User:A Knight Who Says Ni

About me
I am an amateur musician who recorded an album released on vinyl many years ago. Sadly, neither the recording artist nor the album has a Wikipedia article.

Those who are wondering what my username means, should look —> here. <—

Articles I have created or expanded

 * Clearlight (French band) (created) – early Virgin Records progressive rock artist, plus articles for their albums:
 * Clearlight Symphony (created)
 * Delired Cameleon Family (created)
 * Forever Blowing Bubbles (created)
 * Les Contes du Singe Fou (created)
 * Visions (Clearlight album) (created)
 * FM (Canadian band) (expanded) – progressive rock band, plus albums and other related articles:
 * Nash the Slash (expanded) – group member
 * Cut-throat Records (created) – Nash's record label
 * Black Noise (album) (expanded)
 * Direct to Disc (FM album) (created)
 * Surveillance (FM album) (created)
 * City of Fear (created)
 * Con-Test (FM album) (created)
 * Tonight (FM album) (created)
 * Albums by War (also expanded their article and their other album articles):
 * Platinum Jazz (album) (created)
 * The Music Band (created)
 * The Music Band 2 (created)
 * Outlaw (War album) (created)
 * The Music Band – Jazz (created)
 * Life (is So Strange) (created)
 * Peace Sign (War album) (created; album title is actually: [[Image:Peace symbol.svg|13px]] - I managed to make the symbol be the article title for a few weeks, but I knew it wouldn't last)
 * Mike Oldfield's Single (expanded) – plus other Mike Oldfield singles: Don Alfonso, In Dulci Jubilo, Portsmouth
 * International Sound Communication (restored and expanded) – a series of cassettes from the 1980s
 * Obscure Records (expanded) – 20th century classical music record label run by Brian Eno
 * Chapter 24 (expanded) – Pink Floyd song, required boning up on the I Ching
 * Third (Soft Machine album) (expanded) – album by Soft Machine
 * Huffin (created) – song by Soft Machine
 * Tomorrow (album) (expanded) – album by British psychedelic music group Tomorrow, info about reissue
 * Jam Science (expanded) – album by Shriekback
 * Picture Music (expanded) – album by Klaus Schulze
 * MacLean & MacLean (expanded) – Canadian x-rated comedy and folk music duo
 * Benny Bell (expanded) – Jewish American comedy singer-songwriter
 * David Bedford (expanded) – composer
 * Direct to disc recording (created) – split off from direct to disk recording which had 2 subjects within 1 article
 * Matrix numbers (expanded) – rewrite
 * Flemingdon Park (expanded) – neighbourhood in Toronto, Canada

My favourite edit summaries
For the uninitiated, an edit summary is a brief comment explaining what a change is about. On "diff" pages (which the links below will take you to), the edit summary can be found on the 3rd line from the top of the right column, near the upper right corner of your screen. Most of these edits were reverts. I figure a little whimsy can take the sting out of having one's contributions reverted.
 * one (first time I dared to add this tag to an article)
 * two (what I meant was, fixing errors made by a bot)
 * three (especially big revert)
 * four (now if he'd said lounge...)
 * five (me too)
 * six (verbosely)
 * seven (again)
 * eight (take your choice)
 * nine (Schubert just rolled over)
 * ten (but have some sugar... how many lumps?)
 * eleven (and again)
 * twelve (a previous edit changed "efforts" to "works")
 * thirteen (do you like it?)
 * fourteen (I'll make this editor sing a different tune)
 * fifteen (first appearance in this list, of someone else's edit summary)
 * sixteen (before viewing, put on your sense of humour, check your sense of outrage at the lobby, then find the link within the link, and scroll to the bottom)
 * seventeen (oh, my ears!)
 * eighteen (not even with a hammer)
 * nineteen (never pass up the opportunity to quote Pat Paulsen)
 * twenty (must be using the 16 rpm speed)
 * twenty-one (pig POV)
 * twenty-two (do as I say, not as I do)
 * twenty-three (I hadn't had my morning cornflakes yet — and as you can guess, I've made this change before)
 * twenty-four (it was all a load of cobblers anyway! *groan*)
 * twenty-five (the few who don't, must pack a lot of lunches)