Lighting the candles comments

THE place for your Sisters-related comments, questions and snippets of Sisters information. For those who do not know, The Sisters of Mercy are a rock'n'roll band. And a pop band. And an industrial groove machine. Or so they say. They make records. Lots of records, apparently. But not in your galaxy. They play concerts. Lots of concerts, actually. But you still cannot see them. So what's it all about, Alfie? This is one of the few tightly-moderated forums on Heartland, so please keep on-topic. All off-topic posts will either be moved or deleted. Chairman Bux is the editor and the editor's decision is final. Danke.
User avatar
shivarising
Amphetamine Filth
Posts: 205
Joined: 13 Sep 2003, 05:37
Location: Bangkok, TH
Contact:

Here's my own Amazon review to add...

First off, let me say that this is the first m*****n DVD in 19 years of existence as a band... and Amazon got the title wrong. It's "Lighting the Candles" not "Lightning."

Second, this DVD is definitely packed full of stuff. It is good value for the money if you are a m*****n fan. So, why only 3 stars? Well, several reasons...

I think everyone will agree, the classic Mish line-up was Wayne, Craig, Mick and Simon. So, here you have a whole concert from Wayne... and a bunch of new-hires. Rob Halliday (who played with Toni in CURVE) is a great guitarist and his killer tone gives the songs more crunch and a harder edge. The bass player is serviceable but definitely no Craig Adams. The drummer is atrocious. About 4 songs in I thought that, while energetic, there was just something off. Then I realized the drummer was playing the same Boom-Bap-Boom-Bap through every damn song! Not a great drum tone and just Boom-Bap-Boom-Bap until that's all I could focus on. "Brothers, sisters, give me deliverance, deliver me!" Boom-Bap-Boom-Bap. "You are a Tower of Strength - to May-hay" Boom-Bap-Boom-Bap. I never realized what a good drummer Mick Brown was until watching this. Now, I realize I may be biased, having seen the Mish in 1987, '89, '90, and '95, but this just isn't "The m*****n" - it's Wayne and some dudes playing m*****n songs.

What this DVD also illuminates is the frustration of being a fan of this band. In the Bootleg section you can see a couple performances from the classic line-up that are quite exciting, beyond the ridiculous attire and make-up. But somewhere after Simon left the band in '90/'91, the plot was lost. They went from the rockers who ripped off plenty of Zeppelin riffs to pretentious rockers with U2-like aspirations to aping the Cure's abominable cutesy side. (A funny aside is that nowhere in the 355 minutes is any mention made of Simon's replacement - The Etch).

So, Wayne made the very Cure-like "Masque" which had some decent songs but was essentially a Wayne solo album and sticks out like a sore thumb in their catalogue. By the time they returned to sounding anything like themselves, on "Neverland," it was 1995 and most people had forgotten about them. By that point it was Wayne, Mick, and a bunch of new-hires. And much of that album features a drum machine. Anyway, watching the BIO secton, one can see what could have been, but never was. And at the end of the day, still the burning question remains - how can someone come up with such great music as "Deliverance" and then write some totally absurd lyrics about Excalibur and the Lady of the Lake to go with it?!?!?

My other complaint is just the usual about song selection. The live CD features "Wing and a Prayer" and "Grip of Disease" while the DVD concert does not. Also, why are you using the same horrid drum sequences for "Butterfly on a Wheel" as you were in 1990?? And what's worse, for "Tower of Strength" the band are essentially playing over the 1994 remix. I mean, it really sounds like somebody just popped in the CD and the band then plays over that. L-A-M-E. And actually, if you watch the Wayne solo stuff on Disc 2, it gets worse. There is actual footage of Wayne doing some live shows where he simply played guitar and sang over pre-recorded music. It's The m*****n Karaoke! COME ON!

I hope somebody gives Von a copy of this for Xmas. He will soil himself in uproarious laughter. :lol:
User avatar
jost 7
Slight Overbomber
Posts: 1035
Joined: 21 Jan 2004, 21:19
Location: the playground

your comments made me laugh - as i have to aggree on almost all the points mentioned!
it's the basic question about bands which were on the top for at least a little period of time - and never managed to keep the spirit during processes of change, especially when pathos (in sound and thoughts) was a big part of the whole show (on records, in gigs, in the whole life)!
most of them got bored of it, or were not able to enter a kind of professional stage (which is en essential point imo) without loosing the initial spirit, driven by a kind of unprofessional behaviour.

i guess this is a problem for all of them (sisters, m*****n, cure,....) sometimes i get curious about the way u2 managned to keep the spirit alive!

about the m*****n: i would not rate the dvd that bad, as the overall impression is really great, but their drum-sounds are really annoying. almost all the gigs i heard from 1999 onwards (mostly on recordings) were sounding really bad due to the sound of the drums. i never undestood why the drums have to sound that bad, not even talking about the way the drummer played.

in fact i think the sisters drum sound these days is also uninspired. why using a drum machine when it sounds like second rate live-drums? never got that - it's about getting professional i think, but who knows...

having a potential not many have and not using it is the real shame!
love is just a shot away
User avatar
Bill Hicks
Amphetamine Filth
Posts: 229
Joined: 13 Aug 2005, 20:13
Location: stuck inside of my mobile with the Memphis blues again.

I never realized what a good drummer Mick Brown was until watching this.
The guy was a genius! :notworthy:

Now, how often you you hear that said about a drummer? :lol:
User avatar
shivarising
Amphetamine Filth
Posts: 205
Joined: 13 Sep 2003, 05:37
Location: Bangkok, TH
Contact:

jost 7 wrote: i guess this is a problem for all of them (sisters, m*****n, cure,....) sometimes i get curious about the way u2 managned to keep the spirit alive!

Hmmm, I agree with everything you said except this point. I thought U2 sold out at a most curious point. After they were disappointed with the lackluster performance of "Pop" they made a conscious decision to write more commercial stuff and even changed management companies. Subsequent performances at the Super Bowl and such - especially the one in which Bono ran around the arena with an American flag - kept their public profile at the level of superstars and further endeared them to the dubious American mainstream. They then turned in the worst album of their career - How To Dismantle...
User avatar
ruffers
Overbomber
Posts: 2682
Joined: 24 Jan 2005, 16:43
Location: Leeds of all places

re The m*****n review

Main man carries on playing with an assortment of hired hands...?

Less than the full complement of musicians on stage....?

Sounds familiar.
Chucking another log on
aims
Overbomber
Posts: 3211
Joined: 27 Mar 2005, 13:16
Location: in between

I think some would contend that Mr Whammy and Nurse have been around for long enough as to no longer be hired hands. That and the songs have been sufficiently adapted over the course of a decade so as to suit the new lineup (not the same plinky-plink guitars as 1990 ;)) - for better or worse, the current lineup is certainly no FALAA covers band.
User avatar
eastmidswhizzkid
Faster Than The Light Of Speed
Posts: 9881
Joined: 24 Mar 2005, 00:01
Location: WhizzWorld
Contact:

also as has been noticed elsewhere the sisters is a vehicle for von's talent. the m*****n is just a vehicle for hussey.
Well I was handsome and I was strong
And I knew the words to every song.
"Did my singing please you?"
"No! The words you sang were wrong!"

:bat:
Spiggy's hat
Utterly Bastard Groovy Amphetamine Filth
Posts: 662
Joined: 31 Jan 2002, 00:00
Location: East Yorkshire

Is there any TV footage on the dvd?

I know I should ask on the Mish site, but I can't be bothered registering.
Give me one good reason
User avatar
jost 7
Slight Overbomber
Posts: 1035
Joined: 21 Jan 2004, 21:19
Location: the playground

Spiggy's hat wrote:Is there any TV footage on the dvd?

I know I should ask on the Mish site, but I can't be bothered registering.
the bootleg section features some tv (live)material - strange, as even i do have parts of these in better quality than on the dvd.
love is just a shot away
Spiggy's hat
Utterly Bastard Groovy Amphetamine Filth
Posts: 662
Joined: 31 Jan 2002, 00:00
Location: East Yorkshire

jost 7 wrote:
Spiggy's hat wrote:Is there any TV footage on the dvd?

I know I should ask on the Mish site, but I can't be bothered registering.
the bootleg section features some tv (live)material - strange, as even i do have parts of these in better quality than on the dvd.
Is it the Tube & Whistle Test from 87?
Give me one good reason
Spiggy's hat
Utterly Bastard Groovy Amphetamine Filth
Posts: 662
Joined: 31 Jan 2002, 00:00
Location: East Yorkshire

Spiggy's hat wrote:
jost 7 wrote:
Spiggy's hat wrote:Is there any TV footage on the dvd?

I know I should ask on the Mish site, but I can't be bothered registering.
the bootleg section features some tv (live)material - strange, as even i do have parts of these in better quality than on the dvd.
Is it the Tube & Whistle Test from 87?
Anyone?
Give me one good reason
Post Reply