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Post by matt on Jun 7, 2016 16:54:36 GMT -5
I think all of us who praised it initially - and I'm sure I did, I have to put that out there before any of you f*ckers find it - should all read out statements at the gates of our homes in front of the press and inform the wider public of 'a grave error of judgement' and a wholehearted 'apology to my family who have suffered from these damaging revelations'.
Next morning - I'm found dead in the garage, unable to cope with the shame.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 7, 2016 16:56:59 GMT -5
like the rest of the album, a better production could of improved it quite abit, just sounds abit too retro overall.
still like it though.
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Post by Lennon2217 on Jun 7, 2016 17:25:11 GMT -5
I think all of us who praised it initially - and I'm sure I did, I have to put that out there before any of you f*ckers find it - should all read out statements at the gates of our homes in front of the press and inform the wider public of 'a grave error of judgement' and a wholehearted 'apology to my family who have suffered from these damaging revelations'. Next morning - I'm found dead in the garage, unable to cope with the shame. I'm pretty sure I bashed it.
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Post by guigsysEstring on Jun 7, 2016 17:41:41 GMT -5
I think all of us who praised it initially - and I'm sure I did, I have to put that out there before any of you f*ckers find it - should all read out statements at the gates of our homes in front of the press and inform the wider public of 'a grave error of judgement' and a wholehearted 'apology to my family who have suffered from these damaging revelations'. Next morning - I'm found dead in the garage, unable to cope with the shame. I'm pretty sure I bashed it. That's err...lovely bro, but what about your review of 'The Beat Goes On'?
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Post by matt on Jun 7, 2016 18:10:04 GMT -5
I think all of us who praised it initially - and I'm sure I did, I have to put that out there before any of you f*ckers find it - should all read out statements at the gates of our homes in front of the press and inform the wider public of 'a grave error of judgement' and a wholehearted 'apology to my family who have suffered from these damaging revelations'. Next morning - I'm found dead in the garage, unable to cope with the shame. I'm pretty sure I bashed it. I don't doubt you! I'm just incredibly disappointed with myself as I am sure I liked it. I can't find the posts, but they are there, lurking somewhere ready to inflict embarrassment on me when I least expect it......
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Post by matt on Jun 7, 2016 18:11:54 GMT -5
I'm pretty sure I bashed it. That's err...lovely bro, but what about your review of 'The Beat Goes On'? Or to paraphrase it with the infamous Richard Keys...
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Post by Lennon2217 on Jun 7, 2016 19:14:19 GMT -5
I'm pretty sure I bashed it. I don't doubt you! I'm just incredibly disappointed with myself as I am sure I liked it. I can't find the posts, but they are there, lurking somewhere ready to inflict embarrassment on me when I least expect it...... I'd love to find them. I can't remember what the thread was called where we did the reviews.
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Post by boneheadsbolero on Jun 7, 2016 21:13:02 GMT -5
If by The Beat Goes On you mean masturbation, why certainly!
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Post by Deleted on Jun 7, 2016 21:17:44 GMT -5
I don't understand why it gets so much hate.
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Post by Lennon2217 on Jun 7, 2016 21:18:56 GMT -5
I don't understand why it gets so much hate. It's generic, paint by numbers rock n roll.
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Post by Beady’s Here Now on Jun 7, 2016 21:30:03 GMT -5
Somewhere in this thread someone compared it to The Masterplan. webm@ster wept.
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Post by mystoryisgory on Jun 7, 2016 22:21:30 GMT -5
IIRC the NME review called it BDI's Champagne Supernova? Wtf?
It's not the worst song on DGSS by a long shot, but even when I enjoy listening to this song, my eyelids begin to droop from a sudden drowsiness....
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Post by mkoasis on Jun 7, 2016 22:25:51 GMT -5
It's decent, I don't mind it. I liked it a lot when it first came out. And I do remember it being compared to The Masterplan.
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Post by space75gr on Jun 8, 2016 2:59:17 GMT -5
I don't understand why it gets so much hate. i dont get that hate too. i think it's an excellent song/single, one of their best, a great song, melody with a special performance by Liam.Still in love with it
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Post by Lennon2217 on Jun 8, 2016 5:58:01 GMT -5
Somewhere in this thread someone compared it to The Masterplan. webm@ster wept.
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Post by matt on Jun 8, 2016 12:54:03 GMT -5
IIRC the NME review called it BDI's Champagne Supernova? Wtf? It's not the worst song on DGSS by a long shot, but even when I enjoy listening to this song, my eyelids begin to droop from a sudden drowsiness.... It was Q Magazine that said it was Beady Eye's Don't Look Back In Anger. Surprisingly, the writer was Simon Goddard who wrote a very good book on The Smiths entitled 'Songs To Save Your Life'.
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Post by guigsysEstring on Jun 8, 2016 15:12:19 GMT -5
IIRC the NME review called it BDI's Champagne Supernova? Wtf? It's not the worst song on DGSS by a long shot, but even when I enjoy listening to this song, my eyelids begin to droop from a sudden drowsiness.... It was Q Magazine that said it was Beady Eye's Don't Look Back In Anger. Surprisingly, the writer was Simon Goddard who wrote a very good book on The Smiths entitled 'Songs To Save Your Life'. Full type out of the Q Review for you, second from last paragraph talks about TBGO Beady Eye - Different Gear, Still Speeding **** Liam Gallagher strikes first blow as post Oasis years begin....... Be honest. If you were the gambling type, whose chances did you favour following the bitter dissolution of Oasis in August 2009? Was it Noel, band gaffer with the anthemic Midas touch now facing what seemed an inevitable transition to Weller-esque solo Britpop godhead? Or was it Liam, voted the greatest frontman of all time by Q, yet potentially one now fronting thin air if severed from his big brother's masterplan? The safe wager seemed to be Noel, even if 18 months on we're still waiting for him to fulfil those expectations and make the crucial next move. Whereas to back Liam's bid for Noel-less glory felt at best blindly optimistic, at worst laughably imprudent. Consider the odds. Liam has the "The Voice", but while his sporadic songwriting has matured considerably since 2000's much-derided Little James, his ability to pen a whole album is ominously unproven. The same applies to his faithful ex-Oasis right-hand men Gem Archer and Andy Bell, both of whom have borne due critical flak for supplying the band's weakest album filler since 2002's Heathen Chemistry. Not great omens, and that is before they handicap themselves with the preposterous real ale-worthy name of Beady Eye, exacerbated by Liam's typically outrageous hyperbole that they were "going to be bigger" than Oasis and Noel "will come crawling back". On paper, the story was already writing itself, all elements in place for what promised to be the most embarrassing rock folly this side of Tin Machine. So by virtue of circumstance, his post-Oasis moment of truth, Beady Eye's Different Gear, Still Speeding was always going to be one of the most important records Liam Gallagher would ever make. The gobsmacking reality is that it's also among the best. Which isn't to say that Oasis-loathing cynics won't find fish in its barrel to keep themselves trigger happy. No surprise that, yes, a lot of it sounds like The Beatles, the lyrics are no threat to Morrissey and, as in Oasis, musically speaking nobody here is reinventing the wheel. But such mean-spirited nit-picking evaporates in the face of an album which awes in its consistency, melody, determination and, perhaps most surprisingly, positivity; as was never the case with every Oasis album after 1995's (What's the Story) Morning Glory?, making this, however unlikely it sounds, the strongest record Liam's made since. This do-or-die sense of purpose is evident from the first wah-wah smack of Four Letter Word, akin to Spencer Davis Group's I'm A Man as played by The Stooges yet still familiarly Oasis-esque not to scare the horses. It's an appsosite setting for Liam's opening war cry, "Sleepwalk your life away if that turns you on," followed by the first of the album's many allusions to the Gallagher sibling soap opera; "the battle's on and the song is the prize", or its snarling moral "nothing ever lasts FOREVER!" A necessarily cathartic overture, perhaps, it's rock'n'roll gusto sets the bar for at least half of Different Gear.....: from Bring the Light, a romping Jerry Lee Lewis homage manic enough to overcome its banal "baby, c'mon" vocal to the free blues rock chug of Three Ring Circus and the Plastic Ono jam Standing On The Edge Of The Noise. Most ravishingly raucous is Beatles and Stones, Gallagher's mission statement that he's "gonna stand the test of time" like its titular icons over a garage rock stomp twitching between The Who's My Generation and Failure by The La's. If Beady Eye were merely a balls-to-the-wall one-trick pony this would be a passable debut. That it's above and beyond so is thanks to the majority which chooses melodic beauty over sonic boisterousness, much credit due to the clarity of producer Steve Lillywhite's touch extracting Liam's brightest vocals in aeons. Both Millionaire, a gem of '70s slide-guitar glam, and the deliriously romantic For Anyone show a sublime pop sensibility. But the big guns here are all epic ballads, lighters first rising aloft on Kill For A Dream, the wistful alternative to Four Letter Word's post-split autopsy, which just might reduce grown Oasis fans to tears. "Life's too short not to forgive," sings Liam, "I'm here if you wanna call." Its scarf-waving outro is soon eclipsed by the soulful Wigwam climaxing after six minutes in a gospel chorus with Liam "coming up" from the depths of despair. The best, however, is saved till last. The Beat Goes On is an ELO fairytale of a tune, Liam pondering his own death and his heavenly reception by an angel's choir in Beady Eye's equivalent to Don't Look Back in Anger. "It's not the end of the world/It's not even the end of the day." It seems unsurpassable until The Morning Son ripples in on the tide of Champagne Supernova, just Liam, acoustic guitar and a tsunami of poignancy: "I stand alone/Nobody knows/ The morning son has rose." It's a shudder-inducing stroke of genius, Gallagher effectively serenading his own rebirth as the music softly explodes towards a frantic finale again reminiscent of Lillywhite's La's debit and its comparable closer Looking Glass. Breathtaking, in fact. If the Liam Gallagher of Oasis was the greatest frontman of all time the Different Gear.... is evidence enough that with Beady Eye he's created another great British guitar band to justify that honour. And if the battle really is on, then, much to the bookmaker's horror, this decimates all negative preconceptions. The half-score an effortless one-nil to our kid. Now over to you, big brother. Simon Goddard. Download: The Beat Goes On (Q50)//Four Letter Word//Millionaire//The Morning Son//For Anyone
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Post by mkoasis on Jun 8, 2016 20:52:18 GMT -5
^^Takes me right back to when the album was released!
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Post by Flatulence Panic on Jul 10, 2016 20:48:05 GMT -5
Lol.
I still remember when I first heard DGSS and actually thought it was a good album.
Still like The Morning Son. Think that is up there with any later Oasis stuff.
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Post by liamgallagher1992 on Jul 11, 2016 4:59:31 GMT -5
The bashing of this album never really took place until Noel come out and said he didn't think much to it.
I remember so many reviews saying how surprisingly impressive the album was at the time. It's amazing how much "opinion" can change.
It's almost like some of you are told what you can like.
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Post by Mean Mrs. Mustard on Jul 11, 2016 5:00:41 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on Jul 11, 2016 5:53:49 GMT -5
The bashing of this album never really took place until Noel come out and said he didn't think much to it. I remember so many reviews saying how surprisingly impressive the album was at the time. It's amazing how much "opinion" can change. It's almost like some of you are told what you can like. Tbf, there are a lot of BHN lovers around here, while we all know Noel hates this album.
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Post by guigsysEstring on Jul 11, 2016 6:38:00 GMT -5
The bashing of this album never really took place until Noel come out and said he didn't think much to it. I remember so many reviews saying how surprisingly impressive the album was at the time. It's amazing how much "opinion" can change. It's almost like some of you are told what you can like. I wasn't particularly enamored with it to start with TBH, although I am a fan of the second LP and have no idea what Noel thinks of that one The 'impressive' reviews came from the press rather than individual fans IIRC, and these are the same people who routinely used to hand Robbie Williams four stars no matter which album it was whilst hedging their bets so..... Anyway that aside few new faces at Freemans Wharf this season already and Arsenal rejected by JV, so how do you rate your chances?
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Post by carlober on Jul 11, 2016 6:50:07 GMT -5
The bashing of this album never really took place until Noel come out and said he didn't think much to it. I remember so many reviews saying how surprisingly impressive the album was at the time. It's amazing how much "opinion" can change. It's almost like some of you are told what you can like. Oh dear. It's almost like you have some strange kind of bitterness inside which comes through many of your posts. What did Noel say about DGSS? I can't remember, to be honest. Maybe guigsysEstring can! I think he said that he still hadn't listened to it (from the July 2011 press conference), and then there's this quote from 2012 ( source): Not even the most hardcore Beady Eye defenders can disagree on that, I believe... Personally speaking, I liked some DGSS tracks after the release hype (but even then I totally despised utter crap tracks like Standing On... and The Beat Goes On). It was the first post-Oasis release and many of us were overly excited... time has given its answer and I guess it's not a good one. I genuinely think that DGSS is the weakest album ever released by a Gallagher (Rory Gallagher included ). It's just so dull! BE on the other hand was properly enjoyable, in spite of a couple of duds. I gotta go now, I'm off to get the fiver that Noel hands me every time I bad-mouth Beady Eye on a internet forum
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Post by guigsysEstring on Jul 11, 2016 7:00:04 GMT -5
The bashing of this album never really took place until Noel come out and said he didn't think much to it. I remember so many reviews saying how surprisingly impressive the album was at the time. It's amazing how much "opinion" can change. It's almost like some of you are told what you can like. Oh dear. It's almost like you have some strange kind of bitterness inside which comes through many of your posts. What did Noel say about DGSS? I can't remember, to be honest. Maybe guigsysEstring can! I think he said that he still hadn't listened to it (from the July 2011 press conference), and then there's this quote from 2012 ( source): Not even the most hardcore Beady Eye defenders can disagree on that, I believe... Personally speaking, I liked some DGSS tracks after the release hype (but even then I totally despised utter crap tracks like Standing On... and The Beat Goes On). It was the first post-Oasis release and many of us were overly excited... time has given its answer and I guess it's not a good one. I genuinely think that DGSS is the weakest album ever released by a Gallagher (Rory Gallagher included ). It's just so dull! BE on the other hand was properly enjoyable, in spite of a couple of duds. I gotta go now, I'm off to get the fiver that Noel hands me every time I bad-mouth Beady Eye on a internet forum This was a NME magazine interview from July 2011 His take on Wonderwall at the Olympics was alright as well, saying at one point Beady Eye were great and he was happy "Liam and the lads" did it rather than someone like Keane. In the latter interview he talks about some of his solo songs which would definitely have become Oasis songs if they hadn't split, and with songs from DGSS and Flick of the Finger, etc. having their origins in Oasis then I think it would be fair to say that some of those would have made it into the official Oasis cannon as well.
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