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Post by mossy on Dec 20, 2017 7:35:11 GMT -5
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Post by Aman on Dec 20, 2017 19:58:40 GMT -5
Glad the whole UK public get to see it.
Thought the film hype was minimal tbh.
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Post by carl80 on Dec 28, 2017 14:36:15 GMT -5
Watched most of it last night, what a documentary the way he put it together.
Can’t remember if it was answered at the time but when the boardwalk part plays, think it’s take me , there’s a scene where the group are having a drink after in a bar, is that in the boardwalk or other footage ?
Would still love to know how they got hold of Liam’s version of Sad Song as well, anyone know anymore about that and how they got it ?
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Post by Gas Panic on Dec 29, 2017 6:02:01 GMT -5
I watched the second half again on BBC the other night. It really is a superb piece of work.
Roll on the sequels!
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Post by mossy on Dec 29, 2017 13:04:04 GMT -5
Watched most of it last night, what a documentary the way he put it together. Can’t remember if it was answered at the time but when the boardwalk part plays, think it’s take me , there’s a scene where the group are having a drink after in a bar, is that in the boardwalk or other footage ? Would still love to know how they got hold of Liam’s version of Sad Song as well, anyone know anymore about that and how they got it ?Mat Whitecross: “One of the first people we met was Mark Coyle [producer of early Oasis albums], who is this amazing psychedelic guru. Mark was a music obsessive. Him and Noel met touring with the Inspiral Carpets [in the early ’90s] and Noel would bring him tracks to mix. Every so often Mark would give us this stuff. With ‘Sad Song’ he was just, ‘I’ve got no idea where this came from.’ We were like, ‘Is that Liam? That doesn’t make any sense.’ But Liam lends something beautiful to it. No one, including Liam, remembered recording it. But he had no recollection of any of the footage that was recorded, or pretty much anything that’s happened in the last 20 years.” www.nme.com/blogs/nme-blogs/liam-gallagher-most-godlike-moments-2166873X
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Post by janedoe on Dec 29, 2017 17:43:21 GMT -5
... Would still love to know how they got hold of Liam’s version of Sad Song as well, anyone know anymore about that and how they got it ?Mat Whitecross: “One of the first people we met was Mark Coyle [producer of early Oasis albums], who is this amazing psychedelic guru. Mark was a music obsessive. Him and Noel met touring with the Inspiral Carpets [in the early ’90s] and Noel would bring him tracks to mix. Every so often Mark would give us this stuff. With ‘Sad Song’ he was just, ‘I’ve got no idea where this came from.’ We were like, ‘Is that Liam? That doesn’t make any sense.’ But Liam lends something beautiful to it. No one, including Liam, remembered recording it. But he had no recollection of any of the footage that was recorded, or pretty much anything that’s happened in the last 20 years.” www.nme.com/blogs/nme-blogs/liam-gallagher-most-godlike-moments-2166873X
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Post by mossy on Dec 29, 2017 18:23:30 GMT -5
Mat Whitecross: “One of the first people we met was Mark Coyle [producer of early Oasis albums], who is this amazing psychedelic guru. Mark was a music obsessive. Him and Noel met touring with the Inspiral Carpets [in the early ’90s] and Noel would bring him tracks to mix. Every so often Mark would give us this stuff. With ‘Sad Song’ he was just, ‘I’ve got no idea where this came from.’ We were like, ‘Is that Liam? That doesn’t make any sense.’ But Liam lends something beautiful to it. No one, including Liam, remembered recording it. But he had no recollection of any of the footage that was recorded, or pretty much anything that’s happened in the last 20 years.” www.nme.com/blogs/nme-blogs/liam-gallagher-most-godlike-moments-2166873X Missed opportunity: the film should have had a soundtrack and this should have been on it! X
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Post by mimmihopps on Jan 2, 2018 6:04:09 GMT -5
I felt the cinema floor bouncing when Columbia started on a screen when I went to watch it for the first time in October 2016. Matt Whitecross has done a great job by forcusing the band's history for their first years.
Might watch it on my DVD tonight again.
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Post by carl80 on Jan 2, 2018 8:56:41 GMT -5
I felt the cinema floor bouncing when Columbia started on a screen when I went to watch it for the first time in October 2016. Matt Whitecross has done a great job by forcusing the band's history for their first years. Might watch it on my DVD tonight again. I know , the sound was amazing at the start in the cinema. Made a big difference watching for the first time.
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Post by joladella on Jan 2, 2018 11:46:45 GMT -5
I felt the cinema floor bouncing when Columbia started on a screen when I went to watch it for the first time in October 2016. Matt Whitecross has done a great job by forcusing the band's history for their first years. Might watch it on my DVD tonight again. I had to watch it again on my DVD recently, after reading about people enjoying it on TV. Still such a gift, that movie! And I realised that I could never watch it with someone who is not also totally besotted by that band as I was heavily fangirling.
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Post by mimmihopps on Jan 2, 2018 13:34:45 GMT -5
I felt the cinema floor bouncing when Columbia started on a screen when I went to watch it for the first time in October 2016. Matt Whitecross has done a great job by forcusing the band's history for their first years. Might watch it on my DVD tonight again. I had to watch it again on my DVD recently, after reading about people enjoying it on TV. Still such a gift, that movie! And I realised that I could never watch it with someone who is not also totally besotted by that band as I was heavily fangirling. I watched it in a cinema twice when it was out and I took my better half with me. Although he isn't an Oasis fan, he enjoyed it.
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Post by joladella on Jan 2, 2018 13:50:49 GMT -5
I had to watch it again on my DVD recently, after reading about people enjoying it on TV. Still such a gift, that movie! And I realised that I could never watch it with someone who is not also totally besotted by that band as I was heavily fangirling. I watched it in a cinema twice when it was out and I took my better half with me. Although he isn't an Oasis fan, he enjoyed it. Good man, sounds like a keeper! 👍😁
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Post by mimmihopps on Jan 3, 2018 3:26:52 GMT -5
I watched it in a cinema twice when it was out and I took my better half with me. Although he isn't an Oasis fan, he enjoyed it. Good man, sounds like a keeper! 👍😁 He's a good keeper indeed. He knows my love and passion for Gallaghers.
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fouronfouroff
RKid
Maybe I will never be a Rock and Roll Star, I'd like to be no-one else, I need to be up in the sky
Posts: 20
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Post by fouronfouroff on Jan 4, 2018 14:58:34 GMT -5
Would still love to know how they got hold of Liam’s version of Sad Song as well, anyone know anymore about that and how they got it ? I theorised that this was recorded at the soundcheck for the June 1994 Royal Albert gig, which went ahead with just Noel and Bonehead. The evidence to suggest this comes from three sources - Paul Mathur's book 'Take Me There' mentions Shakermaker, Live Forever and Sad Song being performed. At the gig proper, just the first two were played, but it's probable that Sad Song was performed at the soundcheck and was misremembered as being in the setlist. Oasis were on Radio 1 a day or two later and Noel remarked on Liam ''bottling it from the Royal Albert'', suggesting he was intending to sing there up to and including the soundcheck. He also mentions Sad Song being ''brand new'' and it's debuted during the 'Evening Session'. Very likely the soundcheck at the Royal Albert was used as a first run through. The ambiance of the recording. It's echoey. It sounds like a large, empty hall. That's because it most likely was! What the big mystery is, likely to never be explained as all involved can't remember shit for toffee, is why Noel took the vocals up seemingly after one solitary try out with Liam.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Jan 14, 2018 3:06:19 GMT -5
Would still love to know how they got hold of Liam’s version of Sad Song as well, anyone know anymore about that and how they got it ? I theorised that this was recorded at the soundcheck for the June 1994 Royal Albert gig, which went ahead with just Noel and Bonehead. The evidence to suggest this comes from three sources - Paul Mathur's book 'Take Me There' mentions Shakermaker, Live Forever and Sad Song being performed. At the gig proper, just the first two were played, but it's probable that Sad Song was performed at the soundcheck and was misremembered as being in the setlist. Oasis were on Radio 1 a day or two later and Noel remarked on Liam ''bottling it from the Royal Albert'', suggesting he was intending to sing there up to and including the soundcheck. He also mentions Sad Song being ''brand new'' and it's debuted during the 'Evening Session'. Very likely the soundcheck at the Royal Albert was used as a first run through. The ambiance of the recording. It's echoey. It sounds like a large, empty hall. That's because it most likely was! What the big mystery is, likely to never be explained as all involved can't remember shit for toffee, is why Noel took the vocals up seemingly after one solitary try out with Liam. Why would Liam do the soundcheck of only Noel and Bonehead were gonna peform? Liam was never a fan of soundchecks.
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fouronfouroff
RKid
Maybe I will never be a Rock and Roll Star, I'd like to be no-one else, I need to be up in the sky
Posts: 20
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Post by fouronfouroff on Jan 15, 2018 14:36:45 GMT -5
Why would Liam do the soundcheck of only Noel and Bonehead were gonna peform? Liam was never a fan of soundchecks. Never was a fan, but at this early stage he was probably still begrudgingly turning up. And he was intended to sing at the actual gig, it was probably the first example of him pulling out. This 'Liam on Sad Song' theory is just that, a theory, but it's one I feel makes more than a modicum of sense.
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