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UGot2Rollme
I tried to watch Oasis Wembley show last night on MTV, but was bored by Noel and Liam's lack of movement and no connection with the crowd. Noel even had a music stand in front of him! I like some of their music, or I wouldnt have been watching but are there other bands out there who are so dull on stage?
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UGot2Rollme
I tried to watch Oasis Wembley show last night on MTV, but was bored by Noel and Liam's lack of movement and no connection with the crowd. Noel even had a music stand in front of him! I like some of their music, or I wouldnt have been watching but are there other bands out there who are so dull on stage?
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Svartmer
The last time I saw Dylan was 2003. You couldn´t really see him (a big hat on and half way turned from the audience), you couldn´t hear him sing (the remains of his voice buried in the extremely bad mix), you couldn´t hear him talk (he didn´t say a word between the songs), you didn´t recognize most of the songs (the arrangements completely different from the originals). I still have the ticket and it says Bob Dylan but I wonder...
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Doc
The mosty visually boring act to me is Pink Floyd.
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GazzaQuote
Svartmer
The last time I saw Dylan was 2003. You couldn´t really see him (a big hat on and half way turned from the audience), you couldn´t hear him sing (the remains of his voice buried in the extremely bad mix), you couldn´t hear him talk (he didn´t say a word between the songs), you didn´t recognize most of the songs (the arrangements completely different from the originals). I still have the ticket and it says Bob Dylan but I wonder...
Some of us actually like that.
A true performing artist isnt there to replicate the original recordings. Its pretty ludicrous to expect something to sound like it did 30 or 40 years ago. As far as he's concerned, the original recording is merely a template. The song matures and develops over the years through the different interpretations.
Never ceases to amaze me how many different ways he can rework a song. Year-in, year-out the arrangements change radically, sometimes to a degree where it even changes the mood of the song's lyrics (listen to the original of 'I Want You' and then the 1978 live version thats on 'Budokan' for example). Sometimes the arrangements come off brilliantly, sometimes they dont, but it keeps it interesting.
Personally I prefer that option to just attempting to carbon-copy the original or by playing the song the exact same way for years on end.
Genius makes it's own rules.
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Happy24
Bob Dylan. But that is another case... :-) I wouldn't call him dull, but I have never seen anyone else trying so hard not to make any other connection with the audience than by the music itself. But that is well known.
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DandelionPowderman
<It would be fun to hear your reactions if the Stones would play their great songs with different chords and tempo. Maybe they will, unintentional, the next tour>
They did it with 19th Nervous Breakdown. No huge success though.
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Happy24Quote
Doc
The mosty visually boring act to me is Pink Floyd.
Roger Waters actually makes very good connection with his audience. I was very surprised when I saw him - I expected him to be cold and distant, but he was actually quite cool, at least he seemed to be. He put on one of the best concerts I have ever attended both musically and visually. But I understand that you probably speak about the rest of the Floyd, which I have unfortunately never seen. But I don't believe I would be bored.
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SvartmerQuote
GazzaQuote
Svartmer
The last time I saw Dylan was 2003. You couldn´t really see him (a big hat on and half way turned from the audience), you couldn´t hear him sing (the remains of his voice buried in the extremely bad mix), you couldn´t hear him talk (he didn´t say a word between the songs), you didn´t recognize most of the songs (the arrangements completely different from the originals). I still have the ticket and it says Bob Dylan but I wonder...
Some of us actually like that.
A true performing artist isnt there to replicate the original recordings. Its pretty ludicrous to expect something to sound like it did 30 or 40 years ago. As far as he's concerned, the original recording is merely a template. The song matures and develops over the years through the different interpretations.
Never ceases to amaze me how many different ways he can rework a song. Year-in, year-out the arrangements change radically, sometimes to a degree where it even changes the mood of the song's lyrics (listen to the original of 'I Want You' and then the 1978 live version thats on 'Budokan' for example). Sometimes the arrangements come off brilliantly, sometimes they dont, but it keeps it interesting.
Personally I prefer that option to just attempting to carbon-copy the original or by playing the song the exact same way for years on end.
Genius makes it's own rules.
It would be fun to hear your reactions if the Stones would play their great songs with different chords and tempo. Maybe they will, unintentional, the next tour
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shadooby
Bruce Springsteen
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Elmo LewisQuote
shadooby
Bruce Springsteen
Yeah, a real bore. ><
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The Menace of Mayfair
Aimee Mann is a dynamic musician and doesn't move around much, but her between song banter is hilarious!