philipchevron wrote:Sportin' Life wrote:I went to the Wednesday show and it was absolutely as brilliant as everyone described. Quite possibly the best music I have ever heard.
Oh and if anyone was actually interested, as was the plan I became engaged during Rainy Night in Soho. I'm not one given to being overly sentimental, but that was as of yet probably one of the best moments of my life. I suppose you band members that read this forum know that you make real meaningful positive moments that touch the very souls of your audience....but there it is reiterated and explicit.
Mere ticket prices and applause is not enough for people who give so much to life.
Congratulations!
And thanks!
neilinseattle wrote:And I must say, Canadians know how to do one more thing better than Americans -- relax and have a good time!![]()
Sportin' Life wrote:Oh and if anyone was actually interested, as was the plan I became engaged during Rainy Night in Soho.
Anonymous wrote:Here's a good account of the first night in Seattle:
http://lineout.thestranger.com/2007/10/ ... ht_in_sodo
philipchevron wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's a good account of the first night in Seattle:
http://lineout.thestranger.com/2007/10/ ... ht_in_sodo
See how nice these people can write when they're not drunk? Someday, someone will write an on-the-money piece about the Pogues and "sentimentality", though not quite yet. This is a good starting point. Traditionally, sentimentality is not a Bad Word in Irish culture. It is understood as a real human resource, expressed and celebrated but not wallowed in, and always immediately contrasted with a Devil-May-Care moment of equivalent force. Perhaps what allows the Pogues to bring it honestly into what we do is we're such a bunch of fuckin' cynics at heart, as surprised as anyone else to find ourselves ambushed by such uncool and - the unenlightened would argue - cheap emotion.
One of the greatest moments of my musical life was the first New York show after Shane's knee trouble in Boston last March. It came after "Rainy Night In Soho" when the entire audience gave us what can only be described as an ovation. They were all on their feet anyway, so it was more than just the usual mutual celebration of life and love shared between audience and band at a Pogues show. The ovation was directed at Shane, at the Pogues, but more than that, at the common human capacity to feel joy, pain, sorrow, happiness, elation and grief and still survive to tell the tale, something the Pogues seem to be quite good at, especially after 25 years of experience. It's OK to choke up, to shed a tear or two, to hug the guy next to you, because we're HERE, goddamit. Where better for this to happen than New York, a city of survivors and governed, more than anywhere, by the dual forces of sentimentality and hardnosed ambition. The writer is right about conflict, though I prefer to think of it as ambiguity.
Eric V wrote:KathleenwithaK wrote:derelict81 wrote:Neil? Kathleen? Cdn Steve? Hello?
OK, OK...just getting to a computer now (sorry).
Thanks so much for that Kathleen! Aside from our accordion slinging friend's always entertaining writings, with unique insights, yours has been the most enjoyable read thus far on the tour.
I wonder what the No Pitty guy was meaning to relate?
Sportin' Life wrote:I went to the Wednesday show and it was absolutely as brilliant as everyone described. Quite possibly the best music I have ever heard.
Oh and if anyone was actually interested, as was the plan I became engaged during Rainy Night in Soho. I'm not one given to being overly sentimental, but that was as of yet probably one of the best moments of my life. I suppose you band members that read this forum know that you make real meaningful positive moments that touch the very souls of your audience....but there it is reiterated and explicit.
Mere ticket prices and applause is not enough for people who give so much to life.
neilinseattle wrote:Sorry for the delay in posting, but it has been a wild couple of days. I'm finally back in Portland and just put the wee ones to bed.
I departed the office around 1pm. I had originally intended to drive directly downtown to the bar, but decided about halfway to Seattle that the best course of action was to park the car near my friend's house in Greenwood and bus it down to the bar, and cab it home after the show. Considering how things developed, it turned out to be the best decision of the night.
I arrived at the Owl n Thistle around 530pm and my friend Paul and I sat down next to a trio obviously headed for the show. We introduced ourselves and it was all downhill from there. Before I knew it we were surrounded by the Canadian invasion. Mike, Janine, Ian, LowD and his wife. Cheers, lads and lassies! Later the crew from Portland arrived led by runbmg. By 730 in the evening every bastard there was pisky -- the whole bar was singing football songs -- at least I think that's what people were singing.
Unfortunately CdnSteve and KathleenwithaK were in another part of the bar and I didn't get to talk to them much. But thank you for setting them straight with the music, Kathleen! I did get to see Steve after the show the next night. He was standing in the middle of the empty venue floor with a huge grin on his face and one of the copies of the set list in his hand!
BTW--To all those people at the bar who I told the concert venue was a short walk down the street from the bar -- I'm sorry. I was drunk and didn't know what the hell I was talking about.At least we didn't have to scale any moutains like we did on the walk down to the Fillmore last year.
The first show was brilliant. But I woke up the next morning with no voice whatsoever, and I have not yet regained it. Made for a frustrating day and night for the second show, as I was generously granted the opportunity to meet and speak with my heroes after the show, but I couldn't utter a sound! Probably left the impression of being either painfully shy or a just a prick, but I was just frustratingly mute yet happy to be in the presence of such great people.
I think my wife likes my new found muteness, however.She joined me for the second show (her first Pogues concert) and scored us some seats overlooking the stage. I needed to take it easy after the night before. Guess I am getting old.
Thanks again to the Pogues for making it all possible. It was a wonderful time and it was great to meet so many wonderful people at the bar and at the show. With two small kids, I don't get out much lately.
And I must say, Canadians know how to do one more thing better than Americans -- relax and have a good time!![]()
PS--Let it be said, Mr. Chevron that many a pint was raised in your honor at the Owl n Thistle in Seattle, and you were, and remain, in our thoughts!
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