Band: Who, The
14Hey, thanks, Kerble.
Not Crap, though their post-Tommy career brings them dangerously close.
Not Crap, though their post-Tommy career brings them dangerously close.
What are the queers doing to the soil?
Band: Who, The
15stevenstillborn wrote:Hey, thanks, Kerble.
not a problem, fwiw, I searched under 'daltrey' and got far fewer results than with 'who'.
hth
Faiz
kerble is right.
Band: Who, The
16Am I to understand that half of the members of this musical combo have succumbed to substance abuse, and one of the surviving members is a registered sex offender?
I think it is beyond evident that this combo belong in the c**p catagory.
I think it is beyond evident that this combo belong in the c**p catagory.
Band: Who, The
17Martin Billingsworth wrote:Am I to understand that half of the members of this musical combo have succumbed to substance abuse, and one of the surviving members is a registered sex offender?
I think it is beyond evident that this combo belong in the c**p catagory.
This account/schtick is getting old faster than Wernehm did.
Jussayn.
Band: Who, The
18I went to see "The Who" in Liverpool recently. Although I had very low hopes for the concert, my reasoning was that I regret not seeing them with The Ox, because of my feeling that it was never really The Who, in the true sense, since Moon died. So I thought I'd go along before I regretted not seeing the two surviving members, even though in many ways they are the two worst guys from the band. I went alone as nobody I knew wanted to pay £50 to attend, understandably.
I was very pleasantly surprised. The band played a great selection of my favourite songs, including a blistering Amazing Journey/Sparks finale (which I got the impression the audience were largely unfamiliar with). Townshend and Daltrey played with passion and guts, and I would even go so far as to say the concert was poignant, and celebratory.
Obviously, I still don't feel like I've seen The Who, because I haven't. But as Ed O'Brien says near the end of The Wild Bunch: "Well, it ain't much...but it'll do."
The Who were flawed, inspirational, without equal, and at their peak remain, as far as I can tell, an unmatched force in rock music.
I was very pleasantly surprised. The band played a great selection of my favourite songs, including a blistering Amazing Journey/Sparks finale (which I got the impression the audience were largely unfamiliar with). Townshend and Daltrey played with passion and guts, and I would even go so far as to say the concert was poignant, and celebratory.
Obviously, I still don't feel like I've seen The Who, because I haven't. But as Ed O'Brien says near the end of The Wild Bunch: "Well, it ain't much...but it'll do."
The Who were flawed, inspirational, without equal, and at their peak remain, as far as I can tell, an unmatched force in rock music.
Band: Who, The
19Live at Leeds.
that's all I should need to say.
that's all I should need to say.
Life...life...I know it's got its ups and downs.
Groucho Marx wrote:Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it, misdiagnosing it and then misapplying the wrong remedies.
Band: Who, The
20Haven't had the opportunity to hear Isle of Wight.
Hope to pick it up soon, if that's the case. To me, Live at Leeds is the greatest live album ever.
Hope to pick it up soon, if that's the case. To me, Live at Leeds is the greatest live album ever.
Life...life...I know it's got its ups and downs.
Groucho Marx wrote:Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it, misdiagnosing it and then misapplying the wrong remedies.