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	<title>Comments on: Edith Frost</title>
	<atom:link href="http://edithfrost.com/edith_frost/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://edithfrost.com/edith_frost/</link>
	<description>Roller-skating enthusiast</description>
	<pubDate>Thu, 20 Nov 2008 16:19:11 +0000</pubDate>
	
		<item>
		<title>By: clay</title>
		<link>http://edithfrost.com/edith_frost/#comment-67</link>
		<dc:creator>clay</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 19 Oct 2003 20:29:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://edithfrost.com/edith_frost/#comment-67</guid>
		<description>&lt;p&gt;hmmm, I just realized that it was your first recorded song on your first CD, "Evangeline"  on your self-titled 1996 CD that  was played when I called in a request at the local college radio station  at 4:30 in the morning  from my van that Wednesday morning  October 20, 1999.&#160; I'm usually not up and driving at 4 a.m.,  but that morning I was, and to help stay awake I'd  tuned in the local college radio station and heard  the last half-hour of a show that must have been a 3 to 5 a.m. show. They give those least wanted overnight  time slots to first timers at the station. That Wednesday morning  must have been only her fourth or fifth weekly  show.The music she played was stuff I liked, like Elliot Smith, Lisa Germano, (I forget exactly what songs), but , when she invited anyone listening to call in  with a request,  I  thought  I'd  take a long shot, and suggest anything by Edith Frost. I'd just  found your music earlier that year and as I sometimes do, took a chance and  purchased that  CD (knowing full well you can't tell a CD by its cover), intrigued by that  errily rain-distorted  cover of the Sears Tower on "Calling Over Time" .&#160; So at the time I called in to request  anything by Edith Frost (thinking she  probably wouldn't have heard of you, which was true - but that she would like ypir music if she ever did hear it  but  most likely wouldn't find anything in the record library  at the station anyway.) A coupler of songs later  a song came on that I liked, but didn't know. So I called back again and said it was me again, and asked who that song was by. I felt embarrassed  when she told me that she had found a CD at the station b Edith Frost and played that first track  "Evangeline". Duh, yeah, I should have recognized the voice. I thought it was you, but wasn't positive. I liked it and thanked her for  actually finding and playing it. I told her I really didn't think she'd find anything by Edith Frost. Wrong again.&#160; I figured that,  even if she didn't find  anything, my request would  encourage this d.j. to look for  your album. I didn't even know about that  1996 four-song e.p. at that time.&#160; And that's how I first heard your first song on your first CD, by  tuning in for the first time to this  first-semester  radio show called "Hibiscus Galoshes by a third-year student whose on-air persona&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;was named "Daisy Deadpetals" (after the Tori Amos song of the same name).&#160; Over the next 363 days  her  program and the real person behind the person would have a profound affect on my life, then  vanish from it as  suddenly and unexpectedly  as she had entered it.&lt;/p&gt;
</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>hmmm, I just realized that it was your first recorded song on your first CD, &#8220;Evangeline&#8221;  on your self-titled 1996 CD that  was played when I called in a request at the local college radio station  at 4:30 in the morning  from my van that Wednesday morning  October 20, 1999.&nbsp; I&#8217;m usually not up and driving at 4 a.m.,  but that morning I was, and to help stay awake I&#8217;d  tuned in the local college radio station and heard  the last half-hour of a show that must have been a 3 to 5 a.m. show. They give those least wanted overnight  time slots to first timers at the station. That Wednesday morning  must have been only her fourth or fifth weekly  show.The music she played was stuff I liked, like Elliot Smith, Lisa Germano, (I forget exactly what songs), but , when she invited anyone listening to call in  with a request,  I  thought  I&#8217;d  take a long shot, and suggest anything by Edith Frost. I&#8217;d just  found your music earlier that year and as I sometimes do, took a chance and  purchased that  CD (knowing full well you can&#8217;t tell a CD by its cover), intrigued by that  errily rain-distorted  cover of the Sears Tower on &#8220;Calling Over Time&#8221; .&nbsp; So at the time I called in to request  anything by Edith Frost (thinking she  probably wouldn&#8217;t have heard of you, which was true - but that she would like ypir music if she ever did hear it  but  most likely wouldn&#8217;t find anything in the record library  at the station anyway.) A coupler of songs later  a song came on that I liked, but didn&#8217;t know. So I called back again and said it was me again, and asked who that song was by. I felt embarrassed  when she told me that she had found a CD at the station b Edith Frost and played that first track  &#8220;Evangeline&#8221;. Duh, yeah, I should have recognized the voice. I thought it was you, but wasn&#8217;t positive. I liked it and thanked her for  actually finding and playing it. I told her I really didn&#8217;t think she&#8217;d find anything by Edith Frost. Wrong again.&nbsp; I figured that,  even if she didn&#8217;t find  anything, my request would  encourage this d.j. to look for  your album. I didn&#8217;t even know about that  1996 four-song e.p. at that time.&nbsp; And that&#8217;s how I first heard your first song on your first CD, by  tuning in for the first time to this  first-semester  radio show called &#8220;Hibiscus Galoshes by a third-year student whose on-air persona</p>

<p>was named &#8220;Daisy Deadpetals&#8221; (after the Tori Amos song of the same name).&nbsp; Over the next 363 days  her  program and the real person behind the person would have a profound affect on my life, then  vanish from it as  suddenly and unexpectedly  as she had entered it.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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