Mike wrote:
>Admittedly, I like my music LOUD. I have worked for professional
>musicians and in the theater for years and cannot stand a lousy
>stereo. That doesn't mean that everyone feels me coming. It only
>means that I can hear every note with some degree of clarity, even
>when traveling 60mph. Having a stereo is not limited to bone
>crunching bass and ear-bleeding treble. I just like my music clear.
>MGs happen to be, what I thought was pretty ideal. Ok, the
>convertible aspect doesn't make it ideal, but there are plenty of
>good, unobtrusive places to put in speakers. It's like this: I like
>hearing the car run as much as I like to hear music. If it doesn't
>sound good, then I try to fix it, especially when the noise is paired
>with black smoke!
> ~Mike Lishego
>
I *WAS* a professional musician for 25 years and then I took up theater
work and I'm quite happy with the B(PS)L standard monaural AM-FM radio I've
got. I can listen to the daily leftist-news-media on the way to and from
work and hear just enough of the music I might hear to drown out the worst
of the car noises. That keeps me under the impression that the engine still
runs well enough so I don't REALLY have to rebuild it next year...
But as a recovering musician, I must say that the only use I had for a
sound system in my house was to learn parts. All I needed at home was the
click click of a metronome. Now I have the click click of a bad wrist-pin
to replace it. Maybe I just need more recovery time...
Glenn Schnittke
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No one in Tuna knows what I do for a livivng.
Glenn Schnittke I'm cured. Leave me alone.
Nashville TN 615-385-2800
schnittke@mindspring.com
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