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Post by noasabian on Mar 31, 2013 19:03:30 GMT -5
just came back from london, what a night! Noel was great, alone on the rope was really good live. also Noel teaming up with Damon and Paul was epic. shout it out loud and simple game of genius are also great live tracks. thanks to all the uploaders of the youtube movies, still hoping for a pro-shot tv broadcast, or even better al dvd release. Well until we have a pro recording, here are some multi-angle videos: www.live4ever.proboards.com/thread/75361/multi-angle-videos-royal-albert
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Post by nahuel89p on Apr 3, 2013 9:17:47 GMT -5
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Post by Lyla27 on Apr 3, 2013 11:17:48 GMT -5
I can find a lot of my stuff in it...
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Post by yearzero on Apr 3, 2013 14:23:02 GMT -5
Agreed. It can't hurt to try right? Definitely. Anyone found any good photos from the gig? There don't seem to be many around. There are some from the official TCT Facebook page, but I haven't found many beyond that: www.facebook.com/TeenageCancerTrust/photos_albums
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Post by Shockmaster on Apr 3, 2013 15:43:31 GMT -5
Is this on YouTube? I hate The Scum, and can't watch it on their website.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 3, 2013 15:46:12 GMT -5
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Post by Shockmaster on Apr 3, 2013 16:05:36 GMT -5
I just also e-mailed TCT about a release for the shows. I went directly through their website, and I'm also about to contact them via Facebook. This is what I wrote: Hi there. My name is Tom Wells, and I attended the Kasabian and Rizzle Kicks + Labrinth gigs at the Royal Albert Hall a couple of weeks back. I was thinking back to those concerts, and came up with an idea. I think it would be great to release every artist's set digitally, via iTunes or some other audio distributor. I think that this would make a good profit for the charity also. I know for certain that several people would buy the sets from Kasabian, Noel Gallagher, Blur, Rizzle Kicks, Primal Scream and Paul Weller. Each set could be placed on iTunes in audio format for £5-10, with all profits going to Teenage Cancer Trust. As you could probably imagine, that the performance of Blur's 'Tender' featuring Noel Gallagher and Paul Weller with Damon Albarn would be extremely popular, and I believe that this alone would be a good enough reason to try it. If the initial releases from this year are successful, I would also suggest that older sets played for Teenage Cancer Trust should also be released. I believe that sets from the likes of Muse, The Who, Oasis, Sterophonics, Madness and Suede would be very popular. The fact that the DVD from the show performed by The Who and Friends in 2000 has raised over £1.2 Million should be enough proof that the sales of these sets would make a lot of money for the charity. If the charity would like to go ahead with this idea, and would like some help from me, feel free to e-mail me, and I will be more than happy to help. Thank you for reading, Tom. www.teenagecancertrust.org/who-we-are/contact/
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Post by bluemagpie on Apr 3, 2013 23:11:26 GMT -5
Yeah, I remember seeing somewhere that they didn't allow professionals to photograph Noel's set or something. Shame. I just also e-mailed TCT about a release for the shows. I went directly through their website, and I'm also about to contact them via Facebook. This is what I wrote: Hi there. My name is Tom Wells, and I attended the Kasabian and Rizzle Kicks + Labrinth gigs at the Royal Albert Hall a couple of weeks back. I was thinking back to those concerts, and came up with an idea. I think it would be great to release every artist's set digitally, via iTunes or some other audio distributor. I think that this would make a good profit for the charity also. I know for certain that several people would buy the sets from Kasabian, Noel Gallagher, Blur, Rizzle Kicks, Primal Scream and Paul Weller. Each set could be placed on iTunes in audio format for £5-10, with all profits going to Teenage Cancer Trust. As you could probably imagine, that the performance of Blur's 'Tender' featuring Noel Gallagher and Paul Weller with Damon Albarn would be extremely popular, and I believe that this alone would be a good enough reason to try it. If the initial releases from this year are successful, I would also suggest that older sets played for Teenage Cancer Trust should also be released. I believe that sets from the likes of Muse, The Who, Oasis, Sterophonics, Madness and Suede would be very popular. The fact that the DVD from the show performed by The Who and Friends in 2000 has raised over £1.2 Million should be enough proof that the sales of these sets would make a lot of money for the charity. If the charity would like to go ahead with this idea, and would like some help from me, feel free to e-mail me, and I will be more than happy to help. Thank you for reading, Tom. www.teenagecancertrust.org/who-we-are/contact/Good one, shows you've put some thought into the idea. I wonder if they could use an enthusiastic graphic designer to make them some free stuff
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Post by wooboos on Apr 4, 2013 4:47:39 GMT -5
I just also e-mailed TCT about a release for the shows. I went directly through their website, and I'm also about to contact them via Facebook. This is what I wrote: Hi there. My name is Tom Wells, and I attended the Kasabian and Rizzle Kicks + Labrinth gigs at the Royal Albert Hall a couple of weeks back. I was thinking back to those concerts, and came up with an idea. I think it would be great to release every artist's set digitally, via iTunes or some other audio distributor. I think that this would make a good profit for the charity also. I know for certain that several people would buy the sets from Kasabian, Noel Gallagher, Blur, Rizzle Kicks, Primal Scream and Paul Weller. Each set could be placed on iTunes in audio format for £5-10, with all profits going to Teenage Cancer Trust. As you could probably imagine, that the performance of Blur's 'Tender' featuring Noel Gallagher and Paul Weller with Damon Albarn would be extremely popular, and I believe that this alone would be a good enough reason to try it. If the initial releases from this year are successful, I would also suggest that older sets played for Teenage Cancer Trust should also be released. I believe that sets from the likes of Muse, The Who, Oasis, Sterophonics, Madness and Suede would be very popular. The fact that the DVD from the show performed by The Who and Friends in 2000 has raised over £1.2 Million should be enough proof that the sales of these sets would make a lot of money for the charity. If the charity would like to go ahead with this idea, and would like some help from me, feel free to e-mail me, and I will be more than happy to help. Thank you for reading, Tom. www.teenagecancertrust.org/who-we-are/contact/Tom, Firstly, no harm in trying, and good email. But i think the reason they dont do that is that it would simply cost far too much money to promote, i dont think they'd really make any money from it. yeah a number of people who will there will buy it, and guys from forums, but to reach beyond those areas is really pricey to do. Also, fans of this years artists will generally be savvy youngsters who will download illegally (its shocking to think people will basically steal from a charity but they will!!! - look what happened on here with the BDI across the universe release)
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Post by ramattack22 on Apr 4, 2013 12:07:36 GMT -5
Very nice Tom. If enough people do this kind of thing it has to create some attention.
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Post by Shockmaster on Apr 5, 2013 13:09:27 GMT -5
Tom, Firstly, no harm in trying, and good email. But i think the reason they dont do that is that it would simply cost far too much money to promote, i dont think they'd really make any money from it. yeah a number of people who will there will buy it, and guys from forums, but to reach beyond those areas is really pricey to do. Also, fans of this years artists will generally be savvy youngsters who will download illegally (its shocking to think people will basically steal from a charity but they will!!! - look what happened on here with the BDI across the universe release) I'd beg to differ! The promotion could be done pretty much solely through the bands themselves. The effects of Facebook and Twitter are shockingly good, and I'm sure newspapers and radio stations would be happy to advertise charitable things like that for free, as it gives their own company a new name. On top of that, the mixing could be done for free, as there are several people out there who are students, or people looking to get into the business who would almost definitely mix the audio for free, just to get there name out there. Along with that, fans would often make artwork themselves for bootlegs, so who's to say that myself, or someone else from this forum (or even another) wouldn't design something simple for them to put with the iTunes release? Of course, the piracy is unavoidable, but I would believe that the pros severely outnumber the cons.
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Post by bluemagpie on Apr 5, 2013 15:59:44 GMT -5
Tom, Firstly, no harm in trying, and good email. But i think the reason they dont do that is that it would simply cost far too much money to promote, i dont think they'd really make any money from it. yeah a number of people who will there will buy it, and guys from forums, but to reach beyond those areas is really pricey to do. Also, fans of this years artists will generally be savvy youngsters who will download illegally (its shocking to think people will basically steal from a charity but they will!!! - look what happened on here with the BDI across the universe release) I'd beg to differ! The promotion could be done pretty much solely through the bands themselves. The effects of Facebook and Twitter are shockingly good, and I'm sure newspapers and radio stations would be happy to advertise charitable things like that for free, as it gives their own company a new name. On top of that, the mixing could be done for free, as there are several people out there who are students, or people looking to get into the business who would almost definitely mix the audio for free, just to get there name out there. Along with that, fans would often make artwork themselves for bootlegs, so who's to say that myself, or someone else from this forum (or even another) wouldn't design something simple for them to put with the iTunes release? Of course, the piracy is unavoidable, but I would believe that the pros severely outnumber the cons. Actually, you could really be onto something with the fans-as-mixers etc. thing. I'm sure there are a lot of people who would gladly do that kind of thing for free if it means a release. If it happens and someone reports on it (as I'm sure they will) that's extra publicity just for the novelty of the thing.
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Post by jaq515 on Apr 5, 2013 16:21:08 GMT -5
I think your not seeing the big picture the bands have already given their time to play the gigs, rehearse, have merch with their names on, do interviews etc.
If they release something then It becomes an official release. These artists don't want some student mixing an official live release for them, especially as normal live releases have overdubs from other gigs etc. Then there's all the legal stuff that goes with copyright, publishing rights etc etc.
The TCT is based in music they know their stuff, they arent stupid and if it was easy as that they would do have been releasing live sets for years now.
Would be nice to have the sets tho
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Post by KRRRRRRR on Apr 5, 2013 18:14:19 GMT -5
I just also e-mailed TCT about a release for the shows. I went directly through their website, and I'm also about to contact them via Facebook. This is what I wrote: Hi there. My name is Tom Wells, and I attended the Kasabian and Rizzle Kicks + Labrinth gigs at the Royal Albert Hall a couple of weeks back. I was thinking back to those concerts, and came up with an idea. I think it would be great to release every artist's set digitally, via iTunes or some other audio distributor. I think that this would make a good profit for the charity also. I know for certain that several people would buy the sets from Kasabian, Noel Gallagher, Blur, Rizzle Kicks, Primal Scream and Paul Weller. Each set could be placed on iTunes in audio format for £5-10, with all profits going to Teenage Cancer Trust. As you could probably imagine, that the performance of Blur's 'Tender' featuring Noel Gallagher and Paul Weller with Damon Albarn would be extremely popular, and I believe that this alone would be a good enough reason to try it. If the initial releases from this year are successful, I would also suggest that older sets played for Teenage Cancer Trust should also be released. I believe that sets from the likes of Muse, The Who, Oasis, Sterophonics, Madness and Suede would be very popular. The fact that the DVD from the show performed by The Who and Friends in 2000 has raised over £1.2 Million should be enough proof that the sales of these sets would make a lot of money for the charity. If the charity would like to go ahead with this idea, and would like some help from me, feel free to e-mail me, and I will be more than happy to help. Thank you for reading, Tom. www.teenagecancertrust.org/who-we-are/contact/Tom, Firstly, no harm in trying, and good email. But i think the reason they dont do that is that it would simply cost far too much money to promote, i dont think they'd really make any money from it. yeah a number of people who will there will buy it, and guys from forums, but to reach beyond those areas is really pricey to do. Also, fans of this years artists will generally be savvy youngsters who will download illegally (its shocking to think people will basically steal from a charity but they will!!! - look what happened on here with the BDI across the universe release) This is a little off. If the interest is there, the promotion will pay for itself. The biggest problem things like this run into are rights issues. Considering that the majority of these artists are represented by different recording and publishing companies, there is typically a lot of red tape. The thing is, there is already a precedent, at the very least for Noel's set as a TCT set of his has already been released in the past. Id be interested to see what the sales are for that. I'm guessing not too high, but its a guessing game without any statistics in front of me. There's also dozens of cases of fans clamoring for releases (live U2 and RHCP releases spring to mind) that were only released after internet driven fan bombarding. Production, promotion, and distribution is not a a major hurdle because the internet makes it so easy and a "digital only" release or similar won't take much to accomplish (physical releases are different obvs) Its the archaic copyright control (nothing to do with piracy) and major labels that get in the way of things like this being released. I'm fucking tired of the piracy argument. It's flimsy and the statistical backing show that its a moot point. Everything released these days with even a hint of notoriety to it gets pirated, and plenty of charitable releases have been pirated, but they're still making money for the charity from the people that do buy it. Mix the recordings properly (as Tender has been done), crank out a digital release. Its not hard to do it. The thing is getting enough people to create the interest. 5 or 6 people isn't going to make it happen. Actually, you could really be onto something with the fans-as-mixers etc. thing. I'm sure there are a lot of people who would gladly do that kind of thing for free if it means a release. If it happens and someone reports on it (as I'm sure they will) that's extra publicity just for the novelty of the thing. This will NEVER happen with a live release. Not for something like this. There's more than enough professional studio technicians in the world that would do it for free at the beckoning of an artist just for the kudos.
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Post by gdforever on Apr 6, 2013 3:13:48 GMT -5
I think your not seeing the big picture the bands have already given their time to play the gigs, rehearse, have merch with their names on, do interviews etc. If they release something then It becomes an official release. These artists don't want some student mixing an official live release for them, especially as normal live releases have overdubs from other gigs etc. Then there's all the legal stuff that goes with copyright, publishing rights etc etc. The TCT is based in music they know their stuff, they arent stupid and if it was easy as that they would do have been releasing live sets for years now. Would be nice to have the sets tho I agree with this. If it were as easy to do as all that they'd do it for every gig every year. Noel was very generous to donate his performance in 2007 for distribution...but I don't know that all or even most artist would be good with the TCT putting out a live gig of their show. Plus forgive me if I am mistaken the Noel gig was given away first before it was put for sale. Considering how many TCT gigs there have been there haven't been many distributed. I know the Who one and the Noel one. Any others?
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Post by eva on Apr 6, 2013 6:15:02 GMT -5
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Post by ceskojr on Apr 6, 2013 10:41:32 GMT -5
Tune in to XFM from 7pm tonight to hear live tracks from our shows at the Royal Albert Hall including Kasabian, Primal Scream and Noel Gallagher!
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Post by carlober on Apr 6, 2013 11:04:43 GMT -5
Tune in to XFM from 7pm tonight to hear live tracks from our shows at the Royal Albert Hall including Kasabian, Primal Scream and Noel Gallagher! good news!
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Post by bluemagpie on Apr 6, 2013 23:06:10 GMT -5
I think your not seeing the big picture the bands have already given their time to play the gigs, rehearse, have merch with their names on, do interviews etc. If they release something then It becomes an official release. These artists don't want some student mixing an official live release for them, especially as normal live releases have overdubs from other gigs etc. Then there's all the legal stuff that goes with copyright, publishing rights etc etc. The TCT is based in music they know their stuff, they arent stupid and if it was easy as that they would do have been releasing live sets for years now. Would be nice to have the sets tho You're right. Shame though. Exactly Thanks Eva!
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Post by Beady’s Here Now on Jun 3, 2013 22:44:58 GMT -5
Holy shit, Noel played Shout It Out Loud!? Legend!
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Post by King Blougaredoc on Jun 4, 2013 3:45:29 GMT -5
Holy shit, Noel played Shout It Out Loud!? Legend! Welcome to april, fucker Anyway, looks like the japanese edition bonus tracks of BE´s album leak is imminent
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