#16
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Now something tells me that if Guilfest came knocking in 2017 they'd be up there.
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V2002 Move 2003 V2006 KoKo 2006 Culture Show 2007 Album Chart Show 2007 XFM 2007 V2007 Glastonbury 2007 Astoria 2007 London Brixton 2007 NME Awards 2008 NME Big Gig 2008 Forever Heavenly 2008 Roundhouse 2009 Forum 2009 Concert for Care 2009 XFM Winter Wonderland 2010 Brixton Academy 2011 Blackwood Miners Institute 2011 Roundhouse 2011 O2 2011 Rough Trade East 2012 Shepherds Bush 2013 Brixton 2014 Glastonbury 2014 Rough Trade East 2014 Acoustic Guitar Show 2014 Roundhouse 2014 Cardiff Castle 2015 On Blackheath 2015 Royal Albert Hall 2016 Swansea Liberty Stadium 2016 Wembley Arena 2018 Shepherds Bush 2019 Kingston Pryzm 2021 x2 Wembley Arena 2021 Glastonbury 2023 Alexandra Palace 2024 Shepherds Bush 2025 (41)
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#17
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So this place will always be quieter now no matter what the Manics do and that's got nothing to do with the band at all; it's just the way the internet has changed. Fans do move on, but there are plenty of people on social media who still love the Manics and want to talk about them; they just do it elsewhere. This place used to provide an entire evening's entertainment, now those were the days |
#18
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Yeah, I'd say the Facebook side of things is pretty lively. Although it's mostly people responding to news, rather than starting threads and asking questions.
Bring back usenet!
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V2002 Move 2003 V2006 KoKo 2006 Culture Show 2007 Album Chart Show 2007 XFM 2007 V2007 Glastonbury 2007 Astoria 2007 London Brixton 2007 NME Awards 2008 NME Big Gig 2008 Forever Heavenly 2008 Roundhouse 2009 Forum 2009 Concert for Care 2009 XFM Winter Wonderland 2010 Brixton Academy 2011 Blackwood Miners Institute 2011 Roundhouse 2011 O2 2011 Rough Trade East 2012 Shepherds Bush 2013 Brixton 2014 Glastonbury 2014 Rough Trade East 2014 Acoustic Guitar Show 2014 Roundhouse 2014 Cardiff Castle 2015 On Blackheath 2015 Royal Albert Hall 2016 Swansea Liberty Stadium 2016 Wembley Arena 2018 Shepherds Bush 2019 Kingston Pryzm 2021 x2 Wembley Arena 2021 Glastonbury 2023 Alexandra Palace 2024 Shepherds Bush 2025 (41)
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#19
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This is weird: here's my comment on that exact topic on another thread.
To avoid a derail though, I think while the technological side of music changing has had some impact, I think it's given a lot more credit than it's worth. The music industry plays it massively safe by putting on heritage acts all the time. It's a bit like getting Fast & The Furious 17 because they know it "does a job." Quote:
Also music reminds people of stuff, so if it's an old song that reminds you of good times then you're going to want to listen to it. If it just reminds you of paying your 17th mortgage installment off, it's a bit harder to get into that zone. Quote:
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The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there. L.P. Hartley Last edited by darkanddivine; 13-09-2017 at 20:59. |
#20
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Can't be arsed to look, but wonder if there are forums dotted about for oh, I dunno, Ed Sheeran, that are as busy if not busier than this place was at it's busiest. But yeah, you're right, things have changed. Or moved, at least. Haven't got a tumblr meself. Quote:
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#21
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I've stuck with some of the same bands for years....i can't think of the last 'new' band I really fell for.....maybe Bright Eyes....though that's been some time now. There are lots of 'new' songs or songs at least new to me I come across and fall in love with but I'm not so bothered about finding The Band ....I have them already, the Manics, naturally,....and The Killers closely following and I still love to hear whatever Marilyn Manson keeps coming up with.....and wonder where the Marilyn's of today are....I was going to say the Kurt's as well but that didn't end so well....in fact many of the singers and members of bands I've loved have become the dearly departed....don't know what that says about me. Not quite connected but proving I'm not completely jaded I still love to hunt for books I haven't read before, my enthusiasm there hasn't faded at all Maybe try a completely new genre...classical; jazz; hip hop....
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"There is a pleasure in the pathless woods, There is a rapture on the lonely shore There is society, where none intrudes, By the deep sea, and music in its roar: I love not man the less, but Nature more," - Byron 'I must go down to the seas again, for the call of the running tide Is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied; And all I ask is a windy day with the white clouds flying, And the flung spray and the blown spume, and the sea-gulls crying.' (from Sea Fever - John Masefield) "Hope is the thing with feathers That perches in the soul And sings the tune without the words And never stops at all" - Emily Dickinson |
#22
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I'd agree that as you age - books and films do have a certain timelessness to them in some ways. I never look at a 20 year old film and think "my god that was donkeys years ago." But music does seem ultra prone to the sands of time. Maybe that's because it's literally associated with the sexiness (for want of a better word) of youth. Noel Gallagher said something in that interview he did with Nicky where he said that the 90's was nuts because everyone in the arenas was the same age as the bands. And there is something in that I think. I also agree on genres. Growing up I listened to indie, rock and mostly mainstream stuff. I still get the kicks these days because I've ended up going to extremes. I like a lot of metal, some weird techno style stuff and also just good old pop music too. As you get older you often lose interest in fashion, or keeping up, and that is probably also reflected in your musical tastes.
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The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there. L.P. Hartley |
#23
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Some very interesting points in this thread.
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I'm not on Facebook, but I much, much prefer discussing the band here to anywhere else. Quote:
Fair enough, there was the odd discovery down the flea market on in a car boot sale for 10p but in all honestly the diversity was not great. So the internet era is, I must concede, much better for exposing one to new music (and to recommendations from others!). I used to read music reviews and then hope the library or someone I knew had the album or the band in question. Luckily the library where I grew up was staffed by someone who had very cool music tastes - of course, I couldn't rip CDs back then (or even tape from CD), but I at least got to hear stuff I otherwise wouldn't have. Quote:
The difficulty of downloading music via the internet due to low internet speeds - which for many of us wasn't solved until, say, 2005 or later - precluded much finding of new music there. I did use the internet to find out about the existence of rare tracks, b-sides, remixes et al from bands that I already did like, though. So, yeah, a very mixed bag, now and then.
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#24
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And swapping mix tapes with friends to try and complete that B-sides and odds n ends collection. I came across a lot in the library too - Generation Terrorists was borrowed from there after hearing them on Radio 1, think it was the Friday night rock show...played metal and fit in Motorcycle Emptiness. Remember discovering Warrior Soul through the library too. Bought quite a few of the Manics albums on tape afore those new fangled CDs came out, ha. I still prefer to own a CD for a band like the Manics rather than a download...something to hold
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"There is a pleasure in the pathless woods, There is a rapture on the lonely shore There is society, where none intrudes, By the deep sea, and music in its roar: I love not man the less, but Nature more," - Byron 'I must go down to the seas again, for the call of the running tide Is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied; And all I ask is a windy day with the white clouds flying, And the flung spray and the blown spume, and the sea-gulls crying.' (from Sea Fever - John Masefield) "Hope is the thing with feathers That perches in the soul And sings the tune without the words And never stops at all" - Emily Dickinson |
#25
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£16.99!! Where were you buying your CD's from? Imported from Mars?! For some completely anal reason I tucked the receipts from all my CD purchases under the back cover and a quick run through 8 of them from 1995 and 1996 showed that the cheapest was Elastica's debut at £9.99 and the most expensive was Cast's 'All Change' at £12.99. Most were £11.99 from HMV. But, yes, I completely agree. Those prices 20 years ago were ridiculous! But then we didn't know any different ...
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#26
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I remember back catalogue stuff was sometimes more expensive than new releases, I'd often pay £13.99 and £14.99 for an album a few years old, and occasionally £17.99 for a double album. But yeah, new releases were normally £11.99 around here, whether it was Woolies, Smiths, Asda or my local indie. I suppose I was lucky that I could go into town and shop around three different places for CDs, given that I live in a medium-sized midlands town with no real culture.
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#27
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I seem to remember Virgin Megastores sold back catalogue albums for either really cheap or ridiculously expensive prices; I definitely saw some around the £16.99 mark in the past! Our Price was the same too. I remember hunting out the Manics’ old albums in various music shops like those that have long since gone. My hometown of Wakefield doesn’t even have a HMV anymore let alone any of the other places I used to buy my CD’s from.
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#28
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Tower records was the most expensive. I remember looking to get GT in the mid nineties and it was £18.99. Think I ended up paying 15 somewhere else
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#29
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Taping off the radio too - I hardly ever listen to the radio now. The last time was the first play of those new Stone Roses tracks. Quote:
I still love going down to the record shop here (they still exist!) and buying the new Manics album the day it's released. I used to love trotting down to the shop and buying the singles too, to have the cover art and quotes and sense of completeness. Quote:
I moved. Quote:
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Never saw Lipstick Traces reduced, oddly enough. Anyway, I suppose things are better now when you consider the proportion of one's income one would have to fork out for these albums, and when we have better, easier access to a wider selection of music via the internet, but I definitely miss the slow-motion thrill of walking into a record shop on the day of release and getting the latest single - not knowing what the cover looked like and having to find it, then knowing when you got home you had four new songs (b-sides) to gorge on. Would they be classics? Would they be woeful? What would the liner quote be????
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#30
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I still use shops whenever possible - I'm back in my old hometown at the minute, so it's either when I make it over to Nottingham or Leicester or somewhere, or a big release from a supermarket in town.
I really miss CD singles. I know we get deluxe edition albums now, which have the effective b-sides on them, but it was the spreading out of the tracks that I enjoyed. Every few weeks another band I'd like put out a new single and there'd be a handful of new songs to enjoy. Having an album extended beyond its natural runtime to get into all at once sort of has the opposite effect, makes it feel overwhelming. |
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