fat cherry wrote:Anyone go? I did but and this is fairly sound advice i should have heeded, dont go to a gig by even the most desirable to see band if you ears are already fucked.. I know I know and i hope its temporary but i had the tickets so went along. So cant review properly as the sound gettingthrough the shite in my ears was generally drowned out by the whistling thats starting to drive me mad. Still, seeing the doc again next week by which time he reckons it'll be safe and painless to give em a good wash out. Soooo with that in mind the first three or four songs were still brilliant, more smoke than you could shake a stick at, and even rescue ,which I've never rated sounded good, especially with the 'blair witchy' running throufgh the woods backdrop film. It was like the mid to late eighties and nineties never happened. And then with stormy weather it all seemed to go a bit flat. New stuff just passed me by (so i withdraw all my previous comments). Picked up a bit towards the end - people ar estrange, back of love, cutter, zimbo & lips good - but i was pissed and pissed off by then. Oh and roadhouse blues? why oh why oh why. Anyone here down the front end? tell me it was brilliant, purleeeeeese. or am i in KOK territory now?
the ghost of guitarplayer wrote:Didn't go, but sounds like shit those ear problems. I have the same problem when going to gigs (too many caused it), but it's moved from whistling to filthy headaches and blocked ears afterwards.
I think this was the setlist to jog your memory:
http://twitpic.com/lnb6f
Dr Evil wrote:I am absolutely paranoid about hearing damage, and limit my concerts, particularly with over-loud bands-the Bunnymen used to be big culprits, but seem to have toned the amplification down a bit with smaller venues. Too many concerts and the hair cells in your inner ear will die and leave you with "hells bells", a permanent untreatable ringing and buzzing in your ears which will drive you mad, the clinical name is tinnitus.
As a celibate neurotic my ears are my chief organ of pleasure, in fact I sometimes wonder if certain pleasure centers in my brain have re-routed themselves to my ears.
This is one reason I only go to their shows only if they do something new or innovative-so naturally I haven't seen them for a few years.
I wonder what the state of their hearing is by now, and could hearing damage account for the reduction in creativity the band seem to have suffered?
It takes a lot to make me risk my hearing. I will not go to an Elbow concert (excellent, but too loud) though I would see the Chameleons/Mark Burgess whatever the risk, though my favorite artists at present are female Nu-Folk acts who have no macho interest in turning up the dial to 11 but are just as powerful despite this.
zabird wrote:Surely they must wear earplugs. And even if Mac & Will are suffering from tinnitus, that's no excuse for a drop in creativity ... i.e. didn't Beethoven continue to compose after he lost his hearing? Where there's a will, there's a way.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest