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> > It's refreshing > > to see someone that's not content to sit on their laurels and rehash their former > > glory (or worse yet, to keep playing the same old tired material from 20-30 years > > ago). It might be what the audience wants (or thinks they want), but I can't > > imagine it would be satisfying to the musician. > > After a Tom Paxton concert, I thanked him for performing songs from his first album > even though it was thirty years old. He responded, "I'm from Oklahoma. We believe > you dance with the one that brought you." > > Jethro Tull still does "Aqualung" and "Locomotive Breath" every show. They damn well > better. (-8 It's not whether somebody performs old material or not. It's whether they do it with passion or just go through the motions. When you dig in a mine, you might first be after only gold. When the gold is exhausted, you can start a new mine, perhaps looking for the same ore again. Or you can change your vision and find many other things of value in the same old mine. But you don't want to stay in the same old mine simply because it's a comfortable place. Then it becomes merely a hole in the ground. Dennis Leas ------------------- dennis@mail.worldserver.com