pogues22 wrote:Overall, a fantastic live show and one of many that proved that The Pogues were one of the most exciting live acts ever to grace God's green earth.
pogues22 wrote: Overall, a fantastic live show and one of many that proved that The Pogues were one of the most exciting live acts ever to grace God's green earth. Slainte!!!
O'Blivion wrote:I just watched this GREAT show for the first time last night. The band is so together, although Spider's whistle goes a bit flat in places toward the end. I know nothing about the instrument - is it like a harp where you can blow reeds in mid-performance?
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Although the music is amazing, the video itself (shot for Japanese TV, I reckon) features some of the most godawfully annoying 80's-style cheesy video effects I've ever seen, and the shots of rows of teenaged Japanese girls bouncing up and down while the band roars through "the Sickbed of Cuchulainn" left me with a bit of culture shock. How much of what was going on could they possibly have understood?
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Ah, who cares? It's great, from beginning to end!
I saw some of them. These were happy people singing every word, understood or not.philipchevron wrote:It may surprise you to learn that a whole NEW generation of Japanese fans now sings along, word perfect, when we play there.
philipchevron wrote:O'Blivion wrote:How much of what was going on could they possibly have understood?
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Ah, who cares? It's great, from beginning to end!
It may surprise you to learn that a whole NEW generation of Japanese fans now sings along, word perfect, when we play there. I have long believed that the connection people feel to the Pogues' music happens beyond the actual language we use.
Behan wrote:I found a bootleg video of the Pogues live in Tokyo maybe it was that same one O'Blivion. I remember that Spider was sitting down the whole time with a Japanese flag tied around his head. I think he broke his leg. They did some Japanese style instrumental. One part I remember was some bloke in the front yelled out something like:"Shane! You're Ugly" and his reply I think was "Yeah I know mmmugh mmgh mmm hehehehe" They seem to love the music so much and to think, about 47 years earlier, they were bombing Pearl Harbor.
philipchevron wrote:Behan wrote:I found a bootleg video of the Pogues live in Tokyo maybe it was that same one O'Blivion. I remember that Spider was sitting down the whole time with a Japanese flag tied around his head. I think he broke his leg. They did some Japanese style instrumental. One part I remember was some bloke in the front yelled out something like:"Shane! You're Ugly" and his reply I think was "Yeah I know mmmugh mmgh mmm hehehehe" They seem to love the music so much and to think, about 47 years earlier, they were bombing Pearl Harbor.
There are at least two bootleg DVDs from Japan, both from official TV broadcasts. One is from October 1988 and the other is usually billed as Shane's Last Pogues Gig. The atmosphere is strikingly different.
Behan wrote: One part I remember was some bloke in the front yelled out something like:"Shane! You're Ugly" and his reply I think was "Yeah I know mmmugh mmgh mmm hehehehe"
Behan wrote:I found a bootleg video of the Pogues live in Tokyo maybe it was that same one O'Blivion. I remember that Spider was sitting down the whole time with a Japanese flag tied around his head. I think he broke his leg. They did some Japanese style instrumental. One part I remember was some bloke in the front yelled out something like:"Shane! You're Ugly" and his reply I think was "Yeah I know mmmugh mmgh mmm hehehehe" They seem to love the music so much and to think, about 47 years earlier, they were bombing Pearl Harbor.
philipchevron wrote:O'Blivion wrote:I just watched this GREAT show for the first time last night. The band is so together, although Spider's whistle goes a bit flat in places toward the end. I know nothing about the instrument - is it like a harp where you can blow reeds in mid-performance?
<br>
Although the music is amazing, the video itself (shot for Japanese TV, I reckon) features some of the most godawfully annoying 80's-style cheesy video effects I've ever seen, and the shots of rows of teenaged Japanese girls bouncing up and down while the band roars through "the Sickbed of Cuchulainn" left me with a bit of culture shock. How much of what was going on could they possibly have understood?
<br>
Ah, who cares? It's great, from beginning to end!
It may surprise you to learn that a whole NEW generation of Japanese fans now sings along, word perfect, when we play there. I have long believed that the connection people feel to the Pogues' music happens beyond the actual language we use.
philipchevron wrote:The atmosphere is strikingly different.
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