[Music] The band/artist you never saw, never will, and regret the most because of it

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Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,232
Faversham
Ditto. But @HWT’s brother said JD were shit live.

Not my brother but an old pal who saw them at the first V festival in Leeds. He deffo said they were shit. Dull and droney. I saw him recently and asked him about the gig and he said they were great. A 40 year bit of aftertiming :mad: I didn't let it pass, I can tell you.

Fact. Joy Division were not rated by anyone till after Ian died. He was regarded as a (brace yourselves) Jim Morrison soundalikee:eek:. They were in there with Delta 5 (out of 100 as my old pal still calls them), PragVec, early Section 25 and suchlike, very league 1, and way way of the pace of bands like the Comsat Angels, Killing Joke, The Cure and Echo and the Bunnymen.
 




Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,232
Faversham
The Jam.

I was too young to see them, apart from their final ever gig (at The Brighton Centre).



Good shout. Me and I think @<u><a href="https://nortr3nixy.nimpr.uk/member.php?u=25" target="_blank">Gwylan</a></u> (not together as I didn't know him then) were at the Embassy cinema gig. I saw the Clash at Top Rank when Townshend played a track with them, and Scritti Politti :)love:) supported. Just for the record, like, not gloating.
 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,749
The Fatherland
As a follow up I have seen The Clash in their parts:

Joe Strummer - solo
Paul Simenon - The Good The Bad The Queen
Terry Chimes - Cherry Bombz
Mick Jones - Half time tombola at Loftus Road
 


Weststander

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2011
69,367
Withdean area
Not my brother but an old pal who saw them at the first V festival in Leeds. He deffo said they were shit. Dull and droney. I saw him recently and asked him about the gig and he said they were great. A 40 year bit of aftertiming :mad: I didn't let it pass, I can tell you.

Fact. Joy Division were not rated by anyone till after Ian died. He was regarded as a (brace yourselves) Jim Morrison soundalikee:eek:. They were in there with Delta 5 (out of 100 as my old pal still calls them), PragVec, early Section 25 and suchlike, very league 1, and way way of the pace of bands like the Comsat Angels, Killing Joke, The Cure and Echo and the Bunnymen.

Jim Morrison was their hero, mentioned in Hookie’s last autobio

I was just a young teen buying NME and I saw JD mentioned, but just one of many, many band names, I didn’t listen to Peel at that stage. I first fell in love with the newly formed New Order, their first album and singles, then immediately got into JD. So the wrong way round. Curtis’s death undoubtedly helped publicity and awareness, justifiably so in this case. There was substance to the belated love of their work.
 














Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,232
Faversham
As a follow up I have seen The Clash in their parts:

Joe Strummer - solo
Paul Simenon - The Good The Bad The Queen
Terry Chimes - Cherry Bombz
Mick Jones - Half time tombola at Loftus Road

I have the first Clash album, vinyl, cover singed by Joe. This time I am gloating :wink:. And see above wrt seeing them live.
 


Robinjakarta

Well-known member
Jul 14, 2014
2,163
Jakarta
Simon and Garfunkel, the Beatles, Jefferson Airplane, Grateful Dead, Fairport Convention with Sandy Denny or Judy Dyble, Love in the days of Forever Changes, The Doors, Buffalo Springfield.
 








Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,232
Faversham
Jim Morrison was their hero, mentioned in Hookie’s last autobio

I was just a young teen buying NME and I saw JD mentioned, but just one of many, many band names, I didn’t listen to Peel at that stage. I first fell in love with the newly formed New Order, their first album and singles, then immediately got into JD. So the wrong way round. Curtis’s death undoubtedly helped publicity and awareness, justifiably so in this case. There was substance to the belated love of their work.

It was the wrong way round for me too, ish. I bought the last JD studio album and it was the most expensive bit of vinyl I ever bought (£5 odd in 1980, ffs. Equivalent to £100 in today's money taking into account inflation - mostly of my salary). I still don't like it much.

Meanwhile, the first New Order Peel session was an event. I listened on the tranny while in the bath, drinking rum and smoking my licorice roll ups (that's what amounted to decadence for me back then), possibly herbally suplemented. :drool:

But the live double JD album....:love:. A work mate made a tape of it for me in 1982 and I was smitten. Still one of my faves. The dispair is palpable. Ian Curtis and Adrian Borland (The Sound). Two absolute tortured icons. RIP.
 


Eric Potts

Well-known member
Jul 26, 2004
1,873
Top o' Hanover
As a follow up I have seen The Clash in their parts:

Joe Strummer - solo
Paul Simenon - The Good The Bad The Queen
Terry Chimes - Cherry Bombz
Mick Jones - Half time tombola at Loftus Road

I've seen Joe in 3 different bands .
The Clash - Blackburn . King Georges Hall
The Pogues - Finsbury Park Fleadh
The Mescaleros - Concorde
 




GT49er

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 1, 2009
49,192
Gloucester
Good post. Diary of Dreams were supporting Assemblage 23 in Inslington 20 years ago and I'd not heard of them so I stayed in the bar waiting patiently for Tom Shear and pals to hit the stage :facepalm: I have all DOD's releases now and....(twaaaaat!)

Of the above the ones I highlight I have seen live, all in their pomp :thumbsup:

(My ex wife saw Hendrix at Altamont, and my pal Bob the social worker saw the Beatles at the Cavern maybe 25 times (and Little Richard at Port Sunlight, and the Stones, and....the (old) b'stard!)). :rock:

Yeh, we could carry this on all night!. Would have loved to have seen the Everley Brothers and Buddy Holly too, for example! I've got a pretty extensive list of bands - both big and obscure - that I have seen too!
 
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Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,232
Faversham
Simon and Garfunkel, the Beatles, Jefferson Airplane, Grateful Dead, Fairport Convention with Sandy Denny or Judy Dyble, Love in the days of Forever Changes, The Doors, Buffalo Springfield.

Arthur Lee and some young musicians played Mount Ephraim (Canterbury) Festival getting on for 20 years ago. We expected shite but it was one of the 5 best gigs I ever saw. The young musicians recreated the original sound exactly. Lee's voice was perfect. Old people (my mates, in their 50s at the time) cried. It was amazing. :thumbsup:
 






Weststander

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2011
69,367
Withdean area
It was the wrong way round for me too, ish. I bought the last JD studio album and it was the most expensive bit of vinyl I ever bought (£5 odd in 1980, ffs. Equivalent to £100 in today's money taking into account inflation - mostly of my salary). I still don't like it much.

Meanwhile, the first New Order Peel session was an event. I listened on the tranny while in the bath, drinking rum and smoking my licorice roll ups (that's what amounted to decadence for me back then), possibly herbally suplemented. :drool:

But the live double JD album....:love:. A work mate made a tape of it for me in 1982 and I was smitten. Still one of my faves. The dispair is palpable. Ian Curtis and Adrian Borland (The Sound). Two absolute tortured icons. RIP.

For me, very much part of that teens/early 20’s era, where the music of that time in your life does something special to you and your passion for that music stays with you for life. I’d always thought that anyway, then a brilliant R4 documentary about a year ago explained exactly why. Hormones, brain development and all that.

The album Movement, singles Possession/Everything’s Gone Green and Temptation, Closer and Unknown Pleasures all hit that spot for me. Luckily at 16/17 and beyond, my close friends all felt the same, that sharing added to the whole thing. Jeremy Vine gets it, in July on R2 on what would’ve been IC’s 65th birthday, he aired a great piece and cried a bit for IC’s anguish. :bowdown:
 


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