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Friday, 28 December 2007

Eric's Top 25 iPod Songs for 2007

Posted on 07:14 by Unknown
It's the last week of the year, that means that it's "End of the Year List" time.

As per with last year, there's just one I'll offer you. It's the list of songs below which --for whatever it's worth-- ended up as the most played songs on my iPod this year. I know this, because I intentionally reset the song count on my iTunes somewhere during the first week of last January.

It's a fun exercise, actually. I highly recommend giving it a shot. Because it gives you a little musical snapshot of your year...the things that were happening...what you were going through.

In the case of these songs, there are only two or three that ever got any airplay as "hits." (What does that say about me?!) You will also note that although this is advertised as a "Top 25," there are
not twenty-five entries. Apparently, this is because iTunes will not include songs that are not also for sale at their store. Which is really just as well...since the most of the excluded ones are demos of my own songs and only got lots of plays just because I was listening for ways to improve them.

So, without further delay:

Eric's Most Played iPod Songs for 2007

Song Artist Album

1. Lullaby Dixie Chicks Taking the Long Way
Here's a general rule of thumb for songs on my iPod: If it's a song that I like, Dennise likes,
and Maria likes, it's no brainer that it's gonna get a lot of plays. Even though we all three have iPods, mine's the one we listen to most on long trips. Point of this being, that this where all the Dixie Chick songs on this list came from.

The album is actually well over a year old. But we ran it into the ground listening to it this year. And this sweet song is everybody in the family's favorite among all of them. Of course, Dennise and I like it for the obvious reasons of how it makes us think of Maria.

2. Breathe Me Sia Colour the Small One
Right before Christmas last year, Dennise and I got on a kick of watching episodes of "Six Feet Under." We got so obsessed with the show that we went out and bought all the box sets. And around the holidays last year, we were on a serious "
Six Feet Under" binge on our DVD player...sometimes staying up far too late watching "just one more" episode. In retrospect, it's an odd way to spend your holidays, watching a show about morticians and death. But we found ourselves obsessed.

Fans of show argue that the final episode is perhaps the greatest last episode of any show in television history. That's saying a lot. But I have to agree. It wraps things up better than perhaps any other show I've ever seen, pushing out the plotlines long enough so that you get to see just what happens to each character at their end. It was as fitting an end to any show --and especially that one-- as I've ever seen. Having been total steeped in the show for several weeks, when we finally watched that last show, I found myself bawling at the lyricism of it.

This song from Sia is the wordless soundtrack to the final minutes of the show...the final minutes that fans of the show rave so much about.

"Six Feet Under" probably used music better than almost any other show I know of. This hauntingly beautiful song was a marvelous "Coda." So, long after we stopped watching the episodes, I kept listening to this song.

3. The Long Way Around Dixie Chicks Taking the Long Way
Another from the Chicks. The opening CD track, so it also got a lot of play in the car this year. Many times, we all found ourselves singing along at the tops of our lungs while this one played.

4. Not Ready to Make Nice Dixie Chicks Taking the Long Way
Ditto for this song. It's such an angry song, but such an honest one. I really did like the "Taking the Long Way" CD, and I hope the new fans that found the Chicks find stay with them. As you may remember, I blogged about them in my "Things to Like About Texas" section. The things they went through seem more surreal all the time as the time passes. But it was all real, and all quite disturbing that it happened in modern day America.

5. A Remark You Made Jerry Douglas The Best Kept Secret
Charles and Mary invited us to go see Paul Simon at the Nokia sometime back. That would have been cool enough by itself...and it was a great show. But Jerry Douglas was the opener. It was actually an odd pairing...but I'm glad whoever thought of it did...because he and his band were fantastic.

I bought this CD during the intermission. Apparently, folks in know know that Douglas is one of the best slide players in the world, and he's done session work on an array of other star's CD. (Including Fogelberg's "High Country Snows," as I noticed earlier this week...) This song, as you may know, is actually a Spirogyra song, and I have that original CD and loved it for years. It's a really cool and creative cover on the slide guitar.

6. Souvenirs Gretchen Peters Gretchen Peters
Gretchen Peters is my biggest Columbus discovery for this past year. I bumped into her via MySpace, and then went out and bought several of her CDs. Her writing is smart and her voice is golden. I am always attracted to smart, nice lyrics that make you think...or at least give you permission to. Gretchen Peter's songs do just that.

Since my Columbus discovery of her, I now seem to see her name everywhere. I believe she even played Uncle Calvin's back a couple of months ago.

This song is a really fine tune about collecting both metaphorical and real "Stuckey's" souvenirs. My favorite line is:

"They got Mount Rushmore on a cup,
Everybody needs one of those.
For a dollar more, they'll fill it up,
And you can drink out of Lincoln's nose."


Brilliant.

If you haven't discovered her, consider this my high recommendation that you do.

7. Picasso And Me Gretchen Peters Gretchen Peters
A second song from Gretchen Peters. This one written, I assume, from the perspective of Picasso's longtime lover. Very nice.

8. The Aviator's Song Gretchen Peters Halcyon
This one made me cry. I think it was the first song I heard from her on her Myspace page.

Don't know how autobiographical it is, but it's about a pilot is his relationship to the writer. He's always off flying, and his family/loved ones are left on the ground and left behind. Very, very poignant bridge...and, again, very smart, nice lyrics.

9. Lightly Tread Billy Jonas Get Real
This one is the first cut from my good friend Billy Jonas' newest CD. Billy's another one who always offers up some tasty, thoughtful lyrics, and tackles issue of spirituality and life without become dogmatic. If you liked "Life So Far," you will love "Get Real." (And if you don't have "Life So Far," you should run out and get it.)

10. Hanalei David LaMotte Spin
Another one from a friend of mine. Like Billy, David is one of the great songwriters from Asheville, NC. This is not a deep song, but I love the feel, the music, and especially the way it builds to the closing chorus. David: if you ever sing this live and I'm around, I want to sing background with you.

11. Imogene Gretchen Peters Halcyon
Yet another from Gretchen Peters. This song ties her as the artist who appears most often in this year's top twenty-five list. A tasty song about a no-nonsense woman who wins the jackpot at the slot machines, but still keeps her life-bearings. Very, very catchy song, without being too "hook-y."

12. Sir Aly B Jerry Douglas The Best Kept Secret
Another one from Jerry Douglas, from that same CD. Beautiful production and playing.

13. The Calling Mary Chapin Carpenter The Calling
The title track from Mary Chapin-C's new CD. This is great CD. And this song is classic Mary Chapin-Carpenter. If you've ever been a fan of hers, this CD will not disappoint. I like the way this song tackles the whole issue of people being "called," but broadens it out to be very inclusive.

14. To the Morning Dan Fogelberg Home Free
Before December 16th, there were no Dan Fogelberg songs in my Top 25. This one was must have been lurking just below the cut off. (Maybe in the 30s or 40?) Anyway, a few plays, and suddenly it appears at number 14. I'm so pleased about this. It's terribly fitting that Dan song or two make this list, and this is one of my all-time favorites...from him or anyone else.

This is the very first song on his very first CD. It's a song that
I blogged about before, so I won't rehash all that here. But sufficed to say it's been a "desert island" song of mine for 25 years....and I was honored to be able to sing it at the Tribute show. (Seen here.)

"And maybe there are seasons,
And maybe they change,
And maybe
True love is not so strange."


15. Babylon David Gray White Ladder (Extra Tracks)
LIke the last entry, this is also not a new song. I first had my Columbus moment --with the song, and David Gray-- way back on the old "Mp3.com." And I loved the song ever since. Can't really tell you while. Just like it.

16. Paris in a Day Ellis Paul A Carnival of Voices
Once again, as with the last two, not a new Ellis Paul song. But it's my personal favorite. The joy of the music and the joy and spontaneity of the lyrics are infectious. The song is about two lovers --"foolish Americans" -- who try and see all of Paris in one day. Something about that just sounds like such a fun idea. And, actually, my one and only visit to Paris was very close. It was an about eight-hour layover where we did much the same thing....we checked out bags, took the train in from the airport, and rushed about from the Eiffel Tower, to Notre Dame, trying to cram as much into those hours as we could.

So, I've always really identified with the song and how fun it was to be in Paris, trying to cram as much in as we could. As with everything from Ellis Paul, the man really knows how to weave out a story in three to four minutes.

17. Marigolds Beth Wood Marigolds
This one's from my friend, Beth Woods, who lives just across town in Arlington, but whom I never see. It's title track of her great CD that came out around the time she won Kerrville New Folk.

18. Easy Silence Dixie Chicks Taking the Long Way
This is my personal favorite on the Chick's CD. I love it because it describes how I feel about Dennise. Both of us have such public lives, and the truth is that we're both incredible introverts that can often be misunderstood by those on the outside. But we're able to give each other a private space, and an "easy silence," that "keeps the world at bay."

This song ties the Chicks with Gretchen Peters for most-played-artist of 2007.

19. On With the Song Mary Chapin Carpenter The Calling
This song is a dedication to the Dixie Chicks from Mary Chapin-C's new CD. It takes on the reflexive "patriotism" of the early war period...when the Chicks were in the midst of such controversy. Interesting to note that things have changed enough that such a song by a country artist barely causes a "ripple" in the public's imagination now. But if you've been worried about the direction of this country, and concerned about free speech and free expression, you'll like this one.

20. Stars Dan Fogelberg Home Free
The second track from Dan's first CD. In the tribute show, Rusty and I sang this one back to back (as seen here). So, to me it's fitting that it also makes the list. Not my favorite Fogelberg song. But what it probably means was that I listened to "Home Free" more than I realized this year.

21. Free In You Indigo Girls All That We Let In
An old one from the Indigo Girls from my favorite CD of theirs in the past few years. Really fine CD, and a really fine song. It's a love song, talking about how love makes one free. But it also make a nice metaphor for the God/human connection too. This is one I play a lot because it's become a favorite of me and Dennise to describe our relationship.

Hope you enjoyed this list. If any of you post your own Top 25, let me know. I'd love to learn something new, and have some more Columbus discoveries.
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Tuesday, 25 December 2007

Christmas Lists: A Meditation

Posted on 07:16 by Unknown

It's hard to tell just where we are with Santa this year. Maria and her parents are doing something of a "Don't Ask Don't Tell" dance with each other around all the major issues.

But she
did go to see him Saturday:

page9_blog_entry244_1
(Dennise's iPhone)

And we found the list below in her room. It appears to be a draft, and thus the bad spelling. (She's got my sense of spelling, which is no cents at all... Winking ) But I could care less about the spelling though, since I'm so touched by the sentiment:

page9_blog_entry244_2
Isn't that great? Couldn't be prouder.

And, lest we forget, another young girl named Mary --slightly older than my Maria, and much more involved with this whole Christmas story from the very beginning-- spoke some powerful words long ago that we still sometimes hear today.

When she was told she was to bear son, Mary broke out in a long oration we have come to call the Magnificat. Looked at from a certain point of view, it's also a list. Perhaps we could even call it the original Christmas list.
page9_blog_entry244_3
If so, it was not a list of goodies she wanted from Santa. It was a list of things Mary foresaw would happen upon the birth of the Messiah.

I have taken the liberty of bolding the specific items that make up Mary's list, for your easy identification.

From Luke, Chapter 1 (NRSV, inclusive):

"And Mary said,
'My soul magnifies the Lord,
and my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour,
for God has looked with favour on the lowliness of God's servant.
Surely, from now on all generations will call me blessed;
for the Mighty One has done great things for me,
and holy is God's name.
God's mercy is for those who fear God
from generation to generation.
God has shown strength with God's arm;
God has scattered the proud in the thoughts of their hearts.
God has brought down the powerful from their thrones,
and lifted up the lowly;
God has filled the hungry with good things,
and sent the rich away empty.'"

Did you catch the items in this list?

Mary lists that God has:

1. looked with favor on the lowly
2. scattered the proud
3. brought down the powerful
4. lifted up the lowly
5. filled the hungry with good things

Quite a list, huh?

As you are busy exchanging gifts with your nearest and dearest in the next few days, I encourage you to remember this original meaning of Christmas. Christmas, as both my Maria and Mary seem to know, is about remembering the poor. It's about remembering that God remembers the poor. If God comes to earth, then surely God comes into not only the most powerful and mighty places, but also into the forgotten and lonely ones too. If God truly is incarnate, if we can see God around us, then surely God is acting within the lives of the lowly and the poor.
page9_blog_entry244_4
A lot of folks I know who are not very "religious" sometimes talk about the ways that they see God in the world...
...through nature...through art...through music...through hugs and smiles...through the workings of science and logic....

All these, in their own ways, are examples of the Christmas story; because Christmas is about remembering God coming into this earth, and "dwelling among us." Christmas is about the God you can see everyday, all around you, if you only have the eyes to.
----------------------------------------

It's likely too late for you to do anything about it for tomorrow, since it's already Christmas Eve now. But perhaps sometime over these holidays, you too will remember the poor?

Maybe you could make a contribution to an agency you trust. Maybe you and your loved ones could find ways to connect with, and serve, the poor in our society.

Maybe you could make a commitment to start paying opening your eyes to everyone around you....make a commitment to intentionally notice the poor, the meek, the suffering...and to remembering that God, far from abandoning them, gives them a special place on that original Christmas list.

Even better than remembering them just on tomorrow, perhaps you could commit to remembering them each and every day this next year.

Wouldn't
that make a difference?

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Thursday, 20 December 2007

More on Dan...Otis Redding at Stax....Connor's Army....Going Green at Church...And Miss Maria Mis-hears the News...

Posted on 07:17 by Unknown
Many of you have stumbled on my blogs about Dan Fogelberg, especially this second one. Thanks to everyone for your kind comments. It has done my heart good to know that I was not alone in all my thoughts about Dan's passing.

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Some of you who have watched the Dan Fogelberg Tribute Show Videos have noted that one appears to be missing. For reasons that I don't understand, Clip 4 was deleted. It may have had some glitch in it.

I uploaded it again yesterday, and again it was deleted by last night. So, "take three," and
let's hope this one holds. It's actually got some of my favorite songs: To The Morning, Stars, Run for the Roses, and Leader of the Band...check it out. (And let's hope this version doesn't get deleted again!) You can also see them at my MySpace page, under "videos."

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Got a nice email from a guy named Tim, who runs the Stax Records blog. He was writing about
this entry, and was very kind in his assessment of my assessment of Memphis. He reminds us all that currently the Stax Museum is hosting a tribute to Otis Redding, featuring pictures from his family's private collection. This would certainly be worth the trip, if you're anywhere near Memphis. Learn about it here.

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An update on Connor's Army. You may remember
this blog entry about my old friend, Gene Connor, and his one-person crusade to raise money for cancer research by riding 2,000 miles this year. Gene's December blog entry says this:
"This was absolutely the worst ride I have ever had.
Average speed was 14.9 and I usually average 19-20 on the same ride, top speed downhill was 32 and my best has been 45, my ride time was 55:36 and its usually 36:00-38:00.
Yet when I stepped off my bike I was crying with happiness.
Why?
Because I did it. Today I reached my 2,000 commuting mile goal."


They are just shy of their $10,000 goal. But, there are still ten days left in this year, and
you can still join them. I hope you'll consider it as a holiday gift to honor a friend.

Gene has announced big plans for 2010... a Coast-to-Coast ride with the goal of raising $50,000!!! Stay tuned...I know he'll be able to do it!

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A nice story in today's DMN about United Methodist Churches purchasing green energy. Basically, 180-plus UM Churches in North Texas banded together and when they , ahem, renewed their bulk contract for energy purchasing, they required all bids to have a 10 percent "green" allotment. The story, by fine DMN reporter, Sam Hodges, says that this appears to the first time any church group has done this. It makes sense. Environmentalism is a value held dear by many people of faith: why not use our collective clout to affect change? Very proud of us all...

But, wait, there's more! Because there's a quote from your's truly at the of the story.
Our church made the choice to opt-in for a little more, such that we'll purchase 100 percent green energy. The premium on that was a small 3.5 percent increase over the basic price, and we saw that as a "no brainer." Very proud of our church too...

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Funny story from Maria...

She really does listen to what's going on in the news. We must keep this in mind. The other day, she asked Dennise why "knee boarding" was illegal. Knee boarding, of course, is something you do on the lake....you sit on your knees, on a little float-board, and a boat drags you around. It's like water skiing, only without the skis and quite as much falling down.

Maria says, "I don't understand it, my friend Brittany does it all the time, and we did it as summer camp too...why is it illegal?"

To which Dennise said, "It's not, honey, where did you get that idea?"

To which Maria says, "Well, it's all over the TV...you know...how knee boarding is considered torture..."

"That's
waterboarding, honey. It's totally different...."

And then, of course, we had to explain the unexplainable to a ten-year-old: what waterboarding is, and why anyone in our country would defend it for any reason.

She was greatly relieved to find that the kids at summer camp weren't engaging in torture. She was a little more troubled about why our government seems to be.

Aren't we all?

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Wednesday, 19 December 2007

Maria at Gymnastics Meet, Spring 2007

Posted on 07:19 by Unknown

Maria at her gymnastics meet on April 21, 2007.

This is video of her bar and floor routine:



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Follow Up on Fogelberg

Posted on 07:18 by Unknown
"Death is there to keep us honest,
and contantly remind us we are free."
--Dan Fogelberg

I'm feeling a mixture of sadness and embarrassment. It all has to do with what I blogged about Sunday night: the death of Dan Fogelberg.

First, I am genuinely surprised with how genuinely sad I still am. After all, I'm a grown man. I didn't really know the guy. Wasn't a close personal friend. Never technically met him. Although I did spend an awkward few seconds, standing dumb-foundedly in front of him once.

But the deeper issue doesn't have to do with what I think of Fogelberg, but with what I assume other people do. Most folks who know his music, just know the big hits. And some of those big hits were (let's be honest) pretty sappy:

...."Believe In Me"
...."Longer"
...."Hard to Say"
....even "Run for the Roses" was a little on the schmaltzy side.

To many, Fogelberg was the archetype for over-serious singer-songwriter. (As opposed to just the "serious" one...)

So, given what most people probably think of him (maybe even songwriter friends I admire?) this week I must confess it's been hard to admit my sadness...and embarrassing to admit it too.

Why couldn't
my archetypal songwriter haven been Paul Simon? Or Bruce Cockburn? Or maybe even Richard Thompson? Everybody thinks they're totally hip and cool, and nobody jokes about their sappiness.

Well, know what? It just didn't work out that way for me. Fogelberg was my guy.

And so, tonight I have worked through my surface embarrassment, and gotten to a place where I realized there were still things I wanted to say about Dan Fogelberg. And even if nobody else cares, even if everybody else thinks it's sappy, it's good catharsis for me.

There clearly are a lot of folks who share my view of Fogelberg. Just do a
blog search of "Dan Fogelberg" (or, if you're lazy, click the link...) and read the things folks are writing the past few days.

I can tell you that lots of Fogelberg admirers have been stopping by here too. Here at my blog, we've had close to an entire month's of traffic just since Sunday. Lot's of folks are read
ing this. Others are reading this. Still others are watching the Living Legacy Videos. One of those concert clips alone has been viewed more than 10,000 times in the past four days, with several viewers leaving nice comments at my YouTube page. *

So, yes, I am not alone. There are a lot of folks out there for whom "Dan" was not just a writer of schmaltzy hits, but also the writer they most admire.
--------------------------------------------

I made a couple of iTunes playlists I'd like to share with you.
This first one is interesting to me because it features four songs I'd never heard before this week. They were released as a part of the "Portraits" collection. They've never been released anywhere else. They include a scathingly honest song called "Democracy," which is perhaps Fogelberg's most biting political song:

"They've got McDonald's in the USSR
Fries and burgers in the Kremlin's backyard
Now they're learning what democracy means
Let's send them Calvin Klein jeans

Is this what democracy means?"


Every time I went to Russia, I asked myself the same thing.

So, check out these songs. They're all classic Dan in their own way.

The second iTunes playlist I call "
Fogelberg Songs You Should Know." And I post it with the assumption that most of these will be unknown to most of you readers. I tried to avoid all the hits. (But...couldn't not include "Gambler"...)

See, this is the stuff I love. I love the soaring sentiment of "In the Passage." I love the edge of "As the Raven Flies." I love the cool opening riff of "
These Days." I love the eerie, realm-of-the-spirits quality of "Ghosts." I love the sad story of an old woman in "Windows and Walls."

There were so many songs over those many years that nobody but the truest of "Danfans" knew. Get to know them.

Then, there were two albums of jazz music with Tim Weisberg, and one bluegrass record with folks like Ricky Skaggs. How many pop stars
ever release three records like that? (Maybe one. But three?) How many of them play most of their own instruments, sing many of the vocals, and even drew cover art on occasion?

My point is, musically, Fogelberg was a heck of a lot deeper than "Longer."

And, lyrically, there was real poetry and storytelling in those songs. I've blogged about "Same Old Lang Syne" before. But the truth is it's just a well written song...really really nice images:

"She said she saw in the record store,
and that I must be doing well.
I said the audience was heavenly,
but the traveling was hell."


Or the final lines:

"The beer was empty, and our tongues were tired,
And running out of things to say.
She gave a kiss to me as I got out,
And I watched her drive away.

Just for a moment, I was back in school,
And felt that old familiar pain.
And as I turned to make my way back home,
the snow turned into rain."


Even if you've never experienced a moment like that, you can picture it, can't you? As you listen, you draw a mental image of the moment comes to life. So that when Dan inserts a real pause --right at "just for a moment I was back in school..."-- it's we listeners who suddenly pause too, and make our own trips back in time.

Having the muse to write those lines, having the sense to put in that pause, these are the things that distinguish good songs from great ones.

And, I might argue that some of Fogelberg's contributions to the Southern California Rock sound ended up inspiring even greater work later down the road. As just one example, you may remember that Joe Walsh produced Fogelberg's record "Souvenirs."

So, keeping that in mind,
give another listen to "As the Raven Flies." Listen carefully to Dan and Walsh trade off on the final guitar lead that fades out the song. And as you listen, tell me you don't hear the genesis of the most famous two-lead solo ever to close a song: Hotel California.

Go ahead and try it. The similarity will jump out at you. Promise.

If there was no "Raven," would there have been a Hotel California? Would it have sounded like it did?

At the very least, Walsh credits Fogelberg as a general influence on him. Two nights ago, on Larry King, Joe Walsh said this:

"...he was an amazing song writer. I met him about 1974, as far as I can remember, and here was this really humble kid, undiscovered, with these wonderful songs, and finely crafted songs. And I brought him out to Los Angeles to try to help him do an album, and our whole community kind of took him under our wing. He was really a big influence as a song writer and a musician to us all."

Anyway, these are many of the things I still wanted to say about Fogelberg tonight.

But the final reason I wanted to write this entry was to
show you how I literally produced several songs with the intent of creating an "homage" to Fogelberg. I've never admitted this before, but now seems the time.

The two most obvious examples are on the first CD: "Your Warm" and "Deep Blue Grey."

Listen to this clip of "
Your Warm." Then go listen to "The Reach" by Fogelberg. Compare the ringing guitar, and the background strings....hear it?

Then, listen to this clip of "
Deep Blue Grey," and I think you will hear shades of "Place in the World for a Gambler," ....especially in the bass parts and final chorus structure. (the Gambler YouTube clip is quite nice...btw...)

They don't have the same lyrical theme. But when we went to produce them, I
definitely had Fogelberg in mind. Some folks chided me at the time for over-producing these CD. But tonight I am more pleased than ever that they stand as an example of how Fogelberg's music influenced mine. I'd like to believe that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. At least, that's what I was shooting for.

Well, thanks for reading this. It probably helped me more to write it than it did you to read. I'm feeling better already.

So thanks again, Dan: For all the inspiration and music that is so much a part of my own history.

* (This month, we've also had a fair number of visitors reading this blog about our Memphis trip too...)
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      • Eric's Top 25 iPod Songs for 2007
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