People you used to ...
 

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[Closed] People you used to like..

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...til you read their autobiography.
Annie Nightingale.
Yes, you broke your leg on holiday. Having met Prince Charles doesn't mean you will get medevacced home.
Yes, you were on air when lady di got killed.
How you performed is not people's over riding memory of that event.
Just **** off and get some wicked Es grandma then let us know how in tune with the yoof you are.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 8:37 am
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Not really after reading their autobiography but used to love Kenny Everett when I was a kid until I found out he was a tory.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 8:50 am
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Colin Firth until I found out he was remoaner looney enough to become and Italian citizen.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 8:53 am
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I've gone right off Rolf Harris


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 8:54 am
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Become what and an Italian citizen?


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 8:54 am
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Louise


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 8:55 am
 Nico
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Quite a while ago but I liked Eric Clapton until I found out that he liked black music but wouldn't want one moving in next door.

More interesting is the people who seem to be suspect but people you respect who know them say the opposite. Phil Collins, apparently, but I can't remember who said it.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 8:57 am
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black music

Anyone that would pigeonhole any form of music as 'black' attracts my immediate disdain.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:01 am
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David Millar, comes across as a self-regarding bell end in his books. And that's disregarding the doping.

Really good at his TV punditry stuff though, so I'm coming back round to him.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:05 am
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Flashy, up until the footwear fashion shoot.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:06 am
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Anyone that would pigeonhole any form of music as 'black' attracts my immediate disdain.

So where do you stand on the MOBO's? 😆


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:07 am
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I've gone right off Rolf Harris

+1 He was the one out of the whole post-Saville clear-out that surprised and disappointed me.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:10 am
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Not really after reading their autobiography but used to love Kenny Everett when I was a kid until I found out he was a tory.

Do people really dislike others just because of who they vote for? Really really? 😕


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:10 am
 aP
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Lance Armstrong -- until I read his book "It's not about the bike" and realised what a nice person he was.
I don't really read autobiographies, self aggrandising bellends telling the world how great they are doesn't really work for me.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:11 am
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Do people really dislike others just because of who they vote for? Really really?

Of course.

See also Michael Caine.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:12 am
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Conversely I think I might like Colin Firth a bit more than before.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:18 am
 DezB
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[i]I don't really read autobiographies, self aggrandising bellends telling the world how great they are doesn't really work for me.[/i]

Rather knowledgeable about autiobiographies for someone that doesn't read them. 😆


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:18 am
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See also Michael Caine.

I seem to remember his policy is "two terms is enough". So do you like him for 8* years, then not, then do etc.?


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:19 am
 aP
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Rather knowledgeable about autiobiographies for someone that doesn't read them

Yours was alright though 😉


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:19 am
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Ye gods that OP reminded me of a time when we once dropped in to witness an Annie Nightingale DJ slot at the Big Chill. We lasted all of 2 minutes before sodding off. A full 120 seconds within which we were subjected to [url= http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/Blipvert ]blipvert[/url] style blasts of vintage news-footage of events such as you mention, cut with snips of 'choons ov the day'. Came over as relentless, disjointed, and self-conscious. Rather than the 'momentous' set that I'm sure she imagines it was. And I do remember correctly. Horrible. Felt good to slip into the cool night and away from such aching guffrage.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:23 am
 DezB
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[i]Yours was alright though[/i]

Cos I just tell everyone what I dick I am. 8)


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:24 am
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I seem to remember his policy is "two terms is enough". So do you like him for 8* years, then not, then do etc.?

Come again?


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:26 am
 DezB
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I used to really really like Mary Anne Hobbs! Like, we exchanged emails n everything!
Then, I found out that her musical taste just goes with whatever show she's asked to present. What a let down! (I knew about some rock show thing, but thought she'd seen the light!) Then on a review show she slagged off this great track and a few months later the bloke who made it DIED! I bet she didn't even care, the bitch.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:27 am
 dazh
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I have a signed copy of John Major's autobiography. As someone who's rabidly anti-tory after reading it I quite liked him.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:30 am
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So where do you stand on the MOBO's?

Don't start me on that one.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:31 am
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Of course.

Then that makes them a right bellend.

I seriously can't believe that's serious though.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:34 am
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I've never actually "liked" the bloke or been a fan but I saw Gary Glitter in Baileys Nightclub, Leicester 39 years ago and thought he put on a good show without ever realising what a ****in sick bastard he would turn out to be ..


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:36 am
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chakaping - Member
I seem to remember his policy is "two terms is enough". So do you like him for 8* years, then not, then do etc.?

Come again?

Michael Caine, if memory serves correct will vote for who ever is in opposition if the government has been in place for two terms.

Eg voted labour in 97 and 2001 then conservative subsequently and will do that until they've had two terms in office* then vote labour again.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:36 am
 DezB
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I've still got a Gary Glitter album. I like it.
Wouldn't make him a cup of tea or anything though.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:38 am
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I have an autographed copy of The Rolf Harris Song Book, as well as the cartoon dedication he penned in it for us my ex wife had the added bonus of a grope, as did my friend Rachel. They were rather too surprised to be offended.

Took a while longer before he really went down in my estimation.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:39 am
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Thanks for the explanation.

To answer your question, no I'd have even less respect for him basing his voting on such a facile principle.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:40 am
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[img] [/img]

Almost the other way round with this guy. Nobber but knows it, and a right rollicking read...


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:41 am
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David Bowie, nazi loving Hitler fan ****er..
I always thought Clapton and Glitter were grade A tossers!


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:41 am
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Used to like Joe Cocker, but have become tired of his gravelly drone.
Saying that though, I wouldn't want anything bad to happen to the man.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:48 am
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Brandon Flowers.

Used to really like The Killers and wound up going to see them live in Sheffield. By co-incidence they were being interviewed on TV shortly afterwards and he came across as disinterested, bored and spent the whole interview being rude towards the interviewer.

I can barely listen to them now.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:49 am
 km79
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Phil Collins, apparently, but I can't remember who said it.
I can't speak for his music as I'm not really into music but I have met Phil Collins many times as he frequently stayed in a little b&b/inn place I used to drink in back when I was a student. He was very humble and down to earth, bought everyone drinks all the time but without showing off about it and would always join us for a chat and a drink. You wouldn't have known he was so successful because he just came across as a normal bloke. The place he stayed at must have been one of the cheapest places around as well, he could have stayed anywhere or even bought his own place nearby but he liked staying there because the owner and everyone else just treated him normal which he liked.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 9:53 am
 DezB
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Exactly! Never seen Alexei Sayle's Stuff?

NICE?! I don't want my rock stars to be NICE!


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 10:02 am
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I don't mind if they're not nice, I like John Lydon and he's a right tosspot!
but I have to draw the line at racist nazi ****s..


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 10:10 am
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Anthony Kiedis.

frankly I went off him with the coffee-table schlock that was Californication but the autobiography really sealed it


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 10:10 am
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Used to really like The Killers and wound up going to see them live in Sheffield. By co-incidence they were being interviewed on TV shortly afterwards and he came across as disinterested, bored and spent the whole interview being rude towards the interviewer.
But these guys get interviewed constantly and often have nothing to say and they know it, so I generally give them some slack in this area.

ref Alan Clark - I had several occasions to "meet" him as he always dropped in the establishment where I worked when travelling to his house in Scotland, he was very charming, remembered peoples names, told funny stories and was quite self deprecating. Total Snob.

Chris Evans, - liked him, hated him, liked him again, can't be arsed with him now.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 10:16 am
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NICE?! I don't want my rock stars to be NICE!

This. As long as they leave those kids alone.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 10:22 am
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Graham Norton.
He used to be funny, honest.

Charlie Brooker.

Mike Myers and Ben Stiller, until I read about how they treat people.

Peter Kay, because of the way he treated Dave Spikey.

Always assumed Mick Jones was the heart and soul of the Clash and Joe was a bit of a prima donna.
Got that one wrong.....


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 10:22 am
 DezB
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Chris Evans is a good one - Liked him back in the Don't Forget Your Toothbrush days. Can't stand the sight (or sound) of him these days.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 10:32 am
 Nico
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Anyone that would pigeonhole any form of music as 'black' attracts my immediate disdain.

I do beg your pardon. I meant to say "music by black people". B B King, Robert Johnson, those people. You know, the ones that are black.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:02 am
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So what if they are black?

Would anyone say 'music by white/yellow/purple people'? Colour is a complete irrelevance to music.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:06 am
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Not if you're a pianist.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:09 am
 DezB
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MOBO is right - music of black origin. (ie. nearly all of it 🙂 )


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:10 am
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Guy Martin. Goes on and on about how he doesn't like the publicity, doesn't like everybody knowing his business and just wants to be a truck fitter but then keeps making TV shows, releasing books, hoodies etc.

Take your pick, be a millionaire who gets to do cool stuff or be a truck fitter, you cant have it both ways.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:12 am
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I'm with Colin Firth on the wanting out of post-Brexit Britain.

As for Bowie, he made a comment about wanting to be a fascist dictator when he was off his bean on coke, during his thin white duke days. I don't think that the actually [i]meant[/i] anything by it and certainly was a key player in Rock Against Racism (set up after the infamous Clapton comments).

Now, Gary Glitter originally wanted to call himself Terry Tinsel. I'll let you draw your own conclusions.

Finally, I'm also quite anti-Tory but I do have a friend who's father worked with both John Major and Tony Blair. Apparently, Major really is quite a decent chap who took a keen interest in his colleagues and their families. Blair is allegedly a massive knobber, but you already knew that.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:15 am
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ie. nearly all of it

Is so true. But I still see it as putting lines in the sand which needn't be there.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:19 am
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Brexiters, all their autobiographies are written in 1976 and in crayon dawbs and spittle encrusted.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:21 am
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Very disappointed in Brian Pern when it came out he wasn't dead after all.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:27 am
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Colour is a complete irrelevance to music.

bullshit. slavery & blues can't be seperated.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:32 am
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Murray Walker - the voice of motorsport my a***. A mate of mine was trying to organise a grasstrack race in Hampshire and guess who was the ringleader of the NIMBYs who blocked it?


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:40 am
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my in laws.

actually, tell a lie....

Looked after the kids today while we're at work. Sat in front of the TV all day while FIL downloaded the entire internet via torrents. drank all the milk so no bedtime milk for the kids. 4 items on a shopping list of things we needed. got one. didnt think the list was for them. FIL then slept on my daughters bed, ignoring the fact the bed was stripped as she had an accident last night, and he slept on top of the clean bedding but didn't think to chuck a sheet on..... oh a moaned that his teeth were giving him jip while munching on a family size portion of crunchy nut cornflakes (30g sugar per 100g cereal? seems healthy huh)

mother in law doesn't wash up put puts tiny bits of water in the cups to "let them soak" and hangs rank dishcloth type things over every tap in the house to "let them air"

God then annoy me something rotten
rant over. they're back in the morning. yay.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:46 am
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[url= http://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/arts-entertainment/morrissey-was-never-in-the-smiths-say-fans-20171013137412 ]Morriseys[/url] journey from sensitive, articulate, witty, Mancunian lefty whinge-bag to LA dwelling, flag-waving, UKIP-supporting Farage-with-a-quiff has been pretty spectacular


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:49 am
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bullshit. slavery & blues can't be seperated.

Can blue men sing the whites?


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:52 am
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I have a signed copy of John Major's autobiography. As someone who's rabidly anti-tory after reading it I quite liked him.

He went from being "all right for a Tory" to plain old "all right", if anything he was more left of centre than Tony Blair, did a lot of good in his short-ish go and did little bad which isn't easy for a PM.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:53 am
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Anthony Kiedis.

frankly I went off him with the coffee-table schlock that was Californication but the autobiography really sealed it

Same, I got as far as him treating Hepatitis with Ozone injections and wrote him off as another La La Land Pseudo-science fashion victim.

I mean, seriously the more than a decade spanning heroin addict is worried about his Ozone levels.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:56 am
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I'm totally with you, thomthumb. johndoh, I don't know how much time you have spent in the USA, but if you go to New Orleans, Memphis, or Detroit, for example, you will find that black history and pride in the (mind-blowing) music it has produced, nullifies your seemingly naïve position.

Music grows out of a people's experience. It may be synthesised with other forms later, or shared by others after it has marinated among the originating people(s), but it has to start somewhere first and emerge later.

Delta Blues reflects Black experience
Gospel reflects Black experience
Motown reflects Black experience

Just by way of a few examples.

But back to topic: I have a hard time believing that Clapton said what has been quoted of him, above. Are you sure that isn't completely taken out of context? IIRC, he was a huge admirer of Jimi Hendrix - as both a musician and a person.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:58 am
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David Mitchell- liked the peep show, but now he makes a living being a shouty twit on panel shows.
Lemmy- used to think he was kinda cool rock 'n' roll rebel. Turns out nazi memorabilia collecting sad loner.
The Oasis brothers- when they 1st came I was learning to play the guitar and their 1st two albums were good to play along with. Now they're up their own a.holes


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 11:59 am
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He went from being "all right for a Tory" to plain old "all right", if anything he was more left of centre than Tony Blair, did a lot of good in his short-ish go and did little bad which isn't easy for a PM.

Which is why I don't get British party-based tribalism. It really is quite peculiar.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 12:00 pm
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I agree with quite a few of the previous comments: Clapton from 'God' to ****; John Major - I'm also usually anti-Tory, but can't help but like him; Bowie - Wasn't a 'real' fascist. I would add Sean Connery - anti English, pro Scottish independence Spanish resident and Bob Dylan - from (pretend?) left wing protester to reactionary old man and from nice Jewish boy to Christian fanatic. On the other hand I still like Guy Martin.....


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 12:03 pm
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oomidamon - Member 

Murray Walker - the voice of motorsport my a***. A mate of mine was trying to organise a grasstrack race in Hampshire and guess who was the ringleader of the NIMBYs who blocked it?


D'you know, there were stories back in the day of Matchams getting closed down because of him, but it's just utterly irreconcilable with what I know about him. I shall file this under "judgement reserved".


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 12:07 pm
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Sean Connery - anti English, pro Scottish independence Spanish resident

Thought he lived in the Bahamas somewhere?


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 12:13 pm
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Which is why I don't get British party-based tribalism. It really is quite peculiar.

Like the US, you don't win a general election in the UK by convincing people to vote for you per-se, you enthuse the people who would have voted for you anyway because of your party to get out and vote and try to spread apathy amongst the other tribe.

I'm a 'life long Labour voter' but, I have on occasion been tempted by other party, even the Tories. If Major was standing against Corbyn, I'd vote Tory without a moments pause.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 12:17 pm
 chip
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Jonathon Ross, liked him for years from when he did the last resort. Can't stand him now.

Think it might be because of I associate him with Russel brand.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 12:20 pm
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I have a signed copy of John Major's autobiography. As someone who's rabidly anti-tory after reading it I quite liked him.

A much under-rated politician who I admire. I'm not tory either. But that Edwina thing?


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 12:23 pm
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A late friend of my wife's, a schizophrenia sufferer, used to hear Murray Walker shouting through the roof of his flat, aggressively berating him for being homosexual.

So clearly the old duffer wasn't as nice as all that.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 12:26 pm
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Not a fan of reading autobiogs, but John Peel's left a bit of a sour taste.

Morissey, I hope/suspect is just messing with people because he can, a bit like John Lydon.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 12:27 pm
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Take your pick, be a millionaire who gets to do cool stuff or be a truck fitter, you cant have it both ways.

Well... You would think wouldn’t you.

But he’s kind of proved you totally wrong, by doing exactly that.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 12:33 pm
 DezB
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[i]bullshit. slavery & blues can't be seperated.[/i]

*cough* Seasick Steve. As genuine as they come. Straight out the chain gang etc 😆


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 12:40 pm
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Chris Packham


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 12:42 pm
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Seasick Steve. As genuine as they come. Straight out of the transcendental chain gang etc

Ftfy


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 12:45 pm
 DezB
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Yeah, That Dave Attenborough too! Turns out he didn't stand on a melting ice-flow with a camera strapped to his shoulder, talking in hushed tones so the polar bears couldn't hear him.. had a whole team of people and and and EDITED footage. Faker!


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 12:53 pm
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Music grows out of a people's experience. It may be synthesised with other forms later, or shared by others after it has marinated among the originating people(s), but it has to start somewhere first and emerge later.

Delta Blues reflects Black experience
Gospel reflects Black experience
Motown reflects Black experience


I do not, for a minute, dispute what you are saying regarding the historical beginnings of such music. But what I find very strange in this day is that people still insist on labelling music as such. Why does it matter the colour of the skin of the musicians at the root of any given musical genre? It's music.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 1:04 pm
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Seem to remember Sean Connery being comfortable with a bit of spousal abuse. Liked him up to that point.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 1:15 pm
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MOBO is relevant because if you look at every generation or style of music you'll have stuff with a black influence history but there'll be a white crossover act raking all the beans in.
While this is probably inevitable the idea of MOBO was to recognise and reward the origonal artist whether its reggae blues soul or the funk that became disco .Otherwise you're condemned to the beegees or ub40.


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 1:20 pm
 DezB
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..or Vanilla Ice


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 1:34 pm
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MOBO is relevant because if you look at every generation or style of music you'll have stuff with a black influence history but there'll be a white crossover act raking all the beans in.

Like Sam Smith ?

(Six MOBO awards)


 
Posted : 18/10/2017 1:36 pm
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