighbourhood of Seattle. But the most important thing of all that I ended up with was priceless - my time with old friends.
(I realize the cheesy-ness of the closing line, but I wanted to end on a more positive note. Sue me.)
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