Mr. Brian wrote:I've had this song stuck in my head all day. It's good. It's a good song.
It is. Much better than think i need it too. But it would be better with a guitar solo, no?
Mr. Brian wrote:I've had this song stuck in my head all day. It's good. It's a good song.
brundiman wrote:Will Sergeant is on the run...It seems He would like to contribute for the name of the band, that's all...
http://swellpublicity.com/ECHO-THE-BUNNYMEN-ALBUM
Will Sergeant – the only other surviving Bunnyman from the original line-up that came together on the Liverpool post-punk scene in 1978.
fat cherry wrote:well that bit of 'publicity' seems to be the basis of macs 'interviews' that are popping up (well two I think I've seen say the same thing. As someone else said, that's the way it is, and fro the main seems to have been the way since waygtdwyl, if not evergreen, or if you listen to mac, ocean rain. Its a bit of a shock to find that he didn't write the sitar parts on reverberation, left them in the studio and will picked em up and used em. Thats a joke btw if any libel lawyers are reading. The main shift in this is that there's no studio collaboration - and looking back to sarge interviews its been that way anway, around flowers he was saying he and the band did the day shift and mac comes in in the evening. In short there hasn't been a band studio session since porcupine or before.But this time Will can't be arsed going into a studio when he can stay at home and pop out a few licks. Might be more interesting if it worked the other way a bit more often.
brundiman wrote:Will Sergeant is on the run...It seems He would like to contribute for the name of the band, that's all...
http://swellpublicity.com/ECHO-THE-BUNNYMEN-ALBUM
Will Sergeant – the only other surviving Bunnyman from the original line-up that came together on the Liverpool post-punk scene in 1978 – was absent from the initial recording sessions of ‘Meteorites’, but a playback of several tracks at Youth’s house in London persuaded him to contribute guitar. Sergeant’s parts were recorded at his home near Liverpool as the deadline to finish the album rapidly approached. The results, reminiscent of his best and most inventive work with the group, underscored the feeling that ‘Meteorites’ wasn’t a McCulloch solo album, but a bona fide and worthy addition to the Bunnymen’s canon.
mccolloch slaved away over the new album and will, realising that he was runnin gout of pot noodles, went down to add his touches to the record. on first listen, a life long bunnymen fan was quoted to have saidi wish that they had died in 1983
Dr Cheese wrote:Jesus, and I thought I was bad!
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