TheYorkshireTerrier
Well-known member
Is anyone listening to Noel on TalkSport now? Just been asked about getting back together, and he basically said well I’m waiting for him. Asking for him to call him.
That's his current line in every interview now.Is anyone listening to Noel on TalkSport now? Just been asked about getting back together, and he basically said well I’m waiting for him. Asking for him to call him.
Fully agree with this sentence, and despite being a super-fan I too am not bothered about them reforming for a pay day. If it happens I will be watching them at a small venue in Finland or something, not some corporate sponsored bandwagon at the Etihad or Knebworth or whatever.Oasis was never about deep meaningful lyrics, it was about sticking up the volume and living in the moment.
is this a real tweet? Not there now.Looks like it's on, can't say I'll be rushing for tickets but I bet there's a fair few on here who are really excited for this
So a bit like going to a football match then.I went to the Stone Roses reunion gig - I didn't see anything that I wouldn't expect. A load of balding blokes in bucket hats, parkas and Adidas Gazelles. Exactly what I expected
If they only play at Knebworth its a bit of a kick in the teeth for the northern fans, of which I'd say there are far more than down south in 2023 (even if it wasn't the case in 1996). Obviously plenty of people would travel though.its gonna happen and I can see 4 nights at Knebworth as a starter ... the 5 then 6 to maximise the cash.... cant see them touring tho... just a week thrashing the hits out at £200 a ticket for 120,000 fans a night
That’s a good point. They were and are very limited musicians but they caught the zeitgeist perfectly at one point. I love them, a lot. But I’m from that era"Call me. I dare yeh"
Hilarious.
They don't give a f**k and neither do we because they're a couple of lightweights whose music was of its time and that time has long gone.
Caught the ethos of that time well, the dying embers of the Tory government and the disenfranchised youth it had created. The low-fi simplistic songs with the don’t give a f… lyrics caught the zeitgeist of the time. But that was then and a couple of millionaires singing the same things will seem rediculous. Trying to act hard and edgy just seems like they haven’t grown and matured as people, which is frankly a bit embarrassing after 30 years"Call me. I dare yeh"
Hilarious.
They don't give a f**k and neither do we because they're a couple of lightweights whose music was of its time and that time has long gone.
Maybe it's caught the imagination of this generation for the same reasons "dying embers of the tory government, disenfranchised youth" because all my kids/nieces/nephews love them, I was 19 when DM came out and it certainly caught me and that generation but it does sound very much of that time to me.Caught the ethos of that time well, the dying embers of the Tory government and the disenfranchised youth it had created. The low-fi simplistic songs with the don’t give a f… lyrics caught the zeitgeist of the time. But that was then and a couple of millionaires singing the same things will seem rediculous. Trying to act hard and edgy just seems like they haven’t grown and matured as people, which is frankly a bit embarrassing after 30 years
I think there is a huge gap musically. Kids that want a bit of angsty rock, that hasn't been manufactured and packaged by their management doesn't really exist anymore. In fact there is a huge lack of real bands around right now, I guess the kids have to listen to stuff from 15-50 years ago. One thing I noticed at the riverside on Monday was just how many kids were there that would have been 0-6 years old when Whatever People.... came out. The influence of parents with a library of older music at their finger tips, and A&R people signing boy bands and record producers masquerading as musicians has made kids go for the older stuff.because all my kids/nieces/nephews love them,