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Messages - gweimer

#1
Quote from: uwe on April 19, 2020, 07:59:17 PM
Last I heard, wasn't Mutt's input largely with the PA of the couple? And I don't mean the sound system either.

:rimshot:

Where were we? The Floydish intro is nice, but once her own material starts, the music is as fake und inorganic as her hair extensions. And that Mutt Lange sound (I was never a friend of even back in the day, he was good on Pyromania, but totally OTT on Hysteria) has dated badly, Shania carries on with it though.

I'd like to hear her in an unplugged session, stripped down (the music, not her). Not because I believe she can't sing, but because I believe behind all that bombast there might be a voice worth resurrecting.

I don't disagree.  I just found that using not just Pink Floyd, but that song in particular, was really odd in the setting of her show.
#2
We don't listen to much, but Julie likes to watch some of the concert footage on channels like AXS.  We just watched Shania Twain, and I was just amazed at the intro for "Feel Like A Woman".   Sounds like Mutt has some input.   Just wow.  And yes, I know what song that really is.   8)

#4

#5

#6
Quote from: uwe on March 22, 2020, 12:12:14 PM
Robbie has always been a sensible man. And for all the tattoos, sartorial flamboyance und alternative lifestyle: very, very British "keep calm und carry on".

I always liked the fact that the minute he gets off stage, he has the air of a Birmingham grammar school teacher to him.

I interviewed him when I was writing for the music paper.   Two things I noticed about him:

  • He never EVER stammers or hesitates when he speaks.  He is really articulate, and knows exactly what he wants to say.  No "umm" or  getting stuck in a phrase.
  • When he turns his back on the audience in a show, he makes funny faces at the rest of the band.
#7
He's getting older.   Yes....we must ALWAYS remember to clean the crop...
#8

#10
The Outpost Cafe / Re: All is well now ...
March 21, 2020, 12:59:08 PM
I like it !   :thumbsup:
#11
The Outpost Cafe / Re: 13 Questionable Bands
February 21, 2020, 03:45:06 AM
Quote from: Basvarken on February 20, 2020, 11:44:08 PM
:bored:

Just to bore Uwe some more



One of my favorite Thin Lizzy songs.  My first band covered this.  Concrete Blond also covered it.
#12
The Outpost Cafe / Re: 13 Questionable Bands
February 16, 2020, 09:09:00 AM
Quote from: uwe on February 14, 2020, 08:12:18 AM
Black Sabbath's perception has changed greatly over the decades. Back in the 70ies, they weren't really seen as a band with a musical contribution, more as a one hit wonder (Paranoid) with a mad singer you couldn't take entirely serious. That only changed a little with Sabbath Bloody Sabbath (the album), their most orchestral and arranged work (Vol. IV already indicated that direction). Soon after though, Punk happened and Sabbath and their sluggish riffs (no doubt an art, but not valued as one back then) were dubbed dinosaurs. When Ozzy left/was fired (after the Dave Walker intermezzo), they were viewed as a spent force that had seen its ass kicked by an upstart opening act named Van Halen (with a very nimble guitarist who had all digits intact) on the European tour.

Even during the Dio years - musically nothing to be ashamed of -, they were still smiled upon, Ronnie's lyrical sword & sorcery obsession never endeared him to critics. Gillan joining (and I think Born Again is one of the best albums Gillan has sung on outside his Deep Purple canon, I also think that this album and its production - derided at the time, a sonic classic by today's standards - was an unsung trigger for Grunge music as a whole) was viewed as a hilarious move spawned by and in drunken stupor (well, it actually was!  :)).



After that, with constantly changing line-ups, it was diminishing returns, though not without highlights.





It was only the advent of Grunge - not the LA glam hard rock before which patterned itself more after Led Zep and Aerosmith - that led to a lasting re-appreciation of Sabbath and a reinstatement of theirs into the "holy trinity" of Brit heavy rock that is Led Zep, Purple and the Sabs. I remember my surprise when all these Grungies all of the sudden voiced admiration for Sabbath's music (and not just Ozzy's showmanship) come the 90ies. Before that, mention of Black Sabbath was invariably always tied to some joke on them, even in metal mags. Now, the sheer physical necessity of a handicapped guitarist (and closet Joe Pass fan) to downtune co-led to a new musical movement. Life writes the most amazing stories.

I liked Born Again, and got to interview Ian Gillan on the tour with them.  Bev Bevan was on drums.  I always refer to Born Again as one of the most oppressive and brutal albums, soundwise, and that isn't a complaint.
#13
The Outpost Cafe / Re: The best Gwyneth news yet
February 11, 2020, 01:54:36 PM
Quote from: wellREDman on February 11, 2020, 11:53:21 AM
The placebo effect can trick the body into doing some amazing things, that's why they have to control for it in rigorous tests

cant let a quote like that pass without dropping my old firm



quite sad theres only Zal and Chris left now

Let me put my hands on you...  I loved the SAHB!
#14
The Outpost Cafe / Re: Don't eat those tortillas
February 11, 2020, 01:53:42 PM
So.....

Peggy has apparently never had a need for either knowing about, or using, a dildo.

Her customers, however....
#15
The Outpost Cafe / Re: The FDP is closing
January 28, 2020, 06:16:29 PM
^^^what he said.   

I stopped by.   Some of it hasn't changed, but parts of it has.   We're still debating Ginger vs. Mary Ann.