Air

Originally posted by elj:
[QBUnfortunately no. People In The City is pretty much the only song that shows up with any regularity. If you want a setlist, PM me (some people don't like the suprise ruined or whatever so I won't post one on here). [/QB]
Darn, I kinda like the surprise too. I will just go and but Walkie talkie. Thanks again.
Originally posted by mark e smith:
Originally posted by kosmo vinyl:


there is a widely circulating rumour that jason falkner has been tapped by paul mccartney to join him for a project. this would tres cool because mccartney does his best work with an equally talented collaborator.
like Stevie Wonder? :eek:
Or Linda McCartney.
:eek: :eek:
ok i was thinking about elvis costello
yeah… i guess we'll see Air at Coachella anyway, right?!?
the rumours of jason falkner working with sir paul are confirmed… it will be a little beatles meets jellyfish, greys, three o'clock. it's nice to see paul working with some i think is a very talented singer/songwriter/musician.
I'm listening to "Sexy Boy" right now…can't wait for tonight!
Originally posted by kosmo vinyl:
ok i was thinking about elvis costello
What about Michael Jackson?
I could google them but….can anyone tell me about Mosquitos? Much abliged.
Originally posted by El Tee:
I could google them but….can anyone tell me about Mosquitos? Much abliged.
Mosquitos

Anopheles gambiae

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Diptera
Family: Culicidae
Genera: see text

Mosquitoes are insects belonging to the order Diptera; genera include Anopheles, Culex, Psorophora, Ochlerotatus, Aedes, Sabethes, Wyeomyia, Culiseta, and Haemagoggus for a total of around 35 genera into which are placed about 2700 species. They have two scaled wings, halteres, a slender body, and long legs; size varies but is rarely greater than 15 mm.

In most female mosquitoes, the mouth parts form a long proboscis for piercing the skin of mammals (or in some cases birds or even reptiles and amphibians) to suck their blood. The females require protein for egg development, and since the normal mosquito diet consists of nectar and fruit juice, which has no protein, most must drink blood to get the necessary protein. Males differ from females, with mouth parts not suitable for blood sucking. Oddly females of one genus of mosquitoes, Toxorhynchites, never drinks blood. The larvae of the large mosquito are predatory on other mosquito larvae.

The mosquito goes through four distinct stages in its life cycle: egg, larva, pupa, and adult. The length of the first three stages is species- and temperature-dependent. Culex tarsalis may complete its life cycle in 14 days at 20 °C and only ten days at 25 °C. Some species have a life cycle of as little as four days or up to one month. The larvae are the "wigglers" found in puddles or water-filled containers. These breathe atmospheric oxygen through a siphon at the tail end. The pupae are nearly as active as the larvae, but breathe through thoracic "horns" attached to the thoracic spiracles. Most larvae feed on microorganisms, but a few are predatory on other mosquito larvae. Some mosquito larvae, such as those of Wyeomyia live in unusual situations. These mosquito wigglers live either in the water collected in epiphytic bromeliads or inside water stored in carnivorous pitcher plants. Larvae of the genus Deinocerites live in crab holes along the edge of the ocean.

"Mosquito" is a Spanish or Portuguese word meaning little fly, and its use dates back to about 1583. In England mosquitoes were known as gnats.

Much of modern mosquito control is no longer dependent on dangerous pesticides but specialized organisms that eat mosquitos, or infect them with a disease that kills them. Such methods can even be used in Conservation Areas, like the "Forsyth refuge" and the Seaview Marriott Golf Resort, where some major mosquito control is performed and monitored using "killifish" and juvenile eels. The success is documented with most advanced underwater microscopes like the ecoSCOPE. However, outbreaks of human mosquito-borne diseases may still result in fogging with chemicals that are less toxic than those used in the past.

Dragonflies, also known as mosquito hawks, are excellent control agents. Dragonfly naiads consume mosquito larvae in the breeding waters, and adult dragonflies eat adult mosquitoes, particularly the day flying Asian tiger mosquitoes. Fogging for adult mosquitoes can backfire and increase long term populations if it removes dragonflies and other natural controls.

Some mosquitoes are capable of transmitting protozoan diseases such as malaria, filarial diseases like filariasis, and viral diseases such as yellow fever, dengue, encephalitis, and West Nile virus. West Nile Virus was accidentally introduced into the United States in 1999 and by 2003 had spread to almost every state.

Mosquitos weigh only about 2 to 2.5 mg. They can fly at about 1.5 to 2.5 km/h.
Originally posted by El Tee:
I could google them but….can anyone tell me about Mosquitos? Much abliged.
I got the album a while back, but only gave it one listen (I have way too much new stuff…). It's very bossa nova – we're talking "Girl from Ipanema" with an american indie flair. I love that kind of stuff (ie, Koop); and this is pretty authentic in terms of the baseline being bossa nova or samba, with the 'indie' layered over that (rather than vice versa). It's sunny and fun, but I can see people hating it or loving it…
I may try to catch the end of their set if dinner doesn't run over before Air.
They are playing for free at Dupont Ollsens tomorrow at 1:30, but don't tell anybody. You can also see three live performance videos on their website.

Originally posted by El Tee:
I could google them but….can anyone tell me about Mosquitos? Much abliged.
mosquitos are definitely worth checking out. heard them a bunch on…. not on whfs. :-)

when is zero-7 coming back? that was one of the best shows of all time….
so who is going and what night?
I'm going tommorrow.
Tomorrow, I think.
Tomorrow.
what? I'm going tonight
going tonight.
tonight tonight tonight