Kayleigh worst song ever |
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Tristan Mulders
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 28 2004 Status: Offline Points: 1723 |
Posted: May 07 2006 at 09:15 |
Marillion has been (and still is) my favourite for 7 years by now and although I discovered them by means of the song Kayleigh, I nowadays don't have the song in high regard
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Antennas
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 01 2006 Location: Netherlands Status: Offline Points: 331 |
Posted: May 07 2006 at 14:11 |
If charts were stuffed by Kayleigh-esque songs, I'd be a very happy camper!
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Jesus never managed to figure out the theremin either |
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HeirToRuin
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 30 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 454 |
Posted: May 07 2006 at 16:52 |
Kayleigh surely isn't their best song, but it doesn't bother me. I think it has serious emotion in there.
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bhikkhu
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 06 2006 Location: AČ Michigan Status: Offline Points: 5109 |
Posted: May 07 2006 at 23:13 |
It's interesting how successful tracks, from bands outside of the mainsteam, get picked on. Sure, sometimes it's a sellout, but that's not always the case. This is an example of a good tune, by a good band, somehow getting through. It may not be the strongest cut from the album, but hits rarely are. It is also essential to the entire piece. I was very happy when this became a hit. In a way, it justified my love of a group that no one else around me had heard of.
What I found particulary amazing was that Heavy Metal fans liked it. I'll never forget going into a metal bar with a friend, and hearing the band cover "Kayleigh." |
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Greg W
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 24 2004 Location: Chicago Status: Offline Points: 3904 |
Posted: May 07 2006 at 23:16 |
My daughter's name is Kayleigh. Enough said.
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Flip_Stone
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 11 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 388 |
Posted: May 08 2006 at 16:50 |
It's not a bad song in and of itself, but it is poor and poppy when you stick it next to other Marillion songs from that time period. It's always sounded out of place on Misplaced Childhood, and a sad compromise by the band to appease the record company's demand for a hit single.
Edited by Flip_Stone - May 08 2006 at 16:51 |
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sleeper
Prog Reviewer Joined: October 09 2005 Location: Entropia Status: Offline Points: 16449 |
Posted: May 08 2006 at 17:06 |
Actualy I think it fits in perfectly on Misplaced Childhood, does a good job of setting the scene for the rest of the album.
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Spending more than I should on Prog since 2005
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Dirk
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 11 2005 Location: Netherlands Status: Offline Points: 1043 |
Posted: May 08 2006 at 17:31 |
20 years ago i used to hear this song on a holiday in Scotland several times a day. Still love it.
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progadicto
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 19 2005 Location: Chile Status: Offline Points: 4316 |
Posted: May 23 2006 at 20:59 |
Another purist?? Man, KAYLEIGH is a great song... popish but totally enjoyable specially the lyrics... Sometimes the simplicity takes us to the perfection...
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... E N E L B U N K E R...
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stonebeard
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 27 2005 Location: NE Indiana Status: Offline Points: 28057 |
Posted: May 23 2006 at 22:38 |
How many times has this thread been revived?
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valravennz
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: March 20 2005 Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Points: 2546 |
Posted: May 23 2006 at 23:15 |
What a negative thread title! Kayleigh is a great song and certainly brought MARILLION more to the attention of the listening public, than any other of their songs.
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"Music is the Wine that fills the cup of Silence" - Robert Fripp |
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Teaflax
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 26 2005 Status: Offline Points: 1225 |
Posted: May 23 2006 at 23:31 |
Hey, come on. It's better than Lavender.
In the same way that biting your tongue is better than having your tongue bitten by someone else. |
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Teaflax
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 26 2005 Status: Offline Points: 1225 |
Posted: May 23 2006 at 23:52 |
I completely agree. That album is an absolute stinker. I remember buying the vinyl when I was Interrailing in England (when I ended up staying with IQ, but that's another story) and not being able to listen to it for days. I was so excited. Here was a band I had been following from their very first single, that I had queued a week for tickets to see, that I had traveled to Denmark to see again. A band whose two first albums (and singles and 12-inchers and picture disks and bootlegs) I had loved deeply and evangelized for madly (I had turned pretty much half of my 10th grade boarding school into Marillion heads over the course of the previous fall), and now they'd turned in an epic to rival their own Grendel (a song we dug so much that we named our Prog fanzine for it). Maybe it was because my expectations were so high, or maybe it was because it really was a load of fairly pedestrian Pop-Rock songs sellotaped together to make a fake epic (when I said that to Fish in an interview later that fall, he raised his hand as if to strike me - no joke). But I was not alone in thinking so, most of my Proghead friends were equally underwhelmed and/or appalled. That Kayleigh later became a hit single only proved what we'd been saying all along. Misplaced Childhood ("Misplaced Brain, more like" quipped IQ's roadie) retoractively runied Marillion for me. It was as if in seeing through that album, I saw the many flaws in the earlier works that I had ignored. I would occasionally listen to Script and Fugazi and even bought the remasters, but the magic was gone. Fish solo - eh. Hogarth Marillion - eh. Yet I keep trying. I check out each new release from both branches because maybe, just maybe something there will spark that magic again. Well, once it has. On the Fugazi remaster; Cinderella Search. I had completely forgotten about that song, and it really hit home (lisetning to it now, actually - it's not bad). Maybe I'll give MC one more shot. It's been at least half a decade since I last did. Welcome back to the circus. Nevertheless... |
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Cygnus X-2
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 24 2004 Location: Bucketheadland Status: Offline Points: 21342 |
Posted: May 24 2006 at 00:09 |
I know... it's amazing... |
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sbrushfan
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 07 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 1177 |
Posted: May 24 2006 at 01:38 |
Wow...most of you bag on it. It's not TOTAL sh*t. I downloaded it yesterday, along with BEAUTIFUL, HARD AS LOVE and WHO WE ARE. I happen to (really) enjoy what I've heard thus far. IMO, Kayleigh is a (pardon the pun) beautiful ballad.
Face it, kiddies...having a ballad or two on your records does NOT a bad record make. It's only when you begin to water down your records with poor writing and production that the records begin to suck. My opinion; nothing more or less.
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Some world views are spacious, and some are merely spaced...
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prog4evr
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 22 2005 Location: Wuhan, China Status: Offline Points: 1455 |
Posted: May 24 2006 at 01:53 |
Sorry to be late on this thread - didn't see it before. That is so true. When one realizes that Misplaced Childhood is actually one song (or one suite of songs embroidered together - has to split side A and side B on the original vinyl though), you cannot just skip the song and 'get the point' of the album. So many others have answered positive or negative, depending on their point-of-view. It boils down to: Is MC a cohesive unitary piece, or just a jumble of nice songs woven together nicely? Your answer to that answers your question about 'Kayleigh.'
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Forgotten Son
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 13 2005 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 1356 |
Posted: May 24 2006 at 06:38 |
Kayleigh is the track that really grabbed my attention when I first listened to Misplaced Childhood (though the rest is great too) and so it will always be special (eevn though it's overplayed). It's certainly not worse than 3 of the tracks from side 2, Waterhole (Expresso Bongo), Lords of the Backstage or White Feather. |
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Wilcey
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: August 11 2005 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 2696 |
Posted: May 24 2006 at 06:51 |
I think the perceived problem with Kayleigh lies not with the song, but with the overplaying...........
Having said that, I think several hundred people did themselves SERIOUS vocal damage singing it when I saw Fish at a couple of the "return to Childhood" gigs last year!!!! |
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Kid-A
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 02 2005 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 613 |
Posted: May 24 2006 at 07:13 |
uhhh.. if you think its the worst song ever, you can't have heard very many songs
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stonebeard
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 27 2005 Location: NE Indiana Status: Offline Points: 28057 |
Posted: May 24 2006 at 07:17 |
I think the real crime is Marillion's video for the song, as well as "Lavender."
Ugh.
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