For information about how to use this forum please check out forum help and policies.
Quote
RedhotcarpetQuote
keefriffhard4lifeQuote
Redhotcarpet
I dont know anything about the Kinks and I discovered them far too late. They were always mentioned in the magazines or the books but still totally underrated by me. Is it the imo pretty lame bandname and their bleak image compared to Who, Stones, Velvet, Doors or Beatles? They failed to find new teen fans in the 1980s, 90s? Somehow their outside the retro era of the late 80s early 90s.
the kinks had a more bleak image than the velvet underground
Yes absolutely. Velvet Underground is still a goldmine for fashion, music, attitude, image, art etc.
The Kinks is a 60s pop band.
Quote
keefriffhard4lifeQuote
RedhotcarpetQuote
keefriffhard4lifeQuote
Redhotcarpet
I dont know anything about the Kinks and I discovered them far too late. They were always mentioned in the magazines or the books but still totally underrated by me. Is it the imo pretty lame bandname and their bleak image compared to Who, Stones, Velvet, Doors or Beatles? They failed to find new teen fans in the 1980s, 90s? Somehow their outside the retro era of the late 80s early 90s.
the kinks had a more bleak image than the velvet underground
Yes absolutely. Velvet Underground is still a goldmine for fashion, music, attitude, image, art etc.
The Kinks is a 60s pop band.
maybe i am missing something. to me bleak almost means depressed looking. velvet underground always had a bleak, depressing image even though you are right it was all in the name of art. the kinks always seemed upbeat to me.
anyways yes the kinks had a big comeback in the states in the late 70's/early 80's that lasted about 6-7 years with some hits, gold albums and larger tours. they faded again by about 1985. oasis were big fans of then and were going to try to revive the kinks again by touring with them around 1995 and hope the younger audience picked up on them but the kinks were pretty much broken up at that time and the tour never happened
Quote
keefriffhard4life
the kinks did have some songs with weird subject matter but i never thought of them as bleak
Quote
treaclefingersQuote
keefriffhard4life
the kinks did have some songs with weird subject matter but i never thought of them as bleak
Art Lover and Lola certainly fall in that category
Quote
buffalo7478
I used to think the KInks flaw was that they were 'too British' and for a period were doing less-accessoible concept albums. I was a fan of the earliest hits, Lola and then forwarding to the Sleepwalker/Low Budget era. But what I thought were flawed parts of their career was were the really great stuff was. Village Green, once I spent time with it, was brilliant. Songs like Waterloo Sunset, Well-Respected Man, Victoria etc that I thought kept them from being a hit in America due to their 'britishness' were amazing songs because they were about Britain and Rays love and nostalgia for it.
Years on from first enjoying the band in the 70s, I have grown to like them even more.
Quote
Manofwealthandtaste
Go on Dave! What a fun gig that was. Apart from a very impressive performance, as detailed in the review above, I loved his interaction with the audience between almost every song. The culmination of this being when we were all singing "Maybe It's Because I'm A Londoner"!
He really got us going .....and yes, his voice may actually be in better shape than Ray's.
Quote
Beast
He had a cracking three-piece band
Quote
Beast
Well, Dave Davies's first UK gig for 13 years surpassed all my expectations by a long stretch. It was really a great night. Needless to say, it was terrific to hear all those Kinks songs (though a bit strange at first, as I'm now accustomed to seeing Ray sing them), but I was not familiar with his solo work and it was a revelation. After hearing him perform (and I hardly dare say that I found him to be in better voice than Ray these days), I now think that if they do something together it promises to be even better than so far imagined. He had a cracking three-piece band and really seemed to be very at home singing and playing on stage. Quite a feat as well, given that he had to relearn guitar and everything else after his stroke.
Here's the setlist, followed by a 4-star review (and for a photo, click on link at the bottom):
I'm Not Like Everybody Else
I Need You
She's Got Everything
Little Green Amp
Creeping Jean
Tired of Waiting for You
Susannah's Still Alive
See My Friends
Strangers
Flowers in the Rain
Young and Innocent Days
Death of a Clown
The Healing Boy
Dead End Street
Living on a Thin Line
Remember the Future
Where Have All the Good Times Gone
All Day and All of the Night
Encore:
I'm Not Like Everybody Else
You Really Got Me
Dave Davies, Barbican Hall, review
Dave Davies of the Kinks returned to rock with a rowdy run of hits, says Andrew Perry
4 out of 5 stars
For those who’ve learnt to read the runes of heritage-rock comebacks, it now seems certain that the Kinks are to follow in the footsteps of their Sixties antecedents, the Rolling Stones, by playing some 50th-anniversary shows this year. The ever crabby relationship between the band’s core siblings, Ray and Dave Davies, has apparently reached some kind of détente – they’ve reportedly even been rehearsing together.
Speculation was understandably rife that the occasion of Dave’s first UK concert in 13 years might’ve been used as a platform for an announcement, or indeed that the 67-year-old guitarist might be joined onstage by his elder brother, for the first time since the Kinks conked out in 1996.
It was also a necessary exercise in bringing wayward Dave back to match-fitness. While Ray, perennially fêted for his lyrical observations of quintessential Englishness, has remained a solo headlining attraction, the younger Davies’s progress has been more unsteady: 10 years ago, he suffered a stroke, and his rehabilitation, both physical and psychological, has been gruelling; his solo ventures, meanwhile, have reflected his more floaty, spiritual nature, taking in unloved albums of electro-rock, and a book about meditation.
As he appeared to the strains of the Kinks’s “I’m Not Like Everybody Else”, sporting an embroidered oriental gown over a pink suit, with red-rimmed spectacles resting casually atop his brows, he cut an individual dash, indeed. His voice was initially frail, and when a fan responded to the line in “Creepin’ Jean” about the character leaving her underwear lying around in his room, by flinging a rather voluminous bra at him, he was completely wrong-footed, and took a minute to regain his composure.
Barbican Hall’s gaping expanse has engulfed many a brittle rock act over the years, but Davies soon effortlessly filled it with his uniquely Neanderthal riffing style, and his sheer joy at being on stage. He seemed genuinely on the verge of tears as the audience bayed along to his 1967-vintage “Death of a Clown”. He fondly dedicated “Young and Innocent Days” to “a very dear and special person, my brother Raymond”, and eventually the Kinks megahits arrived, a breathless run including “Dead End Street”, “Where Have All the Good Times Gone?”, “All Day and All of the Night”, and, with the audience on their feet, “You Really Got Me”.
There were no fraternal cameos, and no announcements, but this was still a rowdy, memorable and hugely enjoyable show. Against the odds, Dave’s shaping up nicely.
[www.telegraph.co.uk]
Quote
jiggysawdustQuote
Beast
He had a cracking three-piece band
Beast,
As a member of that three-piece band, I thank you. The show was a lot of fun.
Quote
jiggysawdust
Treacle,
I play second guitar.
Quote
crawdaddy
The Davies boys are true Londoners are heart.
Muswell HillBillys through and through.
He did.Quote
filstan
Did he really do "Maybe It's Because I'm A Londoner"?
Quote
jiggysawdustHe did.Quote
filstan
Did he really do "Maybe It's Because I'm A Londoner"?
Man Of Wealth,Quote
Manofwealthandtaste
Hey Jiggy, was it you that Dave said he met in a curry house?!