Music
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It's aight!
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Best music venue for me is most definitely different to most memorable!
Camden Roundhouse sound engineers are on point, and I've enjoyed so great shows there. Most memorable?
Wetland and CBGBs in NYC in the early 90s
Stone Pony in NJ early 90s
The Marquee in London, 90s
London Union Chapel for Mudhoney, Love Battery, Ahghan Whigs, Nirvana shows all around 1990
The Powerhouse for Bikini Kill in the mid 90s, to see Mark Lamar get owned!
The Garage in London for many a hardcore and death metal show.
The old Wembley stadium for GnR in 91, just to hear 75000 people singing from out of nowhere by Faith No More. That was incredible.I've had amazing box seats and floor seats at the Royal Albert Hall but found the acoustics (rather than sound engineering) not to be good.
Security restrictions in the late 90s started to kill the atmosphere of gigs. Accountability and insurance really put an end to my stage diving career!
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I've seen Bicep at the Roundhouse and yeah the sound was good…
Give the R.A.H another bash as they have been improving things a lot in recent years...
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Colin Hay was great last night at the Saban in Beverly Hills.
His fans are total nerds, and not in a good way. Shut the fuck up and let the man talk and play. He shut em down in one instance by saying effectively the same thing. In another, when some asshole started to try to clap on the one, he stopped and pointed out that he'd rearranged the song to make it difficult to clap to. There were other behaviors to rant about, but a general lack of etiquette wasn't enough to derail a great show.
Anyway, very funny man, and I had no idea he could shred guitar that hard.
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Setzer lives (or at least lived) in Minneapolis. He was very nice to us fans who accosted him
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Local roaster has a blend branded "Bitches Brew" so now a formative album will be freaking out the dogs for the next couple of hours. Just love this damn album… So evocative of mystery and the mystical.
I would strongly recommend Miles Davis' autobiography as well, it is fascinating, in turns hilarious, inspiring, and tragic, and definitely you can hear his raspy voice narrating the thing as you read it. He, like another of my favorites, Frank Zappa, was so visionary and so good at assembling and motivating the talent needed to realize his vision.
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Betty Davis….
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She rules. I learned about her on season 2 of Mike Judge's brilliant series "Tales From the Tour Bus" (a must for music lovers: first season did outlaw country, second did funk. I bought each season from YouTube for $20 a pop, 10 episodes–well worth it because you can always screen them for guests and they never get old).
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Yeah! Outlaw shit fo sho
And some hippie outlaw shit (maybe my favorite anecdote from either season where nobody gets shot)
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Yeah a lot of them good old boys of that time loved the cocaine and whiskey.
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Yeah a lot of them good old boys loved the cocaine and whiskey.
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Great tune @Stuart.T ! Personally i think cocaine is highly overrated.
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Troubadour is a go-to album for wifey and me. Great for romantic vibes.
They loved their whiskey, cocaine, AND pills. It's interesting, they said Willie would fire people for doing the devil's dandruff, and Waylon for doing the devil's lettuce. Look who's still here!
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