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.Start.of.DemoNews.092.........................................................

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                                                      |
         DemoNews Issue #92 - May 28, 1995            | Size        : 33,077
                    -------------                     | Subscribers : 1424
 DemoNews is a weekly newsletter for the demo scene.  | Last Week   : 1404
 It is produced by Hornet at the site ftp.cdrom.com.  | Change      :  +20
                                                      |
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
                                  <CONTENTS>
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

           Uploads

           Articles

             Introduction................................Snowman,GD,White Noise
             One Track Minds.............................GraveDigger
             Generation Gaps.............................GraveDigger
             Mailroom....................................Various Authors

           Advertisements

             Area 51 Records Advertisement...............Maelcum

           Subscribing

           Closing

=-[Uploads]-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

=----------------------------------------------------------[File Information]-=

 All files listed below are on ftp.cdrom.com or one of its mirrors.

 Ratings are completely subjective and do not necessarily reflect opinions
 of the demo scene in general.

 ftp.cdrom.com too slow?  Try our mirror at ftp.luth.se.  You may even
 upload to this site under /pub/msdos/demos_upload.

 IMPORTANT!!!

 Today, a file called clxmag.zip was uploaded to few finnish scene boards.
 It claims to be a "magtro" by Complex, but actually it tries to destroy
 your hard disk.  I haven't yet studied it, but I'll do it tonight...

 File is about 44k, and has following text in FILE_ID.DIZ:

 -------------------------------
        CoMPLEX
                   MaGINTRO
 -------------------------------
       jmagic/jugi/reward
 -------------------------------

 Needless to say, I did not code this.

 All sysops of BBSes delete this file, and if you see it in internet, please
 tell ftp admins to delete it.

=---------------------------------------------------------------------[Demos]-=
Location /demos/alpha/1995        Size Rated Description
=-------------------------------- ---- ----- ---------------------------------=
The Gathering '95 Demos

/c/clx_dope.zip                    915 ****+ 1st Dope by Complex
/p/prx_hype.zip                    849 ***   4th Static Hype by Proxima
/h/hexfiles.zip                    806 ***   5th HexFiles by NOD
/i/insomn.zip                      253 **+   6th The Insomnia Demo by YeTi
/m/morphia.arj                     388 **    7th Morphia by the Bit Killers

The Gathering '95 Intros

/v/val-fmf.zip                     124 ****  1st Fluid Motion by Valhalla
/v/val-bes.zip                      67 ****  2nd Bibi-Ergo-Sum by Valhalla
/m/maple_dz.zip                     48 ***+  3rd Maple by Dark Zone
/p/pshycho.zip                      62 ***   4th Psychedelic Mind by Scoop
/a/ausgebur.zip                     49 *+    5th Die Ausgeburt by Xenogenesis
/0-9/48h.zip                        48 **+   8th 48 Hours by Mercurite

Naid '95 Demos

/d/darkp.zip                       423 **    Dark Purpose by The Surrounders
/e/eden.zip                       1349 ***   Eden by the Psychic Monks
/f/flight.zip                     1795 ***   Flight by KFMF
/g/goeaster.zip                    308 **    Go Easter by Verhot
/m/mega.zip                       1145 **    Mega by Dungeon Dwellers
/o/opticron.zip                    580 ****  Opticron by Craw Productions
/t/technon2.zip                    427 ***+  Technon by Core

Naid '95 Intros

/n/naid-hp.zip                      92 **+   High Pressure by US!
/p/pisstro.zip                      64 ***   Pisstro by Friar + DareDevil
/s/squ.zip                          74 *+    Squishtro! by Dungeon Dwellers

OS/2 Warp Demos

/v/val_os2f.zip                    529 ****+ 1st Excellent demo by Valhalla
/o/os2comic.zip                    366 ****  2nd Copy of "DOPE", but different
/s/snc_warp.zip                    796 ****  3rd Warp demo by Sonic

X '95 Demos

/a/acme-big.zip                    676 ****  1st Big Deal by Acme
/a/ac_expr .zip                    574 ****  2nd Expression/Abstract Concepts
/t/tfa-uitg.zip                    374 ***+  3rd Uitgeroeid / Ground Zero
/m/mass-ult.zip                    320 ***   4th Ultimate Possibil. / Massive
/i/img_ancr.zip                    509 [n/a] 5th Ancient Routines / Image

X '95 Intros

/s/spring.zip                      100 ****  1st Spring / Logic Design
/e/envy.zip                         56 ***   2nd Envy / The Clan
/h/have_gun.zip                     82 **        Have Gun, Will Travel/Success

=-------------------------------------------------------------[Music:General]-=
Location /demos/music             Size Rated Description
=-------------------------------- ---- ----- ---------------------------------=
/disks/1995/l/lim0std.zip          181 ****  Various       Various
/disks/1995/m/moz-0002.zip        1064 **    Mozicart
/disks/1995/o/ofmods.zip           109 **    Ambient       Mot
/disks/1995/p/pure-br1.zip        1052 **    Techno/Trance Blaze Runner
/songs/1995/mod/a/actionru.zip      70 ***   Demo music    Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/a/amazing.zip       92 **+   Ambient       Josh Weeks
/songs/1995/mod/b/beanobat.zip      52 ***+  Demo music    Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/b/beyngshk.zip      91 **+   Demo music    Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/b/bsshoes.zip       38 *+    Realism       Josh Weeks
/songs/1995/mod/c/calvin.zip        74 ***   Techno        Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/c/changing.zip      65 **+   Demo music    Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/c/closette.zip     162 ****  Demo music    Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/c/crystdrm.zip      57 ***+  Percussion    Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/d/darkforc.zip      94 ***   Ambient       Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/d/dawntre2.zip     103 ***   Ambient       Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/d/dearrang.zip      38 ***   Demo music    Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/d/defftype.zip      38 **+   Demo music    Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/d/doomhell.zip     173 ****  Ripped        Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/d/drumride.zip      59 **    Percussion    Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/d/drumrun.zip       83 **+   Percussion    Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/e/eyeinsky.zip      94 **+   Ambient       Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/f/flirty.zip        47 **+   Ambient       Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/f/flying.zip        65 ***   Ambient       Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/f/funkyide.zip      62 ***   Ambient       Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/h/heaven.zip        74 ****  Rave          Bjorn Lynne
/songs/1995/mod/h/hikearun.zip      93 ****  Demo music    Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/j/joplin.zip        37 **+   Demo music    Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/m/mantjaz.zip       42 **    Dance         Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/m/maximan.zip       43 **    Dance         Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/m/minerun.zip      129 ***   Ambient       Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/m/mondaymo.zip      46 **    Pop/Lite rock Josh Weeks
/songs/1995/mod/n/newtype.zip       84 ***+  Ambient/Demo  Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/o/ontherun.zip      88 ***+  Demo          Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/o/overdose.zip      34 **+   Techno/Demo   Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/p/papua.zip        456 **+   Dance         Mot
/songs/1995/mod/p/party-on.zip      56 ***+  Dance         Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/r/rockrobo.zip      79 **+   Techno/Demo   Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/r/rollover.zip      81 ***+  Dance         Airon Jayder
/songs/1995/mod/s/safensnd.zip      34 **    Mellow        Airon
/songs/1995/mod/s/satchelc.zip      44 ***   Demo          [anonymous]
/songs/1995/mod/s/soreal.zip       532 ***+  Remix         moT
/songs/1995/mod/s/stalked.zip      102 **+   Pop           Airon
/songs/1995/mod/s/sweat.zip         22 **    Demo          Airon
/songs/1995/mod/t/terminat.zip     117 ***   Ripped        Airon
/songs/1995/mod/t/traingam.zip      41 *+    Ripped        Airon
/songs/1995/mod/v/virtualm.zip      45 ***+  Demo          moT
/songs/1995/mod/w/where.zip         69 *+    Demo          Airon
/songs/1995/mtm/k/k_stron.zip      266 ***   Techno        Maelcum/KFMF
/songs/1995/s3m/c/celgen.zip       140 ****  Techno        moT/Deus
/songs/1995/s3m/d/d-arbitr.zip     142 ***+  Ambient       Perisoft/Defiance
/songs/1995/s3m/d/d-densit.zip     192 **+   Ambient       Perisoft/Defiance
/songs/1995/s3m/d/d-guilty.zip      53 ***   Ambient       Perisoft/Defiance
/songs/1995/s3m/d/d-icftf.zip      227 **+   House         Perisoft/Defiance
/songs/1995/s3m/d/d-swig.zip       231 **+   Ambient       Perisoft/Defiance
/songs/1995/s3m/e/epi-chez.zip      74 ****  Techno        Mute/Epinicion
/songs/1995/s3m/e/epi-grim.zip      25 ****  Ambient       Mute/Epinicion
/songs/1995/s3m/f/fina-drm.zip     141 ***   Rave          Bolleke
/songs/1995/s3m/f/fm-guinn.zip     374 ****  Ambient       Mellow-D & Basehead
/songs/1995/s3m/f/fm-skys.zip      220 ***** Ambient       Big Jim/FM
/songs/1995/s3m/k/k-slack.zip      285 ****  Trance        Chuck Biscuits/KFMF
/songs/1995/s3m/m/maz-dela.zip     313 **+   Techno        Sonic
/songs/1995/s3m/n/nightmar.zip      62 ***+  Ambient/Demo  Ghost Fellow
/songs/1995/s3m/o/oct-pari.zip     143 ***   Ambient       Octoque
/songs/1995/s3m/o/orient.zip        90 ****  Ambient/Demo  Ghost Fellow
/songs/1995/s3m/p/psypack9.zip      83 **    Techno        PsychoTron
/songs/1995/s3m/s/sin_blow.zip      83 *     Remix         Tsumi
/songs/1995/s3m/s/sin_uv.zip       173 *+    Bizarre       Tsumi
/songs/1995/s3m/s/sum_jizz.zip     172 *     Hardcore      SumDeus
/songs/1995/s3m/v/vec_aliv.zip     199 *+    Techno        Vector
/songs/1995/xm/a/amerika.zip       785 **    Hardcore      Saint Vitus
/songs/1995/xm/d/digikezi.zip      145 **+   Realism       Alpha/Legend Design
/songs/1995/xm/d/dissolve.zip      270 **+   Techno        Nathan D. Bowen
/songs/1995/xm/e/epi-pot2.zip      355 ***   Ambient       Roland/Epinicion
/songs/1995/xm/f/fuck.arj          365 **+   Hardcore      Slice & Fly
/songs/1995/xm/h/herejony.zip      342 **+   Hardcore      Festa
/songs/1995/xm/i/ihb3.lzh          231 ***   Hardcore      IHB
/songs/1995/xm/i/ihb4.lzh          143 **+   Hardcore      IHB
/songs/1995/xm/s/spaceinv.zip     1107 ***   Hard Ambient? SLOG
/songs/1995/xm/s/setyoufr.zip      599 ***+  Remix         moT

=--------------------------------------------------------[Music:Non-Reviewed]-=
Location /demos/music             Size Description
=-------------------------------- ---- ---------------------------------------=
/programs/trackers/pmpoze.zip      125 OS/2 Tracker by Tom Stokes

=------------------------------------------------------------------[Graphics]-=
Location /demos/graphics          Size Description
=-------------------------------- ---- ---------------------------------------=
/pictures/ganjaman.zip              25 Ganjaman gfx from X'95 by The Natives
/pictures/genie.zip                 12 Genie's Revenge by Comik from X'95
/pictures/jh-ozone.zip             144 Ozone Logo by Joe Hova (an advert.)
/pictures/ss-smp1.zip              707 Original Renderings by Steve Stiles
/pictures/thd-rip.zip              339 The original and ripped NAID 1st. gfx

=-------------------------------------------------------------[Miscellaneous]-=
Location /demos                   Size Description
=-------------------------------- ---- ---------------------------------------=
/mags/d/dask06.zip                 445 Daskmig Issue #6
/mags/s/skymag09.zip               466 Skyline Magazin Issue #9
/hornet/traxw/traxweek.011          56 TraxWeekly #11
/party/icing95i.zip                276 An Intro for the Icing 95' Party


=-[Articles]=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

=---------------------[Introduction]--[Snowman, GraveDigger, and White Noise]-=

 SM: Hello all, and welcome to the 92nd issue of DemoNews.
 GD: Christopher, it's sure good to see Jeff here with us! Where the heck
     have you been, Jeff?    
 WN: Hmmm... lost myself in real life somewhere...    
 SM: That seems to happen to a great many in the scene at one time or
     another.  Anyway, what articles do we have lined up this week GD?
 GD: Well, our first article is called "One-Track Minds" and was written
     by me. It's about how people can get hostile with their opinions.
     After that, another article by me titled "Generation Gaps."
 SM: Is that about Star Trek...
 WN: ...or the gap between Trixter and I and you guys? :)
 GD: No, silly! It's about the parents of kids in the demo scene. Sort of.
     Ya know, Jeff, you're not *that* old, or are you?
 WN: nah... age-wise no, but scene-wise yes...
 GD: Ah well. In that case, pass me my pacifier.
 SM: But I don't live with my parents anymore!  How does the article
     apply to me?
 GD: Well, Snowman, maybe you can relate to it from earlier experiences.
     And think about your kids! What if they truly master 7800 polys in a
     demo?
 SM: Speaking of 7800 polys, I just made my own metal shaded dolphin.
     Actually it isn't metal shading, its tiny vector balls!
 WN: ... pray that comment doesn't bring hate-mail.
 GD: Ok, what's the next article? Christopher, what kind of mail do we
     have in the mailroom this week?    
 SM: Well GraveDigger, that's a very good question.  I think we have a
     letter from the ftp.mpoli.fi dudes about getting descriptions with ftp.
 GD: That sounds like an interesting piece of mail.. Jeff, do you ever get
     hate-mail?
 WN: Not to my knowledge...    
 GD: Well, that's good to hear. :)
 SM: I got flamed more than a few times in my day.  :(
 GD: Snowman, how do you handle such mail?    
 WN: ... he passes it on to me... <grin>
 SM: ... and if White Noise can't handle it, then I find out where they
     live and... well... what's the next article?
 GD: Isn't there another piece of mail this week?    
 WN: <fumbling in the mailbag> ... hmmm can't see any...
 GD: Wait! Here's apiece of mail. Boy, it looks old. Christopher, what's 
     this?
 SM: <blowing off dust> Hey! Its a mail from Dan Wright.  Its something
     he wrote me about a year and 4 months ago.
 WN: Hey, didn't Maelcum release something?  (or so I heard in my few
     stops on the Net)
 GD: That's right Jeff, Maelcum and IQ have released a CD called "FTZ"...
     I've heard some of it and its pretty cool!  This article is an 
     advertisement for the CD.
 WN: This introduction lacks sound... atmosphere... something.
 GD: This introduction lacks Trixter! With him, we would have the whole
     Hornet Core here.    
 SM: Trixter told me he'll be in-com-mun-a-ca-do until this Saturday.
 GD: Ah, I see. Well, I hope he enjoys his job...
 WN: I can relate to THAT.  Can you spell B-U-S-Y? :)  Speaking of busy, I
     gotta run now guys.  Take care.
 GD: So long, Jeff.
 SM: Later dude.
 GD: Hey Christopher, how are newsletter subscriptions doing?
 SM: Actually, _very_ well.  I get up each morning and there at least 5
     or 10 new subscribers.
 GD: Great! Glad to hear that.  Hey, did those party files get taken 
     care of this week?  Some people asked me about that.                       6PM r3cgm (+is
 SM: Actually, I'm in the process of moving the demos and intros now. 
     Next week, can you follow the format I use and move the music from
     those compos?
 GD: Sure thing. I'll be anxious to listen to some of that music again!
     I'm sure you don't want to hear another minute's worth of NAID compo
     tunes, huh?
 SM: Actually, with all of those entries at NAID, you'd think more of
     them would have been uploaded...
 GD: That's true. With 50+ entries, very few were uploaded. And I only saw
     one graphic uploaded! The ripped one, of course.
 SM: I wonder why people aren't uploading more party files.  I mean, we
     have a European site now so there's no reason not to upload.
 GD: Maybe next year at NAID, Hornet could take responsibility for
     uploading all party ready-to-release entries?    
 SM: That's a very good idea.  Be sure to remind me ok?
 GD: Sure thing. Well, I think we can wrap this up, whad'ya say?
 SM: Coolio.  Well folks, this has been Snowman...
 GD: ...and this has been GraveDigger...
 SM: And we are OUTTA HERE.


=--------------------------------------------[One Track Minds]--[GraveDigger]-=

 Demo scene musicians are fortunate to have a vast collection of freeware
 and shareware programs available to them. But once they find a program they
 like, they tend to stick with it to the point of insisting that it's the
 best. Only a newer version of the same program will replace it.

 They have a reason for hating other tracking programs, too. Logical? Not
 always. Take a look at a few things I've heard in my day:

 "A mouse isn't practical for a tracker program!" Some might say, indicating
 their distaste for FastTracker 2. Yeah, that little white thing with one
 ball that sits on your desk, waiting for you to open Windows. But wait, is
 the mouse more confusing than those hotkeys in other programs? The buttons
 in FT2 are labeled and even explained in-depth in the online documentation.

 "Scream Tracker is so buggy." Hey, so was the Intel Pentium chip, and
 millions of people didn't care much, except when it came time to return
 them for a free replacement. Besides, Psi admits that ST3 has bugs. Just
 save your work every so often and you'll surely get along fine.

 "MultiTracker is so old!" Now come on, my grandmother is old, but I still
 love her! Well, you see, she has a Corvette, and maybe, just maybe, she'll
 let me drive it someday.

 "Everything else sucks." Right. Everything with a copyright date before
 1992 is more outdated than the week-old milk in my refrigerator. Being that
 this is an age of binary numbers that don't change, good 'ole ModEdit will
 still write the same exact mod file as it would back when you first got it.
  
 But is all this foolish talk really just elitism? One person using a
 certain program that they believe to be the best? Or are there real reasons
 behind a musician's insistence on their work environment?

 How would Future Crew's music sound if written in FastTracker 2? Imagine
 Skaven loading in 600k samples and editing their sound right in the
 tracker? What if LizardKing picked up MMEdit and wrote his music in that?
 What if all demo music on the PC was limited to 4 channels?

 Besides the various advances in technology that these programs bring out,
 they also segregate musicians into groups that think their program is the
 best, everything else is junk, and anyone who disagrees is wrong.

 The authors of these programs never envisioned such occurrences. These
 simple programs come with little more than documentation, and maybe an
 example song. There's no subliminal messages that tell the user to hate
 everything else. It's just a learned behavior, most likely copied from
 one's influences.

 Why do some people take things like this so seriously? So, your favorite
 musician just switched tracking programs on you. True, some module formats
 are better supported than others, but you can always load a song into the
 tracker it was written in and listen to it that way. After all, in most
 cases you can't argue that a tracker will play a song incorrectly.

 With such emphasis on matters of little importance, I see the music scene
 as one that discourages beginners and only caters to the veterans. It is
 unfortunate and hard to reverse, but its effects are devastating for those
 outside of it. With such a large and still growing music scene, its almost
 impossible to be objective.

 -Brett Neely gd@ftp.cdrom.com


=--------------------------------------------[Generation Gaps]--[GraveDigger]-=

 One night, I was banging away in Scream Tracker, trying to get a song
 written when my dad, as he often does, came into my room without knocking
 and peered over my shoulder. Hoping to make a point, I ignored his entry
 and continued at my work; headphones on, eyes fixed on the monitor, and
 brain somewhere off in left field.

 "Can't you move the cursor with the mouse?" He abruptly asked, forcing my
 head to snap at the muffled sound; a sound from an object which I had
 forgotten the presence of. He was noticing that I had to tap furiously and
 repeatedly at the cursor keys to move the cursor across the screen.

 "Not in this program, no," was my response. I had chosen my tracker, and I
 had to accept the keyboard-driven interface, which I did not mind, really.

 But then, a short time after this experience, I realized how many differences
 there are between myself and my dad. But it seems to go beyond my own family,
 and I think it bears some relevance to why we all do what we do.

 Parents are generally working in somewhat stable careers, and have reached
 a point in their lives when they know that their childhood dreams will
 never become a reality. My father, for example, works in a hospital. His
 dreams are of boating and fishing, and being outdoors. But while at work,
 occasionally he finds himself behind a computer running Windows. Usually,
 everything in Windows relies on a mouse.
  
 Their children, (that's us, guys) are still dreaming those dreams. That's
 where the products of the demo scene come from, at some level. Visual
 hallucinations, audio delusions. We are also a dos-driven society, for the
 most part, where a mouse is frequently little more than an annoyance.

 It is a simple difference like this that holds generations apart like two
 same-ended magnets.

 And these differences can sometimes go beyond a simple matter-of-choice for
 computer operating systems. Often, parents are stuck on the idea of "Work
 first, play later." Or, "Reality first, dreams later." This is a matter
 that I meet with much difficulty. I struggle hard enough to stay out of
 reality as much as possible without it being forced upon me. "Dreams first,
 everything else later" is my personal motto.

 Some are fortunate. They can show demos to their parents. However, this
 takes patience on their part for them to accept something that you enjoy.
 It also takes courage on your part to face the possible rejection. If you
 are able to talk about and show demos to your parents, then consider
 yourself very fortunate.

 But if you think for a minute, it seems that there are many people who do
 not understand the demo community. To them, we look at things backwards. An
 illusion to them is reality to us, and vice versa. As if the world we all
 live in is upside down from the rest of the world.

 If only it were as simple as to grab the earth and flip it over.

 -Brett Neely gd@ftp.cdrom.com


=-----------------------------------------------[Mailroom]--[Various Authors]-=

 _____Can ftp.cdrom.com Get Descriptions?

 > To whom it may concern,
 >
 > We are currently in charge of maintaining the demo archive on
 > ftp.cdrom.com.  Recently, I noticed that your ftp server had the "dir -e"
 > option enabled where users could see descriptions of files.  I asked our
 > local administrator if we could set a similar option up.  He was
 > unfamiliar with this and said to contact the administration on your end.
 >
 > How have you enabled the "dir -e" option and can we do this as well?
 >
 > Thank you for your time.  Looking forward to your reply,
 >
 > Christopher G. Mann

 We hacked standard GNU ls command to support extra parameter -e. It reads
 descriptions from 00index file. We lost sources few weeks ago when harddisk
 crashed.

 -Johan Ronkainen jr@mpoli.fi


 _____Dusty Old Mail

 [Note: This is an old mail I found lying around.  Maybe you'll find it
 interesting.  Probably not.  However, its one of my most treasured mail
 momentos. -Snowman]

 January 21, 1994  <--- 1 year, 4 months ago!

 Hey Snowman, your the guy who uploaded all  those MODS right?  5+ megs!!!

 Yeah, we could still use help.  We have a few people but no one "stable".

 It gets out of hand if you do not KEEP UP and that is what has happened as
 of late.  However we have a little more control now...just that the
 incoming directory is starting to FLOOD again!!!

 Maybe we could start you with the MUSIC, misc directory.  Then if you get
 yer shit done you will be welcomed aboard...

 Many of the maintainers have started off good or with lots of talk and then
 dwindled to zilch after learning that it is TOUGHER or maybe not as
 exciting as they think.  We could do without those people.

 What do you say...can you help?

 -Dan Wright dmw@inca.gate.net


=-[Advertisements]=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

=----------------------------[Area 51 Records Advertisement]--[Dan Nicholson]-=

 [Following is a very important advertisement.  It is not often that a
 musician in the scene has enough drive and determination to produce an
 album, let alone 2 different cassettes and one CD.  I will be doing a
 review of the CD "Nothing is True" as soon as I get it.]

 Area 51 Records
 Spring 1995 Catalog v2.2
 --------------------------

 Ordering Info:

 * Contact before ordering from Finland or Australia! *

 send payment and correspondence to:

 Area 51 Records
 553 Thoreau Terrace
 Union, NJ 07083-9044
 USA


            email: moddan@ritz.mordor.com, rkn@phoenix.oulu.fi

                              World-Wide Web:
             http://kosmic.wit.com/~kosmic/areawww/area51.html

 * Shipping and Handling is $1 per item within the US, $2 per item to Canada
   and Mexico and $3 per item to anywhere else unless otherwise noted.

 * Allow 4 to 6 Weeks for Delivery

 * Pre-orders for releases which have not yet shipped are accepted, and
   encouraged. Pre-ordering allows us to get albums to the market quicker,
   and you to get the music as soon as it's released.

 * All music is non-returnable unless there is a defect in the media.

 * Cash, Personal Cheques and Bank Cheques in U.S. Funds are accepted. If
   you send cash, please realize that it might not be 100% safe, so we
   cannot be responsible for it getting here safely. All cheques should be
   payable to Dan Nicholson. If sending a U.S. Postal Money Order (or
   Canadian Postal Money Order in U.S. funds, etc), make it payable to
   Marilyn Nicholson (I don't have photo-ID and so I am harassed every time
   I try to cash these).

 * We're looking into wire-transfer and international money-orders for our
   international customers. contact us via email if you need help.


                             Cassette Releases
                            -------------------

 FTZ "Astral Paradox" (1994) - Riku Nuottajarvi (IQ of Kosmic) and friends
   create a blend of over fifty minutes of their potent rave and trance
   techno. Includes "Paradox," "Psychedelic Stat(e)" (written with Maelcum
   of Kosmic), and eight other killer tracks.

 ($7.00, Cassette, order code AR0194)

 Transmission 23 "Dish Conspiracy" (1994) - This release has a massive
   twenty-tracks of everything from 110bpm ambient dub to 180bpm hard acid.
   It was composed over the course of nine months by Dan Nicholson (Maelcum
   of Kosmic) and includes the hard acid track "Litmus," the middle-eastern
   influenced IDM track "Abduction," the Orbital-esque "Satellite of God"
   and many more songs. Over EIGHTY minutes of music!

 ($7.00, Cassette, order code AR0294)


                           Compact Disc Releases
                          -----------------------

 FTZ "Nothing Is True" (1995) - The second album from FTZ, this is an
   innovative collaboration between Maelcum and IQ of Kosmic. The twelve
   tracks are:

   1. Questions
   2. Nothing Is True
   3. Loend (FTZ remix)
   4. Masstarvation
   5. Sunrise
   6. Acid Trek
   7. That Noise (Excursion into the bleepin' underworld mix)
   8. Null Expression
   9. Hitch-hiking Reticulan [this song won 2nd place at NAiD 95 musicompo]
   10. Calling Heaven (Heaven is a Resonant Filter mix)
   11. Shearing The Pin of the Universe Within
   12. Supertron (Compare/Recall mix)

 This CD has over an hour of professionally recorded music on it that you
 can't get anywhere else! Order today because this is a limited edition.

 Want to hear some of the music? Tracks 4 and 11 are available in their
 original tracker form:

 ftp://kosmic.wit.com/kosmic/songs/94/mass-klf.zip
 ftp://kosmic.wit.com/kosmic/songs/94/shea-klf.zip

 ($14.00, Compact Disc, order code A51CD01)

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------

                            Area 51 Order Form
                           --------------------
                                                 Date of Order: _________

 Ship to: _______________________
          _______________________
          _______________________
          _______________________


 |  Quantity  |  Order Code  |  Cost (quantity X price per copy)
 ---------------------------------------------------------------
 |            |              |
 |            |              |
 ---------------------------------------------------------------
 |            |              |
 |            |              |
 ---------------------------------------------------------------
 |            |              |
 |            |              |
 ---------------------------------------------------------------
                             |
                    Subtotal | $_________
                             |
              Shipping Costs | $_________
                             |
                Total Amount | $_________


             Please make all cheques payable to Dan Nicholson.
       See information at the beginning of the catalog for shipping
                             costs and terms.


                      *  Thank you for your order! *


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=-[Closing]-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

 For questions and comments, you can contact Hornet at:

   Handle       Address                   Area
   -----------  ------------------------  -----------------------------------
   Dan Wright   dmw@inca.gate.net         Freedom CD coordinator
   GraveDigger  gd@ftp.cdrom.com          columnist, file mover, musician
   Snowman      r3cgm@ftp.cdrom.com       organizer, editor (DemoNews), coder
   Trixter      trixter@ftp.cdrom.com     coder, web master, file mover


...........................................................End.of.DemoNews.092.