Does exactly what it says on the tin. Some of the nonsense contained herein may be very loosely related to The Sisters of Mercy, but I wouldn't bet your PayPal account on it. In keeping with the internet's general theme nothing written here should be taken as Gospel: over three quarters of it is utter gibberish, and most of the forum's denizens haven't spoken to another human being face-to-face for decades. Don't worry your pretty little heads about it. Above all else, remember this: You don't have to stay forever. I will understand.
1. Outside Nic, it was 'supposed' to be part one of a new Bowie/Eno trilogy. They even had a name for the second album: 2. Contamination.
It's been a while now...
"And when you start to think about death, you start to think about what's after it. And then you start hoping there is a God. For me, it's a frightening thought to go nowhere".
~ Peter Steele
James Blast wrote:1. Outside Nic, it was 'supposed' to be part one of a new Bowie/Eno trilogy. They even had a name for the second album: 2. Contamination.
It's been a while now...
I think we have a better chance of a new TSOM album than "2. Contamination" ever being released.
James Blast wrote:1. Outside Nic, it was 'supposed' to be part one of a new Bowie/Eno trilogy. They even had a name for the second album: 2. Contamination.
It's been a while now...
I think we have a better chance of a new TSOM album than "2. Contamination" ever being released.
I think we have a better chance of Jesus coming back, telling us we've screwed up and then ending the universe
‎"We will wear some very loud shirts. We will wear some very wrong trousers."
eotunun wrote:
Heartland´s third superband: The Wibble Sisters?
Only Bowie could turn the famous Heartland Bird Blunderbuss to jelly...
fully seconded
..which doesn´t qualify you girls as background singers.
I imagine the scene: Star enters the stage, choire faints whith a sigh..
Even better than that background siren of this famous Presley recording!
Last edited by eotunun on 09 Jan 2007, 16:57, edited 1 time in total.
just thought you might be interested in this bit from The Rocking Vicar's latest Missive to the Massive:
THE DAME AT 60
The Vicarage phone has been ringing off the hook this last week with requests from broadcasters for comment on the 60th birthday of David Bowie. It shames us to say that in the face of the avalanche of lionising prose, we have been compiling our alternative tribute – a list of the events and examples of behaviour that make David Bowie's career uniquely rich in embarrassments and agonising examples of trying that bit too hard. Here are a few:
* Being interviewed by Cliff Michelmore at the age of 17 as the representative of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Long Haired Men
* The miming
* The half hour drum solo during the Station To Station tour
* The Dancing In The Street video.
* That Brecht thing on BBC TV. What was that all about?
* Promising that the songs on the Sound & Vision tour would be picked by popular vote and then abandoning the idea as soon as everyone voted for The Laughing Gnome
* That odd business at Victoria Station. Yes, Victoria Station.
* Reciting the Lord's Prayer at the Freddie Mercury concert
* You can probably add your own here
"And when you start to think about death, you start to think about what's after it. And then you start hoping there is a God. For me, it's a frightening thought to go nowhere".
~ Peter Steele
You can blame a large part of this on drugs : the endless drums solo, the Bertolt "Wow ! Look mammy, I'm an artist !" Brecht performance, the Victoria "I'm being so post-modern right now !" Station incident...
The rest you can blame on youth, the 80s, or Canada.
BTW you forgot Peter and the wolf.
I'd end this moment to be with you
Through morphic oceans I'd lay here with you
A few years ago I went to the huge Werchter festival (something I wouldn't do before) to see Bowie on stage for the first time.
A week before the gig he cancelled it, because he needed surgery of some kind...
so now I'm waiting for the next one to arrive
radiojamaica wrote:
A few years ago I went to the huge Werchter festival (something I wouldn't do before) to see Bowie on stage for the first time.
A week before the gig he cancelled it, because he needed surgery of some kind...
so now I'm waiting for the next one to arrive
radiojamaica wrote:
A few years ago I went to the huge Werchter festival (something I wouldn't do before) to see Bowie on stage for the first time.
A week before the gig he cancelled it, because he needed surgery of some kind...
so now I'm waiting for the next one to arrive
Wild is the wind...
I was there too and still waiting with you!
that makes 3 of us
(at the time I didn't even know Bowie )
ps, if I remember correct he had taken a lollypop stick in his eye
One of the finest gigs I've been to was the Ziggy tour in '72.
Travelled from Morecambe to Manchester, missed the last coach home and spent the night sleeping on a bench (bloody cold too).
Trouble was I was working in a hotel as a waiter and was supposed to be on breakfasts the following day, when I eventually got back to work in the afternoon I had been sacked.
What are we gonna do now then?
Eat the phone book...