Once a man gets to his upper teens/young twenties, he decides what to do with his life. For those few and lucky who decide young and actually "do" what they want in life, I applaud them. They are with a small group of men who gots jobs young, and kept them. Good or bad to the masses watching and listening, we could all be so lucky...
I'll still rather here some classic rock that rap, reggae, pop, etc. I wonder if a different genre of classic rock will ever get the call, like Blondie or the Pistols? Nope, take that Pistols question out of the mix. They'll never get the call!
...wisdom
Half-Time Who
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- indianation65
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Re: Half-Time Who
Indian Folklore and Wisdom—Love, Learn, Listen
Re: Half-Time Who
Yep, I'd agree. Overall, I liked the show, was glad they chose to perform, and, from what I read, may have seen one of the last performances. The WHO broke so much musical ground that we have decades of music from them and others to thank them for.Ric-O-Buc wrote:Its funny, actually hilarious to read the "critiques" of a performance by musicians who even at the twilight of their careers have so much more to give than a lot of their naysayers.
Manta
Re: Half-Time Who
No debate on their legacy, simply their current state.
It's "full time" in all probability for Pete and Rog, and no shame in that either.
It's "full time" in all probability for Pete and Rog, and no shame in that either.
Re: Half-Time Who
The Who, my all time favorite group, have always been unpredictable, loud, fun, raucous, and that was why they were so loved. It's rock and roll like it's supposed to be and they played those anthems we all loved for (it was estimated) 190 million people. Not bad for a bunch of old geezers. I'm happy to see them again.
