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Viking Chat => Off Topic => Topic started by: MrFrost on July 22, 2010, 09:32:23 am

Title: Trilogy closes doors
Post by: MrFrost on July 22, 2010, 09:32:23 am
Have read today that the Trilogy Nightclub in town has shut down.
Now, I always thought the place was a shit hole, so I wont miss it. However, it leaves Doncaster without a regonisable night club, which surely will be very detrimental to the night time economy.

To be honest, the choice of late night venue's is pretty poor in town. You've got Walkabout or Priory, and that's about it.

Maybe the town's famed nightlife is coming to an end.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: BillyStubbsTears on July 22, 2010, 09:53:03 am
Ah well. If there's one sliver lining to the cloud of economic woes, it's the fact that music and youth culture improve as the times get harder. In 78-83 we had Joy Division/New Order, Two Tone, The Jam, the birth of British Electro-pop and a dozen other innovative groups/movements.

In the economic fat years over the last two decades, we have had a plethora of manufactured boy/girl bands, bone idle derivatives of 25 year-old techno-pop and shit, comfortable middle-class pap like Keane/The Kooks/Coldplay. There's been nothing truly innovative in British pop music since the days of Madchester and the rave culture 20 years ago.

Maybe things will improve now. Last time all the clubs were being closed down, it spawned THIS.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZ2oXzrnti4
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: CusworthRovers on July 22, 2010, 10:30:36 am
The nightlife is still very much there.

Trilogy is in the heartbeat/hub of Donny Nightlife (unlike 7th Heaven or whatever name it has) and yet still can't fill it. Nothing to do with the nightclub, it's more the relaxed licencing laws, which allow most pubs and pubs with music/disco to stay open til 3am.

In short Donny has too many late night establishments for drinking alcohol and/or throwing out some nifty dance moves ie very much watered down. Donny is not far off being 1 big nightclub/pub/burger bar by night and pound type shop by day.

What Donny doesn't have is the variety of drinking/late night entertainment establishment. They are all the same. Now back in the day, it had a lot more variety
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: MrFrost on July 22, 2010, 10:36:41 am
CusworthRovers wrote:
Quote
The nightlife is still very much there.

Trilogy is in the heartbeat/hub of Donny Nightlife (unlike 7th Heaven or whatever name it has) and yet still can't fill it. Nothing to do with the nightclub, it's more the relaxed licencing laws, which allow most pubs and pubs with music/disco to stay open til 3am.

In short Donny has too many late night establishments for drinking alcohol and/or throwing out some nifty dance moves ie very much watered down. Donny is not far off being 1 big nightclub/pub/burger bar by night and pound type shop by day.

What Donny doesn't have is the variety of drinking/late night entertainment establishment. They are all the same. Now back in the day, it had a lot more variety


There's no market for anything different in Doncaster. There's a new indie themed bar opened up where Reds Bar used to be. It's always empty and won't last long. If that was in Sheffield, it would be full all the time.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: 5minstogo on July 22, 2010, 10:49:10 am
MrFrost wrote:
Quote
Have read today that the Trilogy Nightclub in town has shut down.
Now, I always thought the place was a shit hole, so I wont miss it. However, it leaves Doncaster without a regonisable night club, which surely will be very detrimental to the night time economy.

To be honest, the choice of late night venue's is pretty poor in town. You've got Walkabout or Priory, and that's about it.

Maybe the town's famed nightlife is coming to an end.


Its not surprising really now that Lewis and Heff have moved on.  ;)
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: CusworthRovers on July 22, 2010, 10:50:29 am
You're not wrong. I think Billy may have touched on it re the music though. There is piss all about in terms of non-mainstream.

Let's face it I would guess most lads/lasses go out simply to have a good time, good drink, pull something, grab some cheesey chips at the end of the night. I bet music would not feature anywhere. Nothing wrong with this, may I add

The music is all the same. Going through time there was Northern Soul and packed out rooms in the afternoon and evening in Donny (so says my older sister, somewhere near Free Press). Then we had Mainline, which was always busy and concentrated on the Indie scene. Pubs in Donny played certain types of music and got a certain type of crowd.


I think with the advent of Internet, Media, TV resulting in peer pressure and people ramming down our throats what the norm is, there is a growing reluctance to be seen to be different or to accept anything else.

Like said, I'm sure there will come a new music revolution (as that's what usually starts a trend/scene).

Until then, the people that might not want DJ Fresh featuring The Grass People and Dogs Dinner bass mix will just have to carry on going to the mainstream clubs, stand on their own, leave on their own, go home, cry and want to die.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Filo on July 22, 2010, 11:03:03 am
CusworthRovers wrote:
Quote
Then we had Mainline, which was always busy and concentrated on the Indie scene. Pubs in Donny played certain types of music and got a certain type of crowd.








And don`t forget Mr Davids, that attracted your kind of crowd Cussie!  ;)
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: nightporter on July 22, 2010, 12:00:22 pm
CusworthRovers wrote:
Quote
, stand on their own, leave on their own, go home, cry and want to die.


 :)  :) Nice one.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: coventryrover on July 22, 2010, 12:24:25 pm
BillyStubbsTears wrote:
Quote
Ah well. If there's one sliver lining to the cloud of economic woes, it's the fact that music and youth culture improve as the times get harder. In 78-83 we had Joy Division/New Order, Two Tone, The Jam, the birth of British Electro-pop and a dozen other innovative groups/movements.

In the economic fat years over the last two decades, we have had a plethora of manufactured boy/girl bands, bone idle derivatives of 25 year-old techno-pop and shit, comfortable middle-class pap like Keane/The Kooks/Coldplay. There's been nothing truly innovative in British pop music since the days of Madchester and the rave culture 20 years ago.
Maybe things will improve now. Last time all the clubs were being closed down, it spawned THIS.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZ2oXzrnti4


Err..... Radiohead, Dizzie Rascal, Massive Attack, Super Furries, British sea power, Nitin Sawhney, Foals, Wild Beats etc etc etc

I hate the attitude of \"music was so much better/angst/innovative (delete as appropriate) in the past\"
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Wellington Vaults on July 22, 2010, 01:12:09 pm
Well, donning my Miserable Old Fart hat, which seems to be on my head permanently these days, I would only class Radiohead and Massive Attack as iconic, which Joy Division, New Order, The Jam, The Specials etc undoubtedly are

Dizzie Rascal, Super Furries, British sea power, Nitin Sawhney, Foals, Wild Beats etc are no doubt talented but can't see them getting much coverage in 20 or 30 years time.

The modern stuff is just so accessible, and without putting too fine a point on it, \"nice\".  The Eighties stuff mentioned by BST often had a disturbing edge to it which didn't lend itself to \"media darling\" status, and the \"underground feel\" seems sadly missing these days.

And they do say that class never goes out of fashion, so those young uns bemoaning the closing of Triliogy perhaps should check out the lyrics to The Specials' \"Ghost Town\".  

Coming to a town near you sooner than you think.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: big fat yorkshire pudding on July 22, 2010, 01:18:31 pm
MrFrost wrote:
Quote
CusworthRovers wrote:
Quote
The nightlife is still very much there.

Trilogy is in the heartbeat/hub of Donny Nightlife (unlike 7th Heaven or whatever name it has) and yet still can't fill it. Nothing to do with the nightclub, it's more the relaxed licencing laws, which allow most pubs and pubs with music/disco to stay open til 3am.

In short Donny has too many late night establishments for drinking alcohol and/or throwing out some nifty dance moves ie very much watered down. Donny is not far off being 1 big nightclub/pub/burger bar by night and pound type shop by day.

What Donny doesn't have is the variety of drinking/late night entertainment establishment. They are all the same. Now back in the day, it had a lot more variety


There's no market for anything different in Doncaster. There's a new indie themed bar opened up where Reds Bar used to be. It's always empty and won't last long. If that was in Sheffield, it would be full all the time.


That's not the case really.  There's never any problem getting into an indie bar in Sheffield (in fact they've become much less common now, indie nights have died in Sheffield, compared to 3 years ago).  The thing is people don't want to listen to that kind of stuff when out and about.  There is a market but it isn't that big.  Look at many of the people who prefer that type of music like myself and my mates.  We tend to go to gigs rather than nights on the town, you have to look at the people out in town on the piss.  Most no nothing about music.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: jucyberry on July 22, 2010, 01:36:18 pm
Kids nowadays don't want music, the majority just want to sink as many pints/wkd's as possible and get totally off their faces whilst slumped up a corner in their own vomit.... and that's just the girls.

and, I have to say I'm with you wellygogs, music now is absolutly crap...Dizzy whotsit aside,(and I can't even think what he sings) I have never even heard of the rest of this new line up..  We must be wearng the same hat..lol
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: coventryrover on July 22, 2010, 01:44:28 pm
Wellington Vaults wrote:
Quote
Well, donning my Miserable Old Fart hat, which seems to be on my head permanently these days, I would only class Radiohead and Massive Attack as iconic, which Joy Division, New Order, The Jam, The Specials etc undoubtedly are

Dizzie Rascal, Super Furries, British sea power, Nitin Sawhney, Foals, Wild Beats etc are no doubt talented but can't see them getting much coverage in 20 or 30 years time.

The modern stuff is just so accessible, and without putting too fine a point on it, \"nice\".  The Eighties stuff mentioned by BST often had a disturbing edge to it which didn't lend itself to \"media darling\" status, and the \"underground feel\" seems sadly missing these days.

And they do say that class never goes out of fashion, so those young uns bemoaning the closing of Triliogy perhaps should check out the lyrics to The Specials' \"Ghost Town\".  

Coming to a town near you sooner than you think.


For every Specials there was a Brother Beyond etc etc etc

Plus there is plenty of underground stuff nowadays, particularly in the dance sector
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: coventryrover on July 22, 2010, 01:46:32 pm
jucyberry wrote:
Quote
Kids nowadays don't want music, the majority just want to sink as many pints/wkd's as possible and get totally off their faces whilst slumped up a corner in their own vomit.... and that's just the girls.

and, I have to say I'm with you wellygogs, music now is absolutly crap...Dizzy whotsit aside,(and I can't even think what he sings) I have never even heard of the rest of this new line up..  We must be wearng the same hat..lol


But thats what the older generation always says of the younger generations music, which is quite ignorant especially if all you listen to is Hallam FM etc etc.

Guess we all turn into our parents, who view their kids music as just noise:)
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Nudga on July 22, 2010, 01:51:52 pm
Whatever happened to getting a phone call on a Friday morning from a mate saying that there will be a rave going off in a disused carpark/warehouse/field on the saturday night. They were the best kind of nights out and some decent names turned out as well. I remember Keith wotsisname from Prodigy rolling up at a dingy warehouse in Stoke in the mid/late nineties, he wasn't even down to do a \"turn\" but came with his mates and ended up performing most of the night.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: jucyberry on July 22, 2010, 01:56:25 pm
Also true, its called progression I guess.

Mind you, I do find this whole ooo look at me I'm a gangsta big style Ndubz thing pretty pitiful... Hellooo, you aren't straight outta Compton, they would eat little weanies like you for breakfast....lol

Why do  kids over here feel the need to speak like it? Have you seen the dribble  some put on facebook?? I actually posted that on one lads wall, spotty little norfolk boy speaking like a gangsta, 'Why Benjamin, I didn't know you came from East Compton'....  :laugh:  :laugh: Aren't I mean...
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Nudga on July 22, 2010, 02:00:07 pm
jucyberry wrote:
Quote
Also true, its called progression I guess.

Mind you, I do find this whole ooo look at me I'm a gangsta big style Ndubz thing pretty pitiful... Hellooo, you aren't straight outta Compton, they would eat little weanies like you for breakfast....lol

Why do  kids over here feel the need to speak like it? Have you seen the dribble  some put on facebook?? I actually posted that on one lads wall, spotty little norfolk boy speaking like a gangsta, 'Why Benjamin, I didn't know you came from East Compton'....  :laugh:  :laugh: Aren't I mean...



Going slightly away from OP but I said the same thing on here a couple of days ago, even kids around here don't have Yorkshire accents, they have this weird shitty New London/Black/Asian b*llocks going on....init.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: jucyberry on July 22, 2010, 02:09:00 pm
Either there is something in the water and our kids are morphing into morons, or I blame the Yanks.

I don't know about 50cent, kids now sound more like one and a ha'penny...

Look at this for a direct quote  from spotty norfolk boy to My Adam's brother in law...

Ben Harris 'Crumpit' wos sup fcuker, how u been bro aint spoke to you for time hope all is well geeza, tap back when you can..

Not exactly the work of a poet is it?
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: CusworthRovers on July 22, 2010, 02:40:35 pm
I bet Mr Chumley Warner is turning in his grave.

Just a few points from this thread. If the music is good enough it will stand the test of time regardless of what it is. I like music way before my time of getting into it ie Beatles, Stones, Who, Doors, Kinks, Elvis, Buddy Holly, T Rex, Led Zep and many more.

My daughter is 16. I have no influence on her musical taste. However she has found herself, stuff from the 60's and from my era The Jam and The Smiths.

I do feel the music scene is very much alive (The line up at T in The Park, Glasto was pretty awesome), we just need a new trend.

I think there are many on here who will have grown up going through some pretty cheeky eras one after the other ie Punk, New Wave, Mods, New Romantic, Indie.......after that I cannot recall anything else, except Britpop and girl power
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: keyser_soze on July 22, 2010, 02:50:53 pm
Some people in this thread need to look a bit harder than silver street. Surprised Vintage Rock Bar hasn't been mentioned on this thread. Sine Fm, Inhaler records, higher rhythm studios, all championing local new music.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Nudga on July 22, 2010, 02:51:21 pm
We have only Faggot Force now.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: big fat yorkshire pudding on July 22, 2010, 03:01:22 pm
jucyberry wrote:
Quote
Kids nowadays don't want music, the majority just want to sink as many pints/wkd's as possible and get totally off their faces whilst slumped up a corner in their own vomit.... and that's just the girls.

and, I have to say I'm with you wellygogs, music now is absolutly crap...Dizzy whotsit aside,(and I can't even think what he sings) I have never even heard of the rest of this new line up..  We must be wearng the same hat..lol


Maybe you could get out of your shell a bit more though before criticising young people?  We're not all binge drinking pissheads spending our days listening to American rap and out to steal money from our Grandmas.

But the media would love it if everyone believed that wouldn't they?

Just look like has been said at the recent festivals where large amounts of people were my age, younger and older all enjoying new and old music.  If the the music is good enough it doesn't matter whether it was written in the 60s or last week.  There's a lot of good music out there, but if you listen to Hallam Fm you won't hear it.  Try some of the stations that play new music (6 Music and Absolute tend to be the best, XFM isn't bad either).
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Nudga on July 22, 2010, 03:06:48 pm
\"Maybe you could get out of your shell a bit more though before criticising young people? We're not all binge drinking pissheads spending our days listening to American rap and out to steal money from our Grandmas.\"


True, but if they aren't one of those they are usually fluffy haired, spray tanned, jeans down to arse, pump wearing, wrist banded, man bagged, accessorised, work shy, yeah but no but, shandy drinking, scarf/vest combo wearing bum bandits.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: big fat yorkshire pudding on July 22, 2010, 03:10:45 pm
Nudga wrote:
Quote



True, but if they aren't one of those they are usually fluffy haired, spray tanned, jeans down to arse, pump wearing, wrist banded, man bagged, accessorised, work shy, yeah but no but, shandy drinking, scarf/vest combo wearing bum bandits.


Don't get me started on those types.  Nowt wrong with a man bag though  :silly:
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Nudga on July 22, 2010, 03:13:56 pm
big fat yorkshire pudding wrote:
Quote
Nudga wrote:
Quote



True, but if they aren't one of those they are usually fluffy haired, spray tanned, jeans down to arse, pump wearing, wrist banded, man bagged, accessorised, work shy, yeah but no but, shandy drinking, scarf/vest combo wearing bum bandits.


Don't get me started on those types.  Nowt wrong with a man bag though  :silly:


Oh there is, if what you have won't fit in your pockets then it's a sports ruck sack all the way. And you have to wear it with one strap across one shoulder. Unlike the man bag which looks like it needs to be worn like a womans bag from one shoulder, across the chest and then sits on the hip. Frickin mincers.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: BillyStubbsTears on July 22, 2010, 03:38:37 pm
coventryrover wrote:
Quote
BillyStubbsTears wrote:
Quote
Ah well. If there's one sliver lining to the cloud of economic woes, it's the fact that music and youth culture improve as the times get harder. In 78-83 we had Joy Division/New Order, Two Tone, The Jam, the birth of British Electro-pop and a dozen other innovative groups/movements.

In the economic fat years over the last two decades, we have had a plethora of manufactured boy/girl bands, bone idle derivatives of 25 year-old techno-pop and shit, comfortable middle-class pap like Keane/The Kooks/Coldplay. There's been nothing truly innovative in British pop music since the days of Madchester and the rave culture 20 years ago.
Maybe things will improve now. Last time all the clubs were being closed down, it spawned THIS.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZ2oXzrnti4


Err..... Radiohead, Dizzie Rascal, Massive Attack, Super Furries, British sea power, Nitin Sawhney, Foals, Wild Beats etc etc etc

I hate the attitude of \"music was so much better/angst/innovative (delete as appropriate) in the past\"



1) Your choice of \"new\" music almost makes my point for me. Radiohead were formed in 1985, Massive Attack in 88 and Super Furry Animals in 1990.

2) In any case, these are (predominantly) minority interest groups. Of course there are some interesting and innovative bands these days, just like there were plenty of shit ones in 1980. But the difference is in how many of the edgy bands were MAINSTREAM in the years that I quoted. Look at the charts from 79-82. Number ones for The Specials, The Jam, Tubeway Army, Human League, Kraftwerk, Dexy's etc. All of them either developing new musical genres or producing a new synthesis of older styles. All of them challenging accepted attitudes and approaches. Who is doing that AND GETTING TO NUMBER ONE today? Or for the last 20 years?

3) And that's before you start looking at who were the other innovative bands defining new directions in music. Back in 79-82, you had U2, Joy Division, The Cure, early Simple Minds, Cabaret Voltaire, Cocteau Twins, UB40, even someone like Vince Clark who was defining stripped-down electro-pop for a generation. All of them doing something new, risky and innovative and ADDING to pop music culture across a huge range of genres, rather than just regurgitating it.

I really don't think it's old-gittishness. I genuinely think that fat and lazy economic times generates fat and lazy youth culture. And this is predominantly what we have had for the last 15-20 years. In 1980, unemployment was horrific, and we never more than 4 minutes away from worldwide annihilation. It was fcuking grim. And these things affect the culture that they produce. That's why music by the likes of Joy Division, Cabaret Voltaire, Empires and Dance by Simple Minds were so hauntingly disturbing AND attracted discerning audiences - they reflected the times. That's why poppier but still grim stuff like Ghost Town or Are Friends Electric, or Going Underground got to Number 1. What has there been to be truly disturbed and haunted by for a kid coming to cultural maturity over the last 15 years?
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: big fat yorkshire pudding on July 22, 2010, 03:44:23 pm
BST you mention number ones, but nobody under the age of 40 buys music these days.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: BillyStubbsTears on July 22, 2010, 03:52:22 pm
Ahh, so it was us old t**ts who put JLS, Joe McEldrey, Pixie Lott, Lady Gaga, Kelly Clarkson, Jay-Z and Cheryl Cole on top of the charts last year then eh?
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: big fat yorkshire pudding on July 22, 2010, 03:59:53 pm
BillyStubbsTears wrote:
Quote
Ahh, so it was us old t**ts who put JLS, Joe McEldrey, Pixie Lott, Lady Gaga, Kelly Clarkson, Jay-Z and Cheryl Cole on top of the charts last year then eh?


Certainly wasn't me  :laugh:
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: jucyberry on July 22, 2010, 04:02:37 pm
big fat yorkshire pudding wrote:
Quote
jucyberry wrote:
Quote
Kids nowadays don't want music, the majority just want to sink as many pints/wkd's as possible and get totally off their faces whilst slumped up a corner in their own vomit.... and that's just the girls.

and, I have to say I'm with you wellygogs, music now is absolutly crap...Dizzy whotsit aside,(and I can't even think what he sings) I have never even heard of the rest of this new line up..  We must be wearng the same hat..lol


Maybe you could get out of your shell a bit more though before criticising young people?  We're not all binge drinking pissheads spending our days listening to American rap and out to steal money from our Grandmas.

But the media would love it if everyone believed that wouldn't they?

Just look like has been said at the recent festivals where large amounts of people were my age, younger and older all enjoying new and old music.  If the the music is good enough it doesn't matter whether it was written in the 60s or last week.  There's a lot of good music out there, but if you listen to Hallam Fm you won't hear it.  Try some of the stations that play new music (6 Music and Absolute tend to be the best, XFM isn't bad either).


I will forgive the patronizing nature of your post, you are after all very young.

However. I have forgotten more about 'young people' than you will ever know. I know exactly what a good portion of youth is all about. I am as far away from being sheltered when it comes to youngsters are you are in understanding where an adult comes from obviously.

you are one of the blessed ones, you have the brains and drive to go far, for many this isn't the case..For far to many kids the norm is getting pissed , getting high and just grabbing the shoddy side of life...

my 'shell' has seen the burial of one boy close to your age, pinned and left under a car wreck, and not found until it was too late, thanks in part to a late night session, and oh the bitterest of irony, we also have the funeral of his brother to contend with this coming wednesday.... died choking on his own vomit whilst sleeping..Adam has lost two brother in laws in four and a half years.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Jonathan on July 22, 2010, 09:47:13 pm
There is an NME driven fixation with music being 'innovative,' I don't know why. Constant (re)invention is to be admired, but people that look for something to be different just for the sake of being different, are actually only following the crowd themsleves.

For me, good music can still be class without being groundbreaking. I could sit here and list endless dross from recent times; Joe McEldry, The Kooks, Akon, whatever empty crap you want to pick out, but equally I could pick out countless brilliant bands and artists from the era I've grown up through. From The Stone Roses, to Oasis, Blur, Radiohead, The Libertines, The Coral, Arctic's. I glance down at my CD collection and it never takes me long to find something I really want to listen to from the last 20 years, whether it's something mindlessly uplifting like Black Grape, or a little more cultured like Elbow. Britain still has great music without having to delve into the Simon Cowell driven rubbish or the mock gangsta tripe.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: BillyStubbsTears on July 22, 2010, 09:58:11 pm
Because it's only by innovation that music moves on. Otherwise, it slowly atrophies and turns into pastiche.

Pop/Rock music always has been (or at least, always was) the ultimate dialectic process. Thesis and anthithesis woven into a new thesis. Simple example - Human League taking Kraftwerk and Phil Spector as influences to produce a totally new pop idiom. Or The Jam fusing Ray Davies and Joe Strummer into an archetypal English sound. Happy Mondays were another example, welding Acid House to David Essex/Karl Denver MoR pap to produce something astonishing. It wasn't about imitating - it was about merging influences into something original. And it absolutely was not conscious - it was a wonderfully organic process.

I'm struggling to see where that happens today, at least in bands that have any sort of mass appeal. Possibly Arctic Monkeys, but I don't see them as producing anything that wasn't being done in the late 70s - just a vaguely updated version of it.

PS: The NME was always shite. Melody Maker was where the REAL intellectual pretentiousness was going on.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Jonathan on July 22, 2010, 10:00:26 pm
Oasis were mauled in some quarters for being derivative, but they ruled the world for a time and brought real music back to the masses. It may not have been original, but I’ll always be audibly pleased if you give me Live Forever, Columbia, Cigarettes and Alcohol, and latterly Falling Down or the Importance of Being Idle.

Every so often you'll get a band that can move things along with something new and appealing, but until then I'm very happy with a lot of what we've got.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: BillyStubbsTears on July 22, 2010, 10:13:15 pm
Jonathan wrote:
Quote
Oasis were mauled in some quarters for being derivative, but they ruled the world for a time and brought real music back to the masses. It may not have been original, but I’ll always be audibly pleased if you give me Live Forever, Columbia, Cigarettes and Alcohol, and latterly Falling Down or the Importance of Being Idle.

Every so often you'll get a band that can move things along with something new and appealing, but until then I'm very happy with a lot of what we've got.


Oasis were THE culmination of the dialectic process. At least for the first album and a half, after which they settled down to be a Beatles tribute band.

They combined so many influences, listening to them was like a segue of the previous 25 years of English pop/rock, only better. Beatles, Gary Glitter, Slade, JAMC, Stone Roses and a dozen in the cracks in between. And they appealed across the board, not just to the musical sophisticate. Just like Happy Mondays, Human League, Jam etc had done before them. THAT was what pop music was supposed to be about. And that is what seems to have evaporated over the last decade and a half.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: MrFrost on July 22, 2010, 10:14:41 pm
BillyStubbsTears wrote:
Quote
Because it's only by innovation that music moves on. Otherwise, it slowly atrophies and turns into pastiche.

Pop/Rock music always has been (or at least, always was) the ultimate dialectic process. Thesis and anthithesis woven into a new thesis. Simple example - Human League taking Kraftwerk and Phil Spector as influences to produce a totally new pop idiom. Or The Jam fusing Ray Davies and Joe Strummer into an archetypal English sound. Happy Mondays were another example, welding Acid House to David Essex/Karl Denver MoR pap to produce something astonishing. It wasn't about imitating - it was about merging influences into something original. And it absolutely was not conscious - it was a wonderfully organic process.

I'm struggling to see where that happens today, at least in bands that have any sort of mass appeal. Possibly Arctic Monkeys, but I don't see them as producing anything that wasn't being done in the late 70s - just a vaguely updated version of it.

PS: The NME was always shite. Melody Maker was where the REAL intellectual pretentiousness was going on.


Arctic Monkey's took a massive step away from their usual stuff with their last album, and it worked. It is now difficult to compare that with anything else, especially with the lyrics and metaphores Alex Turner uses.

Add to that his side project, Last Shadow Puppets, much more than your usual pop or indie album.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: CusworthRovers on July 22, 2010, 10:21:18 pm
Music will move with the times. Of course the early 80's were desperate times as said, with all sorts happening in this country and across the globe. Writers and musicians had plenty to reflect on and thus write it. We had many mainstream bands who could pen a decent song with an edge to it and still chart high and have all and sundry buying it and praising it. Jo Dolci penned 'Shaddup your face' as a direct reference to our battles with General Galtieri.


We have some cracking bands today, and just because they aint working class lads/lasses doesn't make them shite. Mumford and Sons have a cracking innovative sound that I'm really enjoying, as are Bombay Bicycle Club, that's on top of the established mainstream we have
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: coventryrover on July 22, 2010, 10:53:10 pm
BillyStubbsTears wrote:
Quote
coventryrover wrote:
Quote
BillyStubbsTears wrote:
Quote
Ah well. If there's one sliver lining to the cloud of economic woes, it's the fact that music and youth culture improve as the times get harder. In 78-83 we had Joy Division/New Order, Two Tone, The Jam, the birth of British Electro-pop and a dozen other innovative groups/movements.

In the economic fat years over the last two decades, we have had a plethora of manufactured boy/girl bands, bone idle derivatives of 25 year-old techno-pop and shit, comfortable middle-class pap like Keane/The Kooks/Coldplay. There's been nothing truly innovative in British pop music since the days of Madchester and the rave culture 20 years ago.
Maybe things will improve now. Last time all the clubs were being closed down, it spawned THIS.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZ2oXzrnti4


Err..... Radiohead, Dizzie Rascal, Massive Attack, Super Furries, British sea power, Nitin Sawhney, Foals, Wild Beats etc etc etc

I hate the attitude of \"music was so much better/angst/innovative (delete as appropriate) in the past\"



1) Your choice of \"new\" music almost makes my point for me. Radiohead were formed in 1985, Massive Attack in 88 and Super Furry Animals in 1990.

2) In any case, these are (predominantly) minority interest groups. Of course there are some interesting and innovative bands these days, just like there were plenty of shit ones in 1980. But the difference is in how many of the edgy bands were MAINSTREAM in the years that I quoted. Look at the charts from 79-82. Number ones for The Specials, The Jam, Tubeway Army, Human League, Kraftwerk, Dexy's etc. All of them either developing new musical genres or producing a new synthesis of older styles. All of them challenging accepted attitudes and approaches. Who is doing that AND GETTING TO NUMBER ONE today? Or for the last 20 years?

3) And that's before you start looking at who were the other innovative bands defining new directions in music. Back in 79-82, you had U2, Joy Division, The Cure, early Simple Minds, Cabaret Voltaire, Cocteau Twins, UB40, even someone like Vince Clark who was defining stripped-down electro-pop for a generation. All of them doing something new, risky and innovative and ADDING to pop music culture across a huge range of genres, rather than just regurgitating it.

I really don't think it's old-gittishness. I genuinely think that fat and lazy economic times generates fat and lazy youth culture. And this is predominantly what we have had for the last 15-20 years. In 1980, unemployment was horrific, and we never more than 4 minutes away from worldwide annihilation. It was fcuking grim. And these things affect the culture that they produce. That's why music by the likes of Joy Division, Cabaret Voltaire, Empires and Dance by Simple Minds were so hauntingly disturbing AND attracted discerning audiences - they reflected the times. That's why poppier but still grim stuff like Ghost Town or Are Friends Electric, or Going Underground got to Number 1. What has there been to be truly disturbed and haunted by for a kid coming to cultural maturity over the last 15 years?


Taking your point number 1 BST, those bands are still innovating, still making quality tunes today, does that make them anyc less relevent.

The Jam etc got to number one because there was only one way to access their music, i.e. by a 45.  Now kids can download etc so much more of a chance the other music can dominate because those into r&b may be more arsed to buy the tunes whereas indie kids might fileshare tunes etc

You seem to advocate that harsh times = great music but thats just forgetting all the shite like Bay City Rollers etc etc that were out the same time of year.  Selective memories? You are from a certain era and everyone fights their corner for music from their youth but it is a tad blinkered

Music is all about stirring up the emotions and it doesnt always have to be anger/angst like Clash, JAm, Joy Division etc.  There is merit in music being uplifting, taking you away from mundane life.  I've had the pleasure of seeing bands like Arcade Fire, Sigur Ross, Radiohead (seminal97 glasters) and Elbow in the last twenty years.  They can rock but do have other strings to their bows to give kids coming to cultural maturity (whenever that is).
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: CusworthRovers on July 22, 2010, 11:00:16 pm
I'll leave Billy to reply, but Bay City Rollers were early mid 70's. Jam really made it big in 79/80/81. The punk era seperates these 2 bands. Different era, different government, different times for such a short space of ....time IMO

The Jam had countless number 1 singles and albums. They still had to compete with all that was around them to do that. That 'only 1 way to access music' was the same for every band wanting to make themselves known.

Also like Arcade Fire and Elbow.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: coventryrover on July 22, 2010, 11:02:12 pm
CusworthRovers wrote:
Quote
I'll leave Billy to reply, but Bay City Rollers were early mid 70's. Jam really made it big in 79/80/81. The punk era seperates these 2 bands. Different era, different government, different times for such a short space of ....time IMO

The Jam had countless number 1 singles and albums. They still had to compete with all that was around them to do that. That 'only 1 way to access music' was the same for every band wanting to make themselves known.

Also like Arcade Fire and Elbow.


Talk about splitting hairs:)

But why does \"important\" music have to be about sticking it to authority?

Yes music is an art form, thus is there to provoke thought.  However, I also like music to take me away from mundane life, to another level

PS I am not knocking the Jam although weller  see quote below

Weller Refuses To Be Labeled 'Middle Class'

Rocker PAUL WELLER was mortified when THE WHO frontman ROGER DALTREY called him 'middle-class', because he is still close to his working class roots despite his fame and fortune. The 48-year-old enjoys the trappings afforded him by more than 30 successful years in the music business, but misses the sense of community he experienced growing up in a working class family. Daltrey remarked at a recent meeting, \"Isn't it funny how we're all middle class now?\" Weller refuses to accept his comment and says, \"I really wasn't having that one. \"People have said in letters to me to give it a rest, banging on about the working class - but it's very important for me. \"I don't miss many things but I miss the sense of community there was growing up. \"It's something that is missing from a lot of people's lives. You need a sense of roots - your next door neighbour could be dead now and you wouldn't know about it.\"
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: BillyStubbsTears on July 22, 2010, 11:07:07 pm
coventryrover wrote:
Quote

You seem to advocate that harsh times = great music but thats just forgetting all the shite like Bay City Rollers etc etc that were out the same time of year.  Selective memories? You are from a certain era and everyone fights their corner for music from their youth but it is a tad blinkered.


A bit of a misinterpretation there. I said that good times militate against innovation in Youth Culture. That means, by extension, that bad times ENCOURAGE interesting music, not GUARANTEE it. Of course you got Bay City Rollers in 1974 when times were hard. You always get shite like that. My argument is about the relative balance between that sort of cack and the more interesting stuff, and the chances of the interesting music surfacing in the mainstream. You cannot possibly argue that the balance is better these days than it was in, say, 1980.

Quote
Music is all about stirring up the emotions and it doesnt always have to be anger/angst like Clash, JAm, Joy Division etc.  There is merit in music being uplifting, taking you away from mundane life.  I've had the pleasure of seeing bands like Arcade Fire, Sigur Ross, Radiohead (seminal97 glasters) and Elbow in the last twenty years.  They can rock but do have other strings to their bows to give kids coming to cultural maturity (whenever that is).


Of course. But you're talking about (relatively) obscure bands again here. Ones that don't break into the mainstream. My argument is not directed at YOU (since you're 35, you're exempt anyway). It's aimed at Youth Culture in general, which (in general) has become flabby and idle and prepared to take whatever is shoveled towards it, while rejecting the more challenging stuff that used to form the bedrock of Youth Culture.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: coventryrover on July 22, 2010, 11:10:40 pm
BillyStubbsTears wrote:
Quote
coventryrover wrote:
Quote

You seem to advocate that harsh times = great music but thats just forgetting all the shite like Bay City Rollers etc etc that were out the same time of year.  Selective memories? You are from a certain era and everyone fights their corner for music from their youth but it is a tad blinkered.


A bit of a misinterpretation there. I said that good times militate against innovation in Youth Culture. That means, by extension, that bad times ENCOURAGE interesting music, not GUARANTEE it. Of course you got Bay City Rollers in 1974 when times were hard. You always get shite like that. My argument is about the relative balance between that sort of cack and the more interesting stuff, and the chances of the interesting music surfacing in the mainstream. You cannot possibly argue that the balance is better these days than it was in, say, 1980.

Quote
Music is all about stirring up the emotions and it doesnt always have to be anger/angst like Clash, JAm, Joy Division etc.  There is merit in music being uplifting, taking you away from mundane life.  I've had the pleasure of seeing bands like Arcade Fire, Sigur Ross, Radiohead (seminal97 glasters) and Elbow in the last twenty years.  They can rock but do have other strings to their bows to give kids coming to cultural maturity (whenever that is).


Of course. But you're talking about (relatively) obscure bands again here. Ones that don't break into the mainstream. My argument is not directed at YOU (since you're 35, you're exempt anyway). It's aimed at Youth Culture in general, which (in general) has become flabby and idle and prepared to take whatever is shoveled towards it, while rejecting the more challenging stuff that used to form the bedrock of Youth Culture.


But its your and other opinion of what is interesting.  As music is art (sounds well poncy so apologies) then its hard to run down any music.....even if i would love drop kick The Kooks into a vat of HCl

ps Arcade Fire, Sigur Ros or everywhere now thanks to the beeb utilising their music to highlight how shit England were at the world cup
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: CusworthRovers on July 22, 2010, 11:24:43 pm
I love all music Coventry and will accept all the new stuff, like you. I'm on your side.

Tbh Billy my 16yr old got me into MGMT, Reverand, Mumford, Bombay, Vampire Weekend and many many more a long time ago and all before they got mainstream or nearly mainstream...........and I actually enjoy listening too these. There are many like her. The difference is, they don't seem to shout about it or advertise it like we did. I think that was because there was a fashion/culture or place to go with our types of music. Also we were into one type of music and styled ourselves on that type of music. Today, it's just one of the many many varieties of music on offer where there is not one certain type of music on offer with a new style, fashion or label attached to it.

In all honesty, they have it good today, they can have what we had and all that is apparent now, then again so can we.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: nice one rovers on July 22, 2010, 11:51:53 pm
Filo wrote:
Quote
CusworthRovers wrote:
Quote
Then we had Mainline, which was always busy and concentrated on the Indie scene. Pubs in Donny played certain types of music and got a certain type of crowd.








And don`t forget Mr Davids, that attracted your kind of crowd Cussie!  ;)


was that the bar under the main line, or was that billypauls?
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Wellington Vaults on July 23, 2010, 07:47:20 am
Reference is made above to laziness and it's implications on musical taste.

Well you need not look any further than X ***ing Factor to demonstrate this, and it's not just restricted to yoof.

I find it apalling that a large chunk of society seem more than willing to sit back and let Simon Cowell and co decide, ON THEIR BEHALF, who will be the current flavour of the year.  Christ, the Christmas number one is virtually guaranteed to be the winner of X Factor by pre-orders alone, regardless of who actually wins.

I am always amazed to hear the conversations that go on around me in Autumn as if music begins and end with the vapid attention-seekers that are served up to the public every Saturday night.

Well I've had enough.  I'm retreating to a croft in the Outer Hebrides, with the full back catalogue of Devo, Durutti Column and Ivor Cutler recordings.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: coventryrover on July 23, 2010, 09:35:26 am
Er Opportunity Knocks etc etc etc.

Plus it is the public who decide who wins X Factor
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: BillyStubbsTears on July 23, 2010, 12:15:28 pm
coventryrover wrote:
Quote
Er Opportunity Knocks etc etc etc.

Plus it is the public who decide who wins X Factor


Comparing Opportunity Knocks or New Faces to X-Factor is like comparing a Molotov Cocktail to an atom bomb.

As for the public deciding who wins X-Factor, doesn't that kind of make the whole point about how idle and consumer-driven pop culture has become? The business end is now pretty much wrapped up by the Cowells of the industry, to a level that was never the case in previous generations, fed by a bone-idle public who are given a list of \"stars\" to consume.

It's enough to make you pine fore the days when a Duran Duran or Spandau Ballet would emerge naturally as world stars from youth culture, and THAT is saying summat.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: jucyberry on July 23, 2010, 12:53:56 pm
Wellington Vaults wrote:
Quote
Reference is made above to laziness and it's implications on musical taste.

Well you need not look any further than X ***ing Factor to demonstrate this, and it's not just restricted to yoof.

I find it apalling that a large chunk of society seem more than willing to sit back and let Simon Cowell and co decide, ON THEIR BEHALF, who will be the current flavour of the year.  Christ, the Christmas number one is virtually guaranteed to be the winner of X Factor by pre-orders alone, regardless of who actually wins.

I am always amazed to hear the conversations that go on around me in Autumn as if music begins and end with the vapid attention-seekers that are served up to the public every Saturday night.

Well I've had enough.  I'm retreating to a croft in the Outer Hebrides, with the full back catalogue of Devo, Durutti Column and Ivor Cutler recordings.


I saw in the paper the other day, one of the wierdos, I mean talented wannabe's is suing Cowell.. Believe it or not, for loss of earnings. She says that her audition was a job interview, and that by not picking her she has suffered from loss of earnings. She wants something like a couple of million if i remember correctly. She says she was discriminated against cos she has a disability... Nothing to do with her being a bagof shite..lol.. I'll try to find the link when i get home from workies... :)
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: River Don on July 23, 2010, 12:59:05 pm
BillyStubbsTears wrote:
Quote
coventryrover wrote:
Quote
BillyStubbsTears wrote:
Quote
Ah well. If there's one sliver lining to the cloud of economic woes, it's the fact that music and youth culture improve as the times get harder. In 78-83 we had Joy Division/New Order, Two Tone, The Jam, the birth of British Electro-pop and a dozen other innovative groups/movements.

In the economic fat years over the last two decades, we have had a plethora of manufactured boy/girl bands, bone idle derivatives of 25 year-old techno-pop and shit, comfortable middle-class pap like Keane/The Kooks/Coldplay. There's been nothing truly innovative in British pop music since the days of Madchester and the rave culture 20 years ago.
Maybe things will improve now. Last time all the clubs were being closed down, it spawned THIS.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZ2oXzrnti4


Err..... Radiohead, Dizzie Rascal, Massive Attack, Super Furries, British sea power, Nitin Sawhney, Foals, Wild Beats etc etc etc

I hate the attitude of \"music was so much better/angst/innovative (delete as appropriate) in the past\"



1) Your choice of \"new\" music almost makes my point for me. Radiohead were formed in 1985, Massive Attack in 88 and Super Furry Animals in 1990.

2) In any case, these are (predominantly) minority interest groups. Of course there are some interesting and innovative bands these days, just like there were plenty of shit ones in 1980. But the difference is in how many of the edgy bands were MAINSTREAM in the years that I quoted. Look at the charts from 79-82. Number ones for The Specials, The Jam, Tubeway Army, Human League, Kraftwerk, Dexy's etc. All of them either developing new musical genres or producing a new synthesis of older styles. All of them challenging accepted attitudes and approaches. Who is doing that AND GETTING TO NUMBER ONE today? Or for the last 20 years?

3) And that's before you start looking at who were the other innovative bands defining new directions in music. Back in 79-82, you had U2, Joy Division, The Cure, early Simple Minds, Cabaret Voltaire, Cocteau Twins, UB40, even someone like Vince Clark who was defining stripped-down electro-pop for a generation. All of them doing something new, risky and innovative and ADDING to pop music culture across a huge range of genres, rather than just regurgitating it.

I really don't think it's old-gittishness. I genuinely think that fat and lazy economic times generates fat and lazy youth culture. And this is predominantly what we have had for the last 15-20 years. In 1980, unemployment was horrific, and we never more than 4 minutes away from worldwide annihilation. It was fcuking grim. And these things affect the culture that they produce. That's why music by the likes of Joy Division, Cabaret Voltaire, Empires and Dance by Simple Minds were so hauntingly disturbing AND attracted discerning audiences - they reflected the times. That's why poppier but still grim stuff like Ghost Town or Are Friends Electric, or Going Underground got to Number 1. What has there been to be truly disturbed and haunted by for a kid coming to cultural maturity over the last 15 years?



I'm not disagreeing with your point about the early 80s creativity being affected by the economy but something else was going on then.

Technology was becoming more affordable and for the first time musicians were starting to get their hands on synthesizers, drum machines and sequencers. It's easy to forget how new these sounds were. The sequencer that clockwork electronic tempo was revolutionary. Kraftwerk demonstrated it and the likes of Human League, New Order, Soft Cell, Cabaret Voltaire, Depeche Mode, Pet Shop Boys and the rest had a whole new medium to explore. Then HipHop and House did it again but then it wasn't quite so fresh. You're unlikely to see a step change like that again, since technology is so much more affordable now. Basically you can create any possible sound with a PC now but it narrows the possibilities because we've heard it all before or something pretty similar.

Back in the 80s these were genuinely new noises to explore but I think the sequencer was the most unique part because it gave the music that machine precise quality that handn't been heard before.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Cultured_Dave on July 23, 2010, 03:27:02 pm
BillyStubbsTears wrote:
Quote

1) Your choice of \"new\" music almost makes my point for me. Radiohead were formed in 1985, Massive Attack in 88 and Super Furry Animals in 1990.

2) In any case, these are (predominantly) minority interest groups. Of course there are some interesting and innovative bands these days, just like there were plenty of shit ones in 1980. But the difference is in how many of the edgy bands were MAINSTREAM in the years that I quoted. Look at the charts from 79-82. Number ones for The Specials, The Jam, Tubeway Army, Human League, Kraftwerk, Dexy's etc. All of them either developing new musical genres or producing a new synthesis of older styles. All of them challenging accepted attitudes and approaches. Who is doing that AND GETTING TO NUMBER ONE today? Or for the last 20 years?

3) And that's before you start looking at who were the other innovative bands defining new directions in music. Back in 79-82, you had U2, Joy Division, The Cure, early Simple Minds, Cabaret Voltaire, Cocteau Twins, UB40, even someone like Vince Clark who was defining stripped-down electro-pop for a generation. All of them doing something new, risky and innovative and ADDING to pop music culture across a huge range of genres, rather than just regurgitating it.

I really don't think it's old-gittishness. I genuinely think that fat and lazy economic times generates fat and lazy youth culture. And this is predominantly what we have had for the last 15-20 years. In 1980, unemployment was horrific, and we never more than 4 minutes away from worldwide annihilation. It was fcuking grim. And these things affect the culture that they produce. That's why music by the likes of Joy Division, Cabaret Voltaire, Empires and Dance by Simple Minds were so hauntingly disturbing AND attracted discerning audiences - they reflected the times. That's why poppier but still grim stuff like Ghost Town or Are Friends Electric, or Going Underground got to Number 1. What has there been to be truly disturbed and haunted by for a kid coming to cultural maturity over the last 15 years?


I’ll make my declaration of interest now – I’m 37 so not (sadly) one of ‘the kids’.

Hmm ok – I think you’re very wrong and that this is the best time to be  listening to music ever, whatever age you’re at.

Back in the olden days, it was really difficult to get hold of music.  There weren’t many record shops, they didn’t carry loads of stock and they were expensive.  Places like Woolies sold the top 40 and that was about it.  There were no minority bands then in the sense that there are now, there was the mainstream and that was it.  It’s not surprising that the handful of decent bands were able to rack up big sales when there was nothing else decent to buy.  Sales are spread over loads of genres nowadays and so it’s not surprising that pure pop and R&B dominate the top of the charts.  Kids now have the run on the sweetshop and can pick and choose whatever they want.  Far from being lazy, they venture off into the genre hinterlands, back into history or off to find unsigned gems.  Lazy is just buying the same stuff as everyone else and that’s not what they’re doing.

All the bands you cite are basically standard line-up guitar bands with verse/chorus songs or electro-pop bands (with an honourable exception for Kraftwerk – the genuine innovators in that list and one hit wonders).  All the genuinely innovative stuff had already happened earlier in the 70’s with disco and punk and they were just riding the coat-tails of that.  Was what Joy Division doing that risky? Wasn’t it just punk?  Weren’t Vince Clark and Gary Newman just sanitising Krautrock and West Coast experimental stuff?  They were adding new sounds and broadening the musical palate for future generations but it wasn’t any newer than what goes on now.  Sampling, hip-hop, the dozens of flavours of dance music, nu-folk, Americana all combine to give us a Technicolor range to chose from rather than the handful of styles available then.

‘Hard times make great youth culture’ is one of those statements that get trotted out regularly with no actual evidence.  Were the sixties (economically booming) worse than the seventies (oil crisis, etc) musically?  I’d suggest not.  And if you’re some council estate sink kid, I expect life’s always been pretty grim, regardless of what the GDP figures say.  Teenagers don’t benefit from house price rises or soaring stock markets and so I expect the pressures on them remain relatively similar.  I don’t think the kids who form bands are sufficiently part of the economic cycle to be affected.  And I had a quick look on Wikipedia with regards to Joy Division – ‘Love with Tear us Apart’ (which is a towering work for me) only reached number 13 in 1980, so it’s not as though this despairing and nihilistic youth culture were rallying around this song, they were too busy drinking and getting laid to Blondie, Abba and Olivia Newton John.  Times don’t change much do they?

Anyway, there's more choice now, more interesting new bands and it's easier to get hold of it.  There are tons of gigs (here in Nottingham anyway), they're cheaper than ever and quite a lot of them are U14 (so no need to sneak in).  There are always loads of kids at these things and good luck to them, lucky sods.

Stuff that relates to my ramblings that you might enjoy (you might have read them already actually) are ‘The Long Tail’ by Chris Anderson and ‘The 17’ by Bill Drummond.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: CusworthRovers on July 23, 2010, 04:08:07 pm
Good thread this and some very sound points.


I'd just like to say that Opportunity Knocks did not spawn laziness. I mean you had to move your hands furiously to make it register on the clapometer.


Where is that clapometer, and would it now be associated with VD?
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Bentley Bullet on July 23, 2010, 04:26:56 pm
There may be more choice now of more interesting bands that are quite easy to get hold of if you look for them. But the point is it never had to be looked for in the past, when quality music was mainstream, and delivered to the public in the form of the pop charts.
The pop charts then contained the most popular music of the day,because they were compiled by listeners who bought the records they liked and therefore created a league table of the current most popular songs.
Nowadays music is downloaded free of charge, and to a great extent is done so willy nilly before it has even been previewed due it costing next to nowt.
The mainstream now is full of karaoke singers covering old songs,and is all you hear on mainstream TV/radio.
No one really knows what is popular anymore.....No wonder pubs don't know what sort of music to play!
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: River Don on July 23, 2010, 04:36:39 pm
Bentley Bullet wrote:
Quote
There may be more choice now of more interesting bands that are quite easy to get hold of if you look for them. But the point is it never had to be looked for in the past, when quality music was mainstream, and delivered to the public in the form of the pop charts.
The pop charts then contained the most popular music of the day,because they were compiled by listeners who bought the records they liked and therefore created a league table of the current most popular songs.
Nowadays music is downloaded free of charge, and to a great extent is done so willy nilly before it has even been previewed due it costing next to nowt.
The mainstream now is full of karaoke singers covering old songs,and is all you hear on mainstream TV/radio.
No one really knows what is popular anymore.....No wonder pubs don't know what sort of music to play!


There was a terrible period in the mid 80s when the Pop Charts were largely manipulated by marketing men and PR people. The likes of Stock, Aitken and Waterman had a stranglehold on Top of the Pops and Radio 1 and their playlist went a long way to informing the British public about what was available. Anything new or interesting tended not to be heard unless John Peel played it on the graveyard shift. That was as bad as any period I can remember.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: MrFrost on July 23, 2010, 04:41:11 pm
Rigoglioso wrote:
Quote
MrFrost wrote:
Quote
Have read today that the Trilogy Nightclub in town has shut down.
Now, I always thought the place was a shit hole, so I wont miss it. However, it leaves Doncaster without a regonisable night club, which surely will be very detrimental to the night time economy.

To be honest, the choice of late night venue's is pretty poor in town. You've got Walkabout or Priory, and that's about it.

Maybe the town's famed nightlife is coming to an end.


Can't say I'll miss it. However, where are all the little \"ten men\" kn0bs going to go now they haven't got Trilogy?

My thoughts: Takings will go up in Walkabout/Priory on a Friday night, but so will anti-social behaviour as well.

At least on the positive side, I've only got a matter of days left before I leave Donny (hopefully for good).


What's wrong with Donny? I love how people are quick to slag it off/
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: MrFrost on July 23, 2010, 04:50:54 pm
Rigoglioso wrote:
Quote
Several things. Take a look at the council as one example.

Why not look at the good things Doncaster offers.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: MrFrost on July 23, 2010, 05:00:42 pm
World class racecourse
The area is steeped in history if you can be bothered to look.
We still have a top notch market, despite reports that try to bring it down
Excellent transport links for road, rail and air
As you said, decent football team
There's plenty to do, if people dare to look past the mainstream things.

The bad points Doncaster has, can be found in any other major town or city.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: CusworthRovers on July 23, 2010, 05:43:58 pm
There are no finer places than Doncaster.

Broddy and Cussie Halls, Mansion house, a bustling vibrant town that will be a city one day. We have a major river, we have heavy and light industry, we have green belt, we have Thorne Moors, lovely green wooded areas and walkways. On the eye, Donny is very asthetically pleasing. We have many reminders on the landscape, that shows that Doncaster was an important place in making Britain work. We have reminders how people used to live a 1000 years ago in Conisbro Castle and Stainforth.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Bentley Bullet on July 23, 2010, 08:56:08 pm
We also have very contrasting villages, all unique in their own styles.
A couple of instances are twinned with other famous places in the world.

Bentley = Hollywood
Hexthorpe = Beamish
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Jonathan on July 23, 2010, 09:54:23 pm
The criticism of Doncaster also gets on my nerves. The amount of people you see bleating about how they can't wait to get out - just go! Nobody is stopping you, but don't project any of your own issues onto the town.

I've been brought up here for all of my years, I know it has faults but it's home and I love the place. I could never dislike the town that houses nearly all my family, friends and social circles. It has the football club that has been my lifelong passion, the only thing it doesn't have is my job but I'm happy to stay living here and travel for that.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Mike_F on July 23, 2010, 10:11:03 pm
I'm in full agreemaent with Jonathan here. It's easy to pick up on the weaknesses of the town and decide to piss off in search of pastures greener. You'll soon find that every town and/or city across the country has the same issues to much the same degree.

Many of the bigger cities are wider ranging in their problems. Nottingham, for example may be better for designer shopping but it has one of the worst gun crime rates in Britain.

I'm of the opinioon that if there are problems with my home own then I'd rather stick around to become part of the solution rather than turn the other cheek and burn the bridge on my way out.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: BillyStubbsTears on July 23, 2010, 11:58:57 pm
Rigoglioso wrote:
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As Jonathon says, plenty of people leave Doncaster and are quick to slag it off. Do all those of us have a point or are we all deluded?


Neither. You're just nest-shitting t**ts.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Mike_F on July 24, 2010, 12:48:56 am
Nobody's claiming that Donny's all peace and light but it's no different to anywhere else inasmuch as it has nice areas and shite areas, nice people and scumbags. Go into any town/city centre on aweekday afternoon and you'll see the same old losers staggering about barely being able to string sentences together and spitting in the street.

Now I'm not going to say nobody should leave the town, everyone has their free choice and their own reason for moving on - when I was around your age, Rigo I also said that I wouldn't come back to live in Donny after university. When I got a bit of life experience and took the blinkers off I realised that the town has a lot going for it and is constantly developing. I wanted to be part of a brighter future for Donny so the first thing I did when I graduated was buy a house here.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Mike_F on July 24, 2010, 12:50:33 am
BillyStubbsTears wrote:
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Rigoglioso wrote:
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As Jonathon says, plenty of people leave Doncaster and are quick to slag it off. Do all those of us have a point or are we all deluded?


Neither. You're just nest-shitting t**ts.


How is Sheffield tonight, Billy  :P
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Viking Don on July 24, 2010, 01:54:36 am
BillyStubbsTears wrote:
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Ah well. If there's one sliver lining to the cloud of economic woes, it's the fact that music and youth culture improve as the times get harder. In 78-83 we had Joy Division/New Order, Two Tone, The Jam, the birth of British Electro-pop and a dozen other innovative groups/movements.

In the economic fat years over the last two decades, we have had a plethora of manufactured boy/girl bands, bone idle derivatives of 25 year-old techno-pop and shit, comfortable middle-class pap like Keane/The Kooks/Coldplay. There's been nothing truly innovative in British pop music since the days of Madchester and the rave culture 20 years ago.

Maybe things will improve now. Last time all the clubs were being closed down, it spawned THIS.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZ2oXzrnti4


My post of this day (i.e. the one I'm looking at this stuff at).

The music industry is ill and needs the kind of thing that punk spawned 30 years ago. Not a punk revival, but a rejection of the X-factor shit that we (not me) feed our kids.

Don't know how it will manifest itself, but it's coming, and it's not nice. Hopefully.

EDIT: Christ I didn't realise this was a donny bashing thread. Count me out, I've lived all over and 'there's no place like home'.
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: MrFrost on July 24, 2010, 11:13:53 am
Rigoglioso wrote:
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Mike_F wrote:
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Nobody's claiming that Donny's all peace and light but it's no different to anywhere else inasmuch as it has nice areas and shite areas, nice people and scumbags. Go into any town/city centre on aweekday afternoon and you'll see the same old losers staggering about barely being able to string sentences together and spitting in the street.

Now I'm not going to say nobody should leave the town, everyone has their free choice and their own reason for moving on - when I was around your age, Rigo I also said that I wouldn't come back to live in Donny after university. When I got a bit of life experience and took the blinkers off I realised that the town has a lot going for it and is constantly developing. I wanted to be part of a brighter future for Donny so the first thing I did when I graduated was buy a house here.


Maybe it did have 10 years ago, but for my own personal reasons when I do go, I don't ever intend coming back to Doncaster as a place to live on a permanent basis.

I have my reasons and they run a lot deeper than irratating folk such as the ginger tramp and the scrounger in town who never has enough change for his bus fare.


I'd say 10 years ago, the town was probably on it's knees.
Since then it has had well over £1 billion pounds worth of investment, and onbiously has worked for the better.

Out of interest Rigo, where is it you're moving to?
Title: Re:Trilogy closes doors
Post by: Jonathan on July 24, 2010, 12:14:33 pm
Rigoglioso wrote:
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MrFrost wrote:
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World class racecourse
The area is steeped in history if you can be bothered to look.
We still have a top notch market, despite reports that try to bring it down
Excellent transport links for road, rail and air
As you said, decent football team
There's plenty to do, if people dare to look past the mainstream things.

The bad points Doncaster has, can be found in any other major town or city.


- World class racecourse. Yeah, if you're willing to pay world class prices. It's good for the town but we need to look a little bit further than the horsey field.

- Area steeped in tradition! So are other places. Past glories, traditions are meaningless anyway as it's about the present, not the past.

- Top notch market? Good occasionally and different every once in a blue moon, but again is the market something that is going to get people flocking here as a place to live?

- Excellent road and rail links. Totally agree with this and the one downside to where I'm moving is that I'll be a bit further away from London, which is a place I spend quite a fair bit of time.

- Decent football team. Yeah, but again too many people in Donny are apathetic towards Doncaster Rovers in terms of attendances.

As Jonathan says, plenty of people leave Doncaster and are quick to slag it off. Do all those of us have a point or are we all deluded?


I would say it's an unfortunate part of the stereotypical, conformist British mentality to 'slag off' their own. I wish it wasn't as I hate it.

Rigo, you've just set out to belittle most of the positive examples that were listed above, while also citing things like 'the council' as a reason for wanting to leave.

Can I ask what it is you do want from a town/city, and what you are expecting from the place you move to? As a young single male with no children or dependents, what is it that you are expecting from the council and, as it is a reason for you wanting to leave Doncaster and never return, what are your personal hopes for the comparable services delivered by the council at the place you are moving to?

I'm asking the above out of genuine interest as I work for a Local Authority (not Doncaster I must specify) and when someone cites the council as a reason for wanting to leave a town, I'm intrigued to find out a bit more? Everybody wants to improve the level of service they deliver, and there is no doubting that there have been some high profile flaws in DMBC (notbaly Childrens Services) but I know for a fact that there are also many many dedicated people that are working very hard to improve the services offered by Doncaster Council in the face of some extremely difficult and challenging times. All Local Authorities are being asked to slash 25% from their budgets over the next four years, so what improved services are they that you are looking for and counting on elsewhere?