Well hello everybody and welcome to the fabulous Vinyl-O-Matic on these beautiful waves of æther. Our journey through albums that begin with the letter D as in Delta continues unabated. If you would like to follow along at home, please point your browser in the direction of vinylomatic(dot)com(slash)s05e21. While you're there, leave a comment in the show notes and let me know what your Top 3 songs from the Aughties are... or at least the first three that come to mind. The Aughties, you ask? Yeah, you know those years between the 90s and the teens? Anywho, anchors aweigh, my friends. A little bit of humor from the legendary comedy duo Peter Cook and Dudley Moore in their roles as Derek and Clive, from the album Derek and Clive (Live) on Island Records from 1976. Prior to that Fórn brought the heaviness with the song "Dweller on the Threshold" from their 2014 Vendetta Records release The Departure of Consciousness. Kicking things off, we had some grade a pop-funk from Money Mark with an assist from Smokey Hormel on guitar. We heard "Three O'Clock" from the ep Demo? or Demolition? on Chocolate Industries from 2004. Moving things right along, here comes the story of the Hurricane. O hai, welcome back to Vinyl-O-Matic. That last epic set started off with Bob Dylan and his still-relevant song "Hurricane" from his 1976 album Desire. That was followed up by San Francisco dynamic duo (and in this case trio) Eye-O with sort of space western feeling selection called "Spatial Relations" from their 2017 album Deux O & Debut. If you enjoyed that track, you'll be interested to know that their second album Continua will be dropping on August 6. And now Le Tigre asks the eternal question, Who took the bomp? Now there's a posterior shaking set. We just heard the DFA remix of Junior Senior's "Shake Your Coconuts" as well as the DFA remix of Le Tigre's killer track "Deceptacon". The former is from The DFA Remixes Chapter Two, and the latter is from The DFA Remixes Chapter One, both released in 2004 (hence my prompt for top 3 songs from the 2000s). After that hot set, let's cool things off with some sparkling soft rock. Thanks for hanging on. We started that last set off with Seals and Croft and the title track to their 1973 album Diamond Girl, an album dedicated to their wives. No really. And we heard Sade with "Hang on to Love" from their 1984 multi-platinum debut album Diamond Life. This seems like a fine place to stop so that is precisely what we're going to do. If you have any questions about what you have heard, drop me a line: will(at)vinylomatic(dot)com. As always, show notes, archive episodes and more can be found at vinylomatic(dot)com. When next we meet, we will endeavor once more to ford the river of albums with titles that begin with the letter D as in Delta. Join me, won't you?