Moderator: Andrew
styxman wrote:What film did open arms appear in by the way as they also make reference to this on the Houston DVD, never could be bothered to look this one up but I'm interested to know now?
styxman wrote:Totally agree, charts count for very little these days, never missed one Gambo show in the 80's, where I went so did the transitor, the show he now has on Saturday night isn't the same, is it?
mallet wrote:Morons!! Please read
Ive been here some time now...decided to sign up...this forum is riddled with repulsive, small minded, and small-dicked, (evidently), little toss-pots
I dont know who the moderators are here.. but they should be shot..... the language used here is excessive...and the abuse seems very personal
What Monker says is correct
There seems to be about half a dozen people here who are ignoring Andrew's requests...and plainly just not interested in keeping this forum "clean and informed" they quite clearly are just "taking the piss" out of Andrew..and have no respect for his wishes at all .....
It all makes for pretty pathetic reading, from an "outsiders" point of view.. I think a few have lost the plot here.... the place needs to be "cleansed" of the detritus, .. (I think the word "morons, was used..how apt..as the standard of post here is pretty moronic) and needs to be rebuilt
Adios to some of you I think, when normality returns
Mallet... "Still Green" .....yeah right!!
joybringer1 wrote:Thanks for the replies and the chart info - I tried to find that on google and failed. I'm guessing I'll have heard some of the songs on the radio back then but without them really registering. That would figure as I don't think the music would have been hard-edged enough for me in my youth - I've mellowed with age! This is the first time I've ever really got into a band (or more specifically a singer) after the event so it's quite a strange feeling. The Houston CD is on constant replay in my car and I'm totally mesmerized by THAT VOICE!
Les wrote:You have to remember that while there are some rock fans in the UK, the 80s was very much for cheesy pop here. Across the pond was probably more rock while here was cheese.
But then I'm only going by what my auntie and uncle, who were teenagers at that time, have said. I wasn't born til 87
MartyMoffatt wrote:Les wrote:You have to remember that while there are some rock fans in the UK, the 80s was very much for cheesy pop here. Across the pond was probably more rock while here was cheese.
But then I'm only going by what my auntie and uncle, who were teenagers at that time, have said. I wasn't born til 87
I'm not sure I entirely agree with that. The late 70's and early 80's was a very fruitful period for rock music as well as that cheesy pop (which I absolutely loathed, by the way). Bands like Def Leppard, Iron Maiden, Dio, Saxon, Diamond Head, UFO, etc etc, as well as the older leviathans Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, Pink Floyd (all of these British bands) were very successful during that time, if not in terms of chart success, certainly in terms of sold out shows and tours.
Overseas bands like AC/DC (adopted Brits) and Rush were also hugely successful on the live circuit. One thing common to all these bands was that they tended to sound much heavier live than on record, and certainly a heavier sound was in favour in the UK - the NWOBHM (New Wave of British Heavy Metal) had a big following, resulting in influential magazines like Kerrang springing up. An unfortunate consequence of this is that softer more melodic rock got a lot less exposure. The arrival of Punk in 1977 meant that it simply wasn't cool to listen to ballady stuff, and that's certainly how band's like Journey would have been perceived at the time, except in a few pockets of more enlightened listeners.
I hasten to add that at no time did rock music ever enter the mainstream in the UK. Top of the Pops was infatuated with the New Romantic movement and very rarely featured rock bands. We had one two hour rock show on the radio each week (The Tommy Vance show), and that was about it in terms of media exposure, so unless a band gained a following via the grapevine or through palying live they had little chance of really making it over here. And as we know, Journey wouldn't tour outside of the US.
Marty
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