Skip to content


Advanced search
  • Board index ‹ Outside The Pogues ‹ Philip Chevron
  • Syndication
  • Change font size
  • E-mail friend
  • Print view
  • FAQ
  • Members
  • Register
  • Login

HOW TO START PLAYING THE GUITAR?

Rerelease of The Radiators, the musical, etc
Post a reply
490 posts • Page 5 of 33 • 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 ... 33
  • Reply with quote

Post Wed Apr 11, 2007 7:35 pm

My ex bought me the guitar. A strat copy (not too shabby) and i can play a handfull of songs after, 5 lessons and lots of practise.
Cant explain
laid
waiting for the great leap forward

to name a few. Its the first guitar i have ever played properly although i can just about play ukelele
Like the Mary Ellen Carter rise again
DownInTheGround
Brighella
 
Posts: 922
Joined: Tue Dec 05, 2006 1:31 pm
Location: Grimsby, United Kingdom
Top

  • Reply with quote

Post Wed Apr 11, 2007 8:03 pm

tis' noice to hear yar doin' great
maybe ukelele knowledge gave ya additional push to yar speedy progress? :D
IrishRover
Yeoman Rand
 
Posts: 2792
Joined: Thu Oct 06, 2005 12:01 pm
Top

  • Reply with quote

Post Wed Apr 11, 2007 8:08 pm

IrishRover wrote:tis' noice to hear yar doin' great
maybe ukelele knowledge gave ya additional push to yar speedy progress? :D


No i dont think so. I beleive unemployment is the key!! maybe all potential Townshends should try it. Today was my first day at the Airport job. saving for uni. i learnt you "should not sniff" dangerous chemicals.
Like the Mary Ellen Carter rise again
DownInTheGround
Brighella
 
Posts: 922
Joined: Tue Dec 05, 2006 1:31 pm
Location: Grimsby, United Kingdom
Top

  • Reply with quote

Post Wed Apr 11, 2007 8:16 pm

DownInTheGround wrote:Today was my first day at the Airport job. saving for uni. i learnt you "should not sniff" dangerous chemicals.

How else will you know if they're dangerous?
“I know all those people that were in the film [...] But that’s when they were young and strong and full of life, you know?”
User avatar
DzM
Site Janitor
 
Posts: 10530
Joined: Sat Nov 29, 2003 2:11 am
Location: Bay Area, California, USA, North America, Western Hemisphere, Terra, Sol, etc etc
  • Website
Top

  • Reply with quote

Post Wed Apr 11, 2007 10:21 pm

DownInTheGround wrote:
No i dont think so. I beleive unemployment is the key!!


unemployment? then oim gonna do ok too :wink:
but then again, twould be noice to work sth loike our guitar master Philip doid in the early days, oimagine having a job where ya actually can work whoile practoising guitar and the work itself is based among music records - that remoinds me, does it stoill exist that music store where Mr. Chevron worked? oim a volunteeeeer !!! :wink:

8)
Image
IrishRover
Yeoman Rand
 
Posts: 2792
Joined: Thu Oct 06, 2005 12:01 pm
Top

  • Reply with quote

Post Thu Apr 12, 2007 1:00 am

IrishRover wrote:
DownInTheGround wrote:
No i dont think so. I beleive unemployment is the key!!


unemployment? then oim gonna do ok too :wink:
but then again, twould be noice to work sth loike our guitar master Philip doid in the early days, oimagine having a job where ya actually can work whoile practoising guitar and the work itself is based among music records - that remoinds me, does it stoill exist that music store where Mr. Chevron worked? oim a volunteeeeer !!! :wink: ]


If its Rock On in Camden then no,it no longer exists Orish. damn fine shop it was too. bought ny first Flyng Buritto Brothers album there in the days when i seemed to be in Camden a lot.
User avatar
trashcity
Arlecchino
 
Posts: 528
Joined: Sun Jun 26, 2005 12:58 pm
Location: Chewing out a rhythm on my bubblegum
  • Website
Top

  • Reply with quote

Post Thu Apr 12, 2007 1:50 am

trashcity wrote:bought ny first Flyng Buritto Brothers album there


Funny, The Pogues and The Flying Buritto Brothers are my #1 & 2 bands of all time. their work seems to stand up forever.
"A Ghost of a Smile"
outofstyle
Eloi
 
Posts: 2
Joined: Thu Mar 15, 2007 1:15 am
Location: New Castle, Delaware
Top

  • Reply with quote

Post Thu Apr 12, 2007 9:06 am

trashcity wrote:If its Rock On in Camden then no,it no longer exists Orish. damn fine shop it was too. bought ny first Flyng Buritto Brothers album there in the days when i seemed to be in Camden a lot.


oim sorry to hear that, it surely was unique and a place woith sporit.. they should have kept it opened!
IrishRover
Yeoman Rand
 
Posts: 2792
Joined: Thu Oct 06, 2005 12:01 pm
Top

  • Reply with quote

Post Thu Apr 12, 2007 3:30 pm

IrishRover wrote:
trashcity wrote:If its Rock On in Camden then no,it no longer exists Orish. damn fine shop it was too. bought ny first Flyng Buritto Brothers album there in the days when i seemed to be in Camden a lot.


oim sorry to hear that, it surely was unique and a place woith sporit.. they should have kept it opened!


Well, I only ever played guitar there for the benefit of Billy Magra's cameras, and only then because I was on my way up to a soundcheck at the Town and Country at the other end of Kentish Town Road. But I spent four years at Rock On and loved every minute of it. I got to meet Doug Sahm and Augie Meyers the very first week I was there. Bob Dunham (currently working with the Pogues tracking down our master tapes in the Warners vaults) was the manager and taught me more about country, jazz, blues, rnb, soul and rock n roll than I could ever have figured out myself. We had erudite customers too, among them Elvis Costello, Robert Plant, Alan Bennett, Bob Dylan, Billy Childish, Tracey Emin.............

It is indeed a great shame it's no longer there. The escalating rents when Camden became Yuppified eventually defeated Ted Carroll. It briefly became another record store and is now, as far as I know, a convenience store. At least it's not a freakin' Starbucks.
User avatar
philipchevron
Harlequin
 
Posts: 11126
Joined: Thu Oct 14, 2004 12:03 am
Top

  • Reply with quote

Post Thu Apr 12, 2007 8:33 pm

oi agree, by the descroption of it and due to so roich hoistory oid vote for Rock On to be saved as some loive cultural monument! tis' not fair to see good stuff goin' down as voictim of corporate society :(
IrishRover
Yeoman Rand
 
Posts: 2792
Joined: Thu Oct 06, 2005 12:01 pm
Top

  • Reply with quote

Post Thu Apr 12, 2007 9:02 pm

IrishRover wrote:tis' not fair to see good stuff goin' down as voictim of corporate society :(

How is high rent due to neighborhood gentrification the same as being a "voictim of corporate society"? It's not like a Wal*Mart opened up next door and undercut their prices.

And for those of you in Ireland (or otherwise acquainted with the "generic" Irish accent) - have you ever heard someone pronounce "victim" as "voictim"? My inner voice reads the first as "vik-tim", the other as "voyk-tim", and rebels. I refuse to believe that this is actually representative of the Irish accent or speaking pattern that our Oirish longs for.
“I know all those people that were in the film [...] But that’s when they were young and strong and full of life, you know?”
User avatar
DzM
Site Janitor
 
Posts: 10530
Joined: Sat Nov 29, 2003 2:11 am
Location: Bay Area, California, USA, North America, Western Hemisphere, Terra, Sol, etc etc
  • Website
Top

  • Reply with quote

Post Thu Apr 12, 2007 9:21 pm

DzM wrote:And for those of you in Ireland (or otherwise acquainted with the "generic" Irish accent) - have you ever heard someone pronounce "victim" as "voictim"? My inner voice reads the first as "vik-tim", the other as "voyk-tim", and rebels. I refuse to believe that this is actually representative of the Irish accent or speaking pattern that our Oirish longs for.

Oi agree. The accent is feckin' shyte this toime.
User avatar
Michaelo
Scaramuccia
 
Posts: 1145
Joined: Fri Sep 03, 2004 8:01 pm
Location: Whitton, London
Top

  • Reply with quote

Post Thu Apr 12, 2007 9:59 pm

Michaelo wrote:Oi agree. The accent is feckin' shyte this toime.

Oirish-English dictionary: "this toime" = "the last several months"?
Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines.
User avatar
Zuzana
Site Janitor
 
Posts: 2996
Joined: Fri Oct 22, 2004 1:21 pm
Location: Prague, Czechia
  • Website
  • ICQ
Top

  • Reply with quote

Post Thu Apr 12, 2007 11:02 pm

me views & accent aren't exactly caged anoimals.. essence matters :idea:
so rents aren't profoitable category? maybe Sam Walton took the fortune from rentoing and founded next chain of profoits called Walmart :evil:
IrishRover
Yeoman Rand
 
Posts: 2792
Joined: Thu Oct 06, 2005 12:01 pm
Top

  • Reply with quote

Post Thu Apr 12, 2007 11:34 pm

IrishRover wrote:me views & accent aren't exactly caged anoimals.. essence matters :idea:

This has nothing to do with your views. It has to do with your approximation of an Irish accent.

You've said before that you're embracing the Irish spirit and culture, and that one of the ways you're doing it is by writing in a way that reads like an Irish accent. I agree that some of your phonetic constructs do this, but many of them are just gibberish. I don't imagine you'll find many people in Ireland that pronounce "animals" as "an-oy-mals," "profitable" would not often "prof-oyt-able," and "renting" I hope would never be "rent-oyng" (that, to me, is how your words in this post "sound" when I read them). That's just farce.

I'm not asking you to stop. I just don't understand why you're going to such great lengths to make your writing unpleasant to read. Some people seem to invest a large amount of energy in making their writing a chore to read. It makes me wonder why they bother writing if they want to discourage others from considering the words.
so rents aren't profoitable category? maybe Sam Walton took the fortune from rentoing and founded next chain of profoits called Walmart :evil:

There are a lot of causes for neighborhood gentrification. It's a stretch to blame higher rent on "corporate society" though.

If your point is that people are preferring to shop at chain stores and malls rather than independent music shops, and that this general trend toward centralized corporate management is responsible for Rock On closing, then OK. Now your "victim of corporate society" comment makes sense. That's not what Philip said though. He said that the owner was unable to keep pace with the increased rents that resulted from the neighborhood becoming "yuppiefied."
“I know all those people that were in the film [...] But that’s when they were young and strong and full of life, you know?”
User avatar
DzM
Site Janitor
 
Posts: 10530
Joined: Sat Nov 29, 2003 2:11 am
Location: Bay Area, California, USA, North America, Western Hemisphere, Terra, Sol, etc etc
  • Website
Top

PreviousNext

Board index » Outside The Pogues » Philip Chevron

All times are UTC

Post a reply
490 posts • Page 5 of 33 • 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 ... 33

Return to Philip Chevron

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

  • Board index
  • The team • Delete all board cookies • All times are UTC


Powered by phpBB
Content © copyright the original authors unless otherwise indicated