MartyMoffatt wrote:A band like Rush is definitely the exception here – able to keep the same personnel for decades and still make fresh music.


Argh!!!!
Nothing is fresh about anything Rush does!
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MartyMoffatt wrote:A band like Rush is definitely the exception here – able to keep the same personnel for decades and still make fresh music.
Red13JoePa wrote:They're OK, but I wouldn't call Tom Sawyer, one of their monster hits, fresh when they got the music from Journey.
strangegrey wrote:MartyMoffatt wrote:A band like Rush is definitely the exception here – able to keep the same personnel for decades and still make fresh music.
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Argh!!!!
Nothing is fresh about anything Rush does!
Red13JoePa wrote:Then the author of the liner notes of Time3 MAY have less than truthful?
I wasn't dismissing the entire band at all. There IS minor irony that one of their hits may or may not have been built around a schon/Rolie motif. And that ain't fresh.
Although I do agree w/ Matthew's finding that overall Rush's sound is pretty "fresh" even though I'm not that interested in anything other than the Roll THe Bones album.
MartyMoffatt wrote:Don’t forget that most of these bands have been around for 25-30 years old, sometimes even longer. Very few marriages last that long, let alone groups of 4-5 individuals, each with their own egos and careers. Rappers have only been around a few years. Let’s see how well they get on with each other after a few more years, and when they aren’t having money thrown at them for doing next to nothing.
strangegrey wrote:MartyMoffatt wrote:A band like Rush is definitely the exception here – able to keep the same personnel for decades and still make fresh music.
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Argh!!!!
Nothing is fresh about anything Rush does!
strangegrey wrote:
No, that's actually from the first half of Season 6. It was during Tony Soprano's recovery in the hospital...
We all grasp things differently from our music...and somepeople gravitate to the bombastic arogance that Roth carried around with VH during his time in the band....personally, I found it offensive....and when Sammy joined the group, I was able to discover Eddie's playing.
John Sykes, who came in to fill in the last few solos on the Slide It In Record....He was largely relplacing Moody & Marsden, if I recall....ironic that he was given his same walking papers very shortly into the recording of Whitesnake:Whitesnake. John actually recorded the majority of the album after getting fired, but trudged on knowing someone else would do it and he felt it would be better off doing it himself. Good chap that he is!
But Coverdale *is* rumored to be a real dick to work with. However, I will add, that one of the reasons I've brought him up...is that he really appears to have matured over the past 20 years. The current incarnation of whitesnake (save for Mendoza's departure) seems to have remained intact for what seems like 5-7 years. That's coming up on a record for Coverdale. Regardless, the current lineup of whitesnake, in my opinion, is about the best lineup the band has had. They're doing the right things right now, they all get along...they're doing right by the fans. So to that end, they're in my good graces. i.e. Coverdale seems to have gotten past the petty bullshit that STILL plagues alot of current bands.
strangegrey wrote:I dunno if Sykes was brought in as solely a looker. The guy clearly brought a new level of musicality to the band...and for 1987, Sykes' tone was about as Modern and cutting edge as you can get.
I will add that I do believe Vivian Campbell *was* brought in as a visual stand in...because early on into the 87 tour, Coverdale was just ITCHING to fire Viv. They aparently saw nothing in common with eachother, from a musical standpoint....and I remember, even during the 87 tour, reading interviews with Coverdale where he would complain to no end about how much of a musically inept dipshit Vivian Campbell was.
Matthew wrote:Who's in Whitesnake now? And are they releasing albums? I've totally lost track of them over the years - even though I used to be a big fan of Coverdale's.
strangegrey wrote:[Coverdale has reported "erect nipples" over how it's coming out.
MartyMoffatt wrote:To continue with the theme of this thread, I think part of the problem for the decline in this genre is that radio stations and promoters don’t want to hear new music from older bands. They already have a captive audience with established fans of those bands and don’t want to take risks with their cash cows. Instead they will play just the music that made those people fans in the first place.
The music establishment would rather spend their resources chasing the larger but more fickle market of younger music lovers. They in turn want to hear something new – anything, as long as it’s different to what their parents listened to – that they can identify with and call their own. It’s a constant conveyor belt, and the focus is only on those stepping onto the conveyor belt. Talent and quality of music doesn't even enter into the process.
In a way it isn’t the bands that have become marginalised. It is us, the fans.
Marty
Matthew wrote:Who's in Whitesnake now? And are they releasing albums? I've totally lost track of them over the years - even though I used to be a big fan of Coverdale's.
Matthew wrote:I don't know about you..but the older I get the more my daily playlist starts to resemble the ones I had as a teenager. I couldn't really care less what bands of my generation are doing now. The music is rarely any good...certainly compared to the classic releases from twenty years ago.
Matthew wrote:Musically inept? This is the same guy who was completely on fire on Dio's Holy Diver album! Admittedly he hasn't done anything exciting since and Def Leppard are a shockingly bad rock group...but back in '83 Campbell was just as modern and as cutting edge as Sykes was...possibly more so, don't you think?
MartyMoffatt wrote:Actually, three albums on my playlist right now are new albums from Talisman, Danny Vaughn and Thunder which are every bit as good as anything they've ever done before. I'm also really looking forward to the new Rush album next week.
By contrast, I rarely listen to old albums from Black Sabbath, Whitesnake or Deep Purple the way I used to. I do agree that new music from old bands is often uninspired, but it depends on whether or not they still have the fire to produce genuinely new music and not just rehashes of their hits.
NoMoreTails wrote:I think Viv's still a very good guitarist, the only reason I've been interest in Def Lep at all for the last 15 years or so,
the Riverdogs album from 91 or 92 is his best work imo.
Regarding Hagar I recently heard Bob & Tom, nationally syndicated radio morning show, say he is the most real and genuine rock star they've encountered and the same guy during and post VH that he was in the 70s. Sammy has always seemed what you see is what you get to me.
Matthew wrote:NoMoreTails wrote:I think Viv's still a very good guitarist, the only reason I've been interest in Def Lep at all for the last 15 years or so,
the Riverdogs album from 91 or 92 is his best work imo.
I'll check that out, NMT. Did you like the Shadow King stuff? .
Regarding Hagar I recently heard Bob & Tom, nationally syndicated radio morning show, say he is the most real and genuine rock star they've encountered and the same guy during and post VH that he was in the 70s. Sammy has always seemed what you see is what you get to me.
NoMoreTails wrote:I really liked Shadow King at the time but it doesn't do as much for me now while I like Riverdogs as much as ever.
They're very different, as Shadow King was like Foreigner with a much better lead guitarist. Mick Jones had his strong points but playing lead wasn't the strongest of them. Riverdogs on the other hand was an album of (almost) folk songs injected with a dose of crunching guitar and great leads.
cyndy! wrote:NoMoreTails wrote:I really liked Shadow King at the time but it doesn't do as much for me now while I like Riverdogs as much as ever.
They're very different, as Shadow King was like Foreigner with a much better lead guitarist. Mick Jones had his strong points but playing lead wasn't the strongest of them. Riverdogs on the other hand was an album of (almost) folk songs injected with a dose of crunching guitar and great leads.
i feel the same. i have no desire to dig out the shadow king cd, but i have the riverdogs cd still in rotation. i was fortunate enough to see riverdogs a few times on their first tour & then again on their mini reunion tour a few years ago. the only reason i go to def leppard shows is to see viv.
NoMoreTails wrote:I really liked Shadow King at the time but it doesn't do as much for me now while I like Riverdogs as much as ever.
They're very different, as Shadow King was like Foreigner with a much better lead guitarist. Mick Jones had his strong points but playing lead wasn't the strongest of them. Riverdogs on the other hand was an album of (almost) folk songs injected with a dose of crunching guitar and great leads.
Matthew wrote:NoMoreTails wrote:I really liked Shadow King at the time but it doesn't do as much for me now while I like Riverdogs as much as ever.
They're very different, as Shadow King was like Foreigner with a much better lead guitarist. Mick Jones had his strong points but playing lead wasn't the strongest of them. Riverdogs on the other hand was an album of (almost) folk songs injected with a dose of crunching guitar and great leads.
Who was the vocalist on the Riverdogs album?
Shania wrote:Shadow King!1990? Oh my...I completely forgot about that band!I think I still have the audio cassette buried somewhere in a box.
I remember one song I really liked,"Russia" was the name,loved Lou's voice on that one.
It would take forever to fast forward the tape to get to it,it was somewhere and the end of Side B or something like that...
NoMoreTails wrote:Shania wrote:Shadow King!1990? Oh my...I completely forgot about that band!I think I still have the audio cassette buried somewhere in a box.
I remember one song I really liked,"Russia" was the name,loved Lou's voice on that one.
It would take forever to fast forward the tape to get to it,it was somewhere and the end of Side B or something like that...
Russia was a great song and the only Gramm/Campbell co-write as Viv basically did only the lead guitars on that album.
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