Sid in the Sharknado
New member
Quoasis doesn't do it for this idiot![]()
I'm sure past me will welcome your incorrect opinions on whatever thread that was on


Quoasis doesn't do it for this idiot![]()
I'm sure past me will welcome your incorrect opinions on whatever thread that was on
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I'm pretty sure I've written on here before, there's no point in slightly holding an opinion.
Edit: now that I think about it, I think I was claiming that anybody who doesn't like Oasis is an idiot at the time![]()
The Beatles, on the other hand...
PS I've been reluctant to dive into this thread, because I don't focus on lyrics (although the odd ones capture my attention: Dylan, Cohen, Holliday, Simone, Yorke), love Roy Orbison, adore The Beatles but rank them in the following order -- John, George, Paul, Ringo -- and think Paul is a stunning bass player.
It has a bit of a Rubber Soul vibe to it doesn't it![]()
Yes, we get it. You don't rate The Beatles.
That was my mum's complaint. She and her friend wanted to hear them, but couldn't.
As you can probably guess, I was more interested in asking her what Roy Orbison was like. She couldn't remember. They only went because The Beatles were supporting. I'm not sure they even stayed for Roy. He was, according to Presley, the greatest rock'n'roll singer ever, but he wasn't going to be winning the affections of teenage girls in the mid sixties. I remember seeing him on an old repeat of 'The Wheeltappers and Shunters Club' on late night TV a decade or so ago. To think that he was turning a quid on the club circuit in the seventies reminds me a bit of last week's thread about Radostin Kishishev playing a season for us at the Withdean.
I was a teenager and was at the Hippodrome in 1963. Teenage girls did love Roy Orbison too.
You remind me of a literature student. How to ruin a good book? Study it for O or A level and analyse it to death.
We didn’t analyse any music, we just lived it and loved it.
Glad to hear that. My mum was quite dismissive of him.
Living and loving music and thinking about it are in no way mutually exclusive. The reaction to music is a spiritual not an intellectual thing, but thinking about that reaction has never ruined a record for me. I have studied literature, among other things and you'll notice that my contributions to music threads, and quite a lot of other threads, generally contain similar levels of over-analysed undergraduate drivel. I only seem to get called out for it when I say that I don't think the Beatles were as great as the consensus does.
Where did I say your posts were of a similar level to over-analysed undergraduate drivel? I didn't.
I was a teenager and was at the Hippodrome in 1963. Teenage girls did love Roy Orbison too.
You remind me of a literature student. How to ruin a good book? Study it for O or A level and analyse it to death.
We didn’t analyse any music, we just lived it and loved it.
Glad to hear that. My mum was quite dismissive of him.
Living and loving music and thinking about it are in no way mutually exclusive. The reaction to music is a spiritual not an intellectual thing, but thinking about that reaction has never ruined a record for me. I have studied literature, among other things and you'll notice that my contributions to music threads, and quite a lot of other threads, generally contain similar levels of over-analysed undergraduate drivel. I only seem to get called out for it when I say that I don't think the Beatles were as great as the consensus does.
And in agreeing about the "spiritual" bit as well, I personally might use the word "soul", not in the sense of Soul Music, whether it's Motown, Atlantic, Stax or whatever, but in the sense of "they mean it", or "they are living this music." I'm not expressing that very well.
I was thinking more about the people who wax lyrically about the poetic genius of the tone deaf Dylan and the musicality of that sawn off ponce, Mozart, while sneering at the majesty of The Ramones.
It happens. Trust me, it happens.
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I studied literature as well within Modern Languages at sixth form and degree level. I also did a short music appreciation thing in sixth form - not part of any formal qualification - and really appreciated being encouraged to think about WHY one did or didn't like a particular piece of music..... or literature. And in agreeing about the "spiritual" bit as well, I personally might use the word "soul", not in the sense of Soul Music, whether it's Motown, Atlantic, Stax or whatever, but in the sense of "they mean it", or "they are living this music." I'm not expressing that very well.
In terms of the Beatles, I always preferred the Stones in the very early years (early to mid sixties and the early singles and albums). I also liked the Yardbirds and later my real heroes were Cream.
I was no great fan of early Beatles -" She Loves You" was distinctly meh for me, but I thought "We can work it out" was a great song. But when my brother gave me Sergeant Pepper as a birthday present when it came out - I was 13 or 14 - I thought it was a bit special, as was Abbey Road and the earlier Rubber Soul.
A previously unreleased non-Beatles track recorded in 1968 featuring George Harrison and Ringo was recently discovered in a loft in Birmingham during lockdown.
You can listen to it here...
The story behind the track starts at 2:16:00.
The track starts at 2:27:55
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/p09z32fn
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