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mystic fred View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 16:41
Originally posted by Melomaniac Melomaniac wrote:

Can even a movie beat a good book? Not in a hundred years!

 
 
very true....back in 1971 i read the hobbit and the whole of lord of the rings, i saw the movie trilogy and was very impressed, though they had to miss out a lot of material.
 
i also like to read history books, naval history, i read a two volume history of the united states just travelling to and from the city some years ago..it took me 5 months!
 
 
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 16:47
Melomaniac : We also have to teach our kids to invest time in what they really want to do, in passions and hobbies, and in their dreams, not in what society teaches them to be important -  agree with you there, good advice.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 16:48
Originally posted by mystic fred mystic fred wrote:

Originally posted by Melomaniac Melomaniac wrote:

Can even a movie beat a good book? Not in a hundred years!

 
 
very true....back in 1971 i read the hobbit and the whole of lord of the rings, i saw the movie trilogy and was very impressed, though they had to miss out a lot of material.
 
i also like to read history books, naval history, i read a two volume history of the united states just travelling to and from the city some years ago..it took me 5 months!
 
 
 
 
Just the example I had in mind.  True, the movies were amazing, but Jackson remodeled the story for the screen, and they left out many things... 
 
I am an avid sci-fi / anticipation fan, and history also... Books on WWII, The Middle-Ages French Kings, the discovery and conquest of our country (Canada) and about how the natives were, simply put, almost completely eradicated...
"One likes to believe in the freedom of Music" - Neil Peart, The Spirit of Radio
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 16:50
I read a book about the Scottish history and a big bit is going on the Battle of Culloden. It is amazing and horrific to read what the english did back then. Not that the Dutch are clean!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 17:02
Originally posted by Melomaniac Melomaniac wrote:

Can even a movie beat a good book? Not in a hundred years!



Not by a longshot.

Give me a good novel over a movie anyday!!!
    


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 17:46
Hello, is this the Grumpy Old Men room?

I'd like to take us back to one of the original ideas about discussing old gigs. I still have the ticket stub from Genesis at the Hammersmith Odeon, Friday June 11th 1976. It cost me the vast sum of £1.50!!
I guess my mind must be going because the only bit I can really remember is the "A flower?" bit from Supper's Ready.
So who else saw the giants of prog in the 70s? My sisters used to go and see Caravan at Ewell Tech (with Black Sabbath!).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 17:55
Originally posted by chopper chopper wrote:

Hello, is this the Grumpy Old Men room?

I'd like to take us back to one of the original ideas about discussing old gigs. I still have the ticket stub from Genesis at the Hammersmith Odeon, Friday June 11th 1976. It cost me the vast sum of £1.50!!
I guess my mind must be going because the only bit I can really remember is the "A flower?" bit from Supper's Ready.
So who else saw the giants of prog in the 70s? My sisters used to go and see Caravan at Ewell Tech (with Black Sabbath!).
 
 
 
......me...grumpy?LOL
 
 
hi chopper, Hammy Odeon (now the Hammersmith Apollo) was almost my second home for some time. Many gigs, Aerosmith 76 , Queen 75, the show was built around Bohemian Rhapsody, amazing, saw Quo a few times, Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, Peter Gabriel, Marillion!....loads.  i used to go to Wembley Arena ( Yes 90125, AC/DC) and Earl's Court (Led Zep 75) too. I remember them all, not very cool!
 
 
 
 
PS  must get my beauty sleep now, up at 5am tomorrow! Unhappy
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Edited by mystic fred - September 18 2006 at 18:05
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 18:00
Hello, is this the Grumpy Old Men room?     No.
 
I saw Marillion on their first european tour just after they released 'Script ". It was at an open air festival in my homer town. It was great. A lot of people didn't know them and I had just bought the album.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 18:03
Originally posted by glass house glass house wrote:

I read a book about the Scottish history and a big bit is going on the Battle of Culloden. It is amazing and horrific to read what the english did back then. Not that the Dutch are clean!!
 
i read up on some Scottish history on a visit there some years ago, i visited some empty abandoned castles in the Loch Ness region, it was very eerie,  imagined the sieges and bloodbaths, i also visited Glencoe. Cry
 
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 18:06
Originally posted by mystic fred mystic fred wrote:

Originally posted by chopper chopper wrote:

Hello, is this the Grumpy Old Men room?

I'd like to take us back to one of the original ideas about discussing old gigs. I still have the ticket stub from Genesis at the Hammersmith Odeon, Friday June 11th 1976. It cost me the vast sum of £1.50!!
I guess my mind must be going because the only bit I can really remember is the "A flower?" bit from Supper's Ready.
So who else saw the giants of prog in the 70s? My sisters used to go and see Caravan at Ewell Tech (with Black Sabbath!).
 
 
 
......me...grumpy?LOL
 
 
hi chopper, Hammy Odeon (now the Hammersmith Apollo) was almost my second home for some time. Many gigs, Aerosmith 76 , Queen 75, the show was built around Bohemian Rhapsody, amazing, saw Quo a few times, Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, Peter Gabriel....loads.  i used to go to Wembley Arena ( Yes 90125, AC/DC) and Earl's Court (Led Zep 75) too. I remember them all, not very cool!
 
 
 
 
PS  must get my beauty sleep now, up at 5am tomorrow! Unhappy
 
 
 

I saw Peter Gabriel at Hammy Odeon too - March 12th 1980. The whole band walked through the audience from the back onto the stage, carrying torches. Very effective. I also saw Rainbow, Rush (3 times), Be Bop Deluxe, Yes (with Trevor Horn), Rory Gallagher and Status Quo (amongst others).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 19:08
I'm closing in on 40 soon, I'll be turning 39 this January, May I join the club?
I have grey hair and I like to reminisce about the good old days. Smile
DEATH TO FALSE PROG!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 20:24
Originally posted by TheProgtologist TheProgtologist wrote:

Originally posted by Melomaniac Melomaniac wrote:

Can even a movie beat a good book? Not in a hundred years!



Not by a longshot.

Give me a good novel over a movie anyday!!!
    
 
 
Clap Wholeheartedly seconded
 
 
 
(I know, I know, I am not your age....  married w/o kids and that's it. But those 3 years in the army have taught me things you can't learn in other places...).
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 20:31
Nearly 40 here
 
 
and I live in a grey room...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 22:24
I like to read as well, but I simply don't do enough of it.  I have the desire too though.  It is vitally important though for children to read regularly and try and restrict their television watching.  I had a television in my room and I used to watch a lot of 18 rated films when I was 14 or 15, but they luckily didn't have a bad affect on me.  However, the content in films today is very worrying.

Maybe it's just me, but almost every American film I see on late at night involves mindless car chases, shootings, stabbing, swearing... what ever happened to harmless films that dealt with adult concepts in an intelligent way?
I'm not saying all violent films are inherently bad, not at all, but some of them are pointless and not even worth making.  It's also not always a question of violence, but it's often a question of how much the film costs to make!

Personally, I would much rather watch an old Ealing Comedy, or an Alistair Sim film, than something modern and mind-numbingly awful.

Oh and I realise I am not 30, but I am 26, which is older than most of the posters in that VR place!


Edited by Geck0 - September 18 2006 at 23:17
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2006 at 23:13
    Well, I wondered where my grouchy old contemporaries were off too.

I like the idea of an area for our interests, but come on guys. Is this only going to be a gripe session about how much better it was in the old days.?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2006 at 02:19
Originally posted by bhikkhu bhikkhu wrote:

    Well, I wondered where my grouchy old contemporaries were off too.

I like the idea of an area for our interests, but come on guys. Is this only going to be a gripe session about how much better it was in the old days.?
 
 
 
i hope not.......there are many things which are better these days - the world is a safer place in the workplace for instance with health and safety rules in force, travel is safer believe or or not - compulsory seat belts, impact air bags, crash helmets on bikes, i could give you a long list! also music technology is well advanced than it used to be - music can be enjoyed at last to its full potential. my old albums sound much beter on modern equipment - there are loads of modern things which are better now!Clap
 
can you come up with any examples?
 
 


Edited by mystic fred - September 19 2006 at 02:21
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2006 at 02:54
Originally posted by Bastille Dude Bastille Dude wrote:

I'm closing in on 40 soon, I'll be turning 39 this January, May I join the club?I have grey hair and I like to reminisce about the good old days.


I just turned 40.

Remember when all of our toys were made of metal,playground equipment had sharp edges,bolts sticking out and a concrete pad under the jungle gyms and riding a bike with a helmet on was unheard of?


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2006 at 03:51
Originally posted by chopper chopper wrote:

I still have the ticket stub from Genesis at the Hammersmith Odeon, Friday June 11th 1976. It cost me the vast sum of £1.50!!I guess my mind must be going because the only bit I can really remember is the "A flower?" bit from Supper's Ready.So who else saw the giants of prog in the 70s? My sisters used to go and see Caravan at Ewell Tech (with Black Sabbath!).


Let's clear up a couple of things first, eh?

1 - Hammersmith Odeon (Genesis, Zappa, AC/DC, Motorhead, Hawkwind, plus too many others to recall... especially Krokus ) is, was and will always be Hammersmith Odeon, or 'Hammy' - never The Labatts Apollo or the Carling Apollo!

2 - My favorite venue, St Albans City Hall (Marillion, Hawkwind, Fairport Convention, Budgie... etc etc etc and Manowar...) is not The Alban Arena!

3 - The Marquee (too many to list, but included are The Enid, Magnum, Pendragon, Twelfth Night, Solstice, 999... and believe it or not, Pallas ) is a pokey little black painted sweaty basement club in Wardour Street, London - you cannot just move a venue anywhere you like and call it The Marquee!

But, oh! Those halcyon days of the late 1970s - I was there on the first night at Earls Court when Floyd left 20,000 of us with our mouths open after seeing 'The Wall' played live. I've been at the Reading Festival watching The Enid's Robert John Godfrey jumping around in dungarees singing 'Wild Thing' . I was there, too, at Reading in 1983 when a young, nervous Marillion blew headliners Black Sabbath (vocals - Ian Gillan ) off stage...

I've never had an I-Pod, but remember when cassette Walkmans were cool, I remember when mobile phones were the size of a Mini Metro... Hell! I remember the Mini Metro, I remember when computers filled large carefully air conditioned rooms and the closest we came to this technology was a Commodore 64, a ZX Spectrum, or (if you were rich) a BBCB.

The internet? The internet?!? E-Mail?!?! I remember when people used to phone each other, and write letters, and tape albums from friends (remember "home taping is killing music"?) - when download wasn't even a word!

And you tell the kids of today that...

...and they'll not believe you.

Now you'll have to excuse me, my bag's full.
      
    

Edited by Jim Garten - September 19 2006 at 07:10

Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2006 at 04:02
^^lol
I'm always almost unlucky _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Id5ZcnjXSZaSMFMC Id5LM2q2jfqz3YxT
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 19 2006 at 04:15
*dozes off in a comfortable chair*
Blog this:
http://artrock2006.blogspot.com
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