Four great players but the Chapman-Chinn material was cartoonish. What they did afterwards, I think, was as good as Queen's first albums but unlike Bowie and Bolan, I don't think they influenced anyone. There's lots of Sweet vids on here. Turn it UP.
@@kellymelrose8527 You are clueless. Love Is Like Oxygen is as good as anything Queen did at that period but they imploded due to Brian Connolly's ill-health. They were a great band and you, by comparison, are a hapless nobody on the internet.
Being a big Beatles fan when they broke up, I was kinda in a funk about the next big thing musically for myself. Then in 1969 I found an EP of David's 'Space Oddity' and I was hooked and I am still hooked...Between Bolan and Bowie I was happy.
I hardly see a man's arm casually draped around another's shoulder as sexual. It was theatrical, not an embrace. Part of the show. Don't get me wrong, I believe Bowie when he said he explored all there was to explore in the 70's. This particular act though, was just that: an act.
I totally agree...far more is made of that moment now than ever was at the time. I remember the following day us all talking at school about how amazing Bowie looked but I don't recall any big fuss about the arm draping incident after all Jagger often draped his arm around Keith Richard, same with Rod Stewart and Ron wood in the Faces etc.
@@bgbreakdown I agree...Bowie had sex with plenty of guys in the 60s and early 70s ..that is not my point ...my point was that more is made of the arm around the shoulder today than ever was back at the time. And I speak as someone who actually watched the performance and remember the reaction at school the next day.
I was definitely in the Bowie camp and my best friend at the time was the Marc Bolan camp. The first album I ever bought was Space Oddity :) I bought several of his others after that. I thought Marc Bolan was pretty and I liked some of his stuff, but David was edgy, sexy in a different way, theatrical, not typically good looking as we girls were used to but had that charisma and of course I loved the tone of his voice. I was a big fan as a girl and still loved him throughout his whole career. I liked the rock around and also folk but when I first heard him I thought this guy is different.
In Hollywood, back in 73 we didn't call the sound glam rock, we called it glitter rock. We tossed glitter in our hair, mixed glitter with vaseline and put it on our faces, arms and legs... etc.. hot pants, tube tops and platforms...
WHAT!!! Agreed. Bowie was not adorable, just an incredibly funny, compassionate man, with some of the best songs ever written under his belt. He was the supreme ever-changing showman. Could and did put on the best live shows in town. But also a human being. It shined through everything he did, said and sang. The master. And Bolan knew it too.
I loved these times x I saw Bowie 3 times in concert and adored Marc Bolan x But I was only 11 at the time and Donny Osmond came on the scene but even then I realised the music was 🇬🇧 and then Roxy Music hit us oh god xx
I liked Bolan but he ended up just becoming a Pop star. Bowie was so much more. More depth. Edgier. Not afraid to push the boundaries of sound and fashion.
@@lauraarcher6996 His management pushed him in that direction with the TV show etc. He was pushed into the mainstream. Yes he probably would have branched out given the chance but sadly never happened.
he was glam before anyone knew what it was. he was into punk before anyone else. check out his song "rip off". it's a total punk rock song! i love him! KALMIYH.
@@silvergirlie Totally agree. I am a fan. It’s his latter career that ended up in the mainstream. Fare enough but it’s a shame he got pushed in that direction as I believe he could have been as out there as Bowie got given the chance.
Rocky Horror- one the great works of the 20th century, and still so alive, getting its due at last. Love Sweetshop too, could be filling stadiums still., like Ozzy, if they made [serious music]-great riffs in pop songs.
I half lived it with mj's crowd.😕 The girls rapping on the door that was most of my friends 🤷🏼♀️ Love this documentary! Eternal respect and love for the two! Marc especially 🧠brain power 💞
It Wasn't Glam Rock it was GLITTER ROCK...EVERYTHING was GLITTER from the platform shoes to the eye makeup!!! Glam Rock was the eighties....I live in New York and I was there....every show and every party....♥️
How Alice Cooper is omitted from that beggars belief - everyone but! Even include those that declare Alice as their influence! Alice Cooper were the first male glam rock band, the first band to suggest gender confusion. They created 'the rock show' and supported teenage angst that would spurn punk, goth and dark and glam metal. Alice was doing this when Bowie and Bolan were sit-down folk singers in 1968.
Oh holy crap--I just realised that I legit got picked up by one of the Bay City Rollers when i was like 22? I worked at a music store in New Orleans (this would've been like 1998 or 99), and they were performing somewhere local. I worked in piano sales, and as the band were leaving they walked past my desk and this guy just turned around and started chatting me up. He gave me a backstage pass (maybe a business card?) kind of thing and told me where he was staying. But I was young and (mostly) devoutly Mormon--I had literally never heard of the Bay City Rollers. I didn't know they were even real til I went upstairs to tell some of the guys in the band department what happened and they started laughing at me. So i guess that's my 'I was nearly a Bay City Rollers (at fifty) groupie' story...?
@@iconicshrubbery I'm thinking everyone of the now million's who use that insipid remark are hoping to be rewarded with endless replies and comments saying? Spot on mate clearly your amazing. I could'nt have described it better. Instead of? FFS can you not reach into your sponge (brain) and say simply? A fab band etc and just leave it there. Anything anything than that cringe.
@@paulhargreaves4345 I’m 17, and I really wish we could be out dancing and playing gigs, but I can’t because sadly nobody does that anymore. I wish they did.
@@AlianaRegos The problem is that there no longer is a culture and maybe think that what and how you define yourself sexually has a lot to do with programming and propaganda. For a minority like the trans community which is 0.008% they take up a lot of airspace and that is why people think that it is being forced down their throats. And if you don't agree with it you are persecuted for not "understanding" please!
So many mistakes in this. No one "threw" glitter in Marc Bolan's face. He famously applied it himself before going on TOTP, and clearly with glue from the photo used. "The Man Who Sold the World's" dress cover did not "go down well in a country by now used to Marc Bolan's glittering forays..." as it was released in 1970, before "Ride a White Swan" made Bolan famous. And how was "Swan" played at the Isle of Wight Festival in August 1970, when it wasn't yet released? I gave up after 20 minutes.
Marc gave Steve Dexter D.J a white label of white swan for him to play and he played over and over. Marc gave D.J peel a copy of get it on he never played it end of relationship. Marc put glitter February 1971 hot love.
Ride A White Swan was written by that time. They didn’t play the whole track, at the festival, just bits if I remember correctly. The Man Who Sold The World was released in the UK in April 1971. It was released the previous year in the USofA. Bolan wore the glitter in March 1971. I think you’re getting the UK and USA mixed up.
Every generation throws up a new set of heroes. Bowie and Bolan were a reaction to the tough guy denim clad rocker that was perhaps played out. Really though what Angie says was the truth. Bowie was doing all he could for well over 6 years before he began to have larger success. Bowie was using every bit of creativity he could muster to stand out, to be noticed. What was revolutionary was embracing their “feminine” was being pushed more fearlessly than ever. (New York Dolls) It had to be encouraging to people like Marc Almond or Morrisey who could relate. The gay players in rock were begun by Little Richard, continued by Lou Reed, Elton John, and Freddie Mercury and at the end of the day the music took precedence over the players actual orientation. It perhaps liberated the culture. Really it made the straights from the post WW2 generation uncomfortable. And that is ultimately the big goal of every new generation.
I was around at the time and glam-rock seemed, and still does, like it was primarily a publicity stunt and a sell-out for fame. Maybe that's what it took to break out, but it's sad because it actually turned me off to Bowie, who I now regard as a musical genius.
It's like saying Andy Kaufman was a terrible wrestler--which he was--but that was his purpose...he used that format for creating his comedy, which was unprecedented and imaginatively excellent.
Rubbish. He's just singing a pop song! You lot in the 21st century put all your social media dissecting of past decades. Singers sing about all ages of peoples. It's not paedophille! I find Social Media disturbing as you go on witch hunts like a pack of hyaenas. Go light a candle..
@@seltaeb3302 What are you going on about I made none of these assumptions I was alive at the time and at school and had these thoughts as I was a 10 year on child. Why was Alice Cooper singing about my school holidays when he was a grown man.
AWESOMENESS 😁😎👍👍 BLAST ❤️ FROM THE PAST 💜🙌🌈🦋🦋🙏🌹🌹🌹🗽🇬🇧 THANKYOU SUPERRR DOOPERRR BRAVOOO XD NAMASTE KISSES 🧡 & BIG WARM HUGS FROM ENGLAND 💜🙌💋💋🤩💝☺️💓 ABSOLUTELY THUMBS 🤗 UP INDEED XXXXXXX
18;50... There's that bootleg record.where Marc's...complaining boys are fighting....then he says; " Did you know.....me and Mickey Finn ...are married.....?
Interesting docu, but very much of it's time: Hey it's cool to slag prog rock! But what does it say that half the punks interviewed will now admit they liked Pink Floyd, and Toyah is happily married to that old curmudgeon of prog, Robert Fripp? But I hope the rest of the video *that we don't see* manages to come back around to the original point of rock giving kids an outlet to express their identity.
. "Bouwie"... Marc Almond (nut)...... _"Marc Bolan sleeping with the bongo player"_ ..been following Bolan from the beginning ,but never heard such dizzgusting silly rumour....seemingly Almond's personal wet dream ? Jacky editor throws Marc in with The Osmonds ,David Cassidy ....When I dare to suggest that Marc began catering for the wet panty brigade round '72 , I'm being crucified as "hater".....😥 Now even the Rocky Horror Blow is being reevaluated as Glam's highpoint.... Suzy Quatro , Slade , Roy Wood ,Sweet,......yes.... together with Roxy, Bouwie, Reed , all "Glam"...... Biggest joke of this concoction ....Iggy Pop didn't got one mention....which is the ultimate compliment.
If Captain Sensible can play like Genesis, ELP and Yes , play drums like Collins, keyboard like Emerson or Wakeman, guitar like Hackett or Howe and write incredible music like this, than, maybe he can come back and judge again. Cause he, never made it that big. Sorry mate.
In pratica questa e' la breve storia del cattivo gusto nella musica popolare inglese post-1976. L'ho sempre ascoltata, cercando di non vederne questi discustosi aspetti: per me anche la contestazione DEVE avere la sua eleganza, altrimenti e' uguale a quel che contesta, o anche PEGGIO. E ripeto: sto parlando di musica che ascolto da 40 anni. Peccato. Meglio la musica classica e i valori che le sono sottesi.
Johnny Rotten and Capt. Sensible sure looks ridiculous at age 60 talking like an angry 18 year old. His recent rants are as boring as he thought everything else was. Pfft.
Bowie vs Bolan
There was never a need to choose.
Take It All In. All the greatness
This doc touched on everyone.
I wish they would have paid more attention to Sweet. A criminally underrated talented band
Four great players but the Chapman-Chinn material was cartoonish. What they did afterwards, I think, was as good as Queen's first albums but unlike Bowie and Bolan, I don't think they influenced anyone. There's lots of Sweet vids on here. Turn it UP.
they released a few bad singles after which no one could take them
seriously..somehow Bowie got away with it ...luckily
@@kellymelrose8527 You are clueless. Love Is Like Oxygen is as good as anything Queen did at that period but they imploded due to Brian Connolly's ill-health. They were a great band and you, by comparison, are a hapless nobody on the internet.
@@heraldeventsandfilms5970 Why do you have to be rude?!!
@@techmiter6299 Why waste wit on an imbecile?
I love Angie's impression of David's band! HaHaHaHaHa! xxxx
David could skit them very well and affectionately, too.
Being a big Beatles fan when they broke up, I was kinda in a funk about the next big thing musically for myself. Then in 1969 I found an EP of David's 'Space Oddity' and I was hooked and I am still hooked...Between Bolan and Bowie I was happy.
I hardly see a man's arm casually draped around another's shoulder as sexual. It was theatrical, not an embrace. Part of the show. Don't get me wrong, I believe Bowie when he said he explored all there was to explore in the 70's. This particular act though, was just that: an act.
I totally agree...far more is made of that moment now than ever was at the time. I remember the following day us all talking at school about how amazing Bowie looked but I don't recall any big fuss about the arm draping incident after all Jagger often draped his arm around Keith Richard, same with Rod Stewart and Ron wood in the Faces etc.
@@markwardel6751 And Bowie and Jagger were found in bed together, not and act! Hahaha.
@@bgbreakdown I agree...Bowie had sex with plenty of guys in the 60s and early 70s ..that is not my point ...my point was that more is made of the arm around the shoulder today than ever was back at the time. And I speak as someone who actually watched the performance and remember the reaction at school the next day.
It's a cultural thing. We have a photo of my father in law as a teen with his friends in Belgium all arms around each other
@@stacyyoust yes but was he wearing a catsuit, eyeshadow, platform slingback shoes and a chandelier earring at the time? Lol
I was definitely in the Bowie camp and my best friend at the time was the Marc Bolan camp. The first album I ever bought was Space Oddity :) I bought several of his others after that. I thought Marc Bolan was pretty and I liked some of his stuff, but David was edgy, sexy in a different way, theatrical, not typically good looking as we girls were used to but had that charisma and of course I loved the tone of his voice. I was a big fan as a girl and still loved him throughout his whole career. I liked the rock around and also folk but when I first heard him I thought this guy is different.
Jay morgan@sound and fashion hmmm that could been good name for a song.David be ideal song title like🎹🎸
No contest Bowie was far more talented, but just like The Stones and Beatles camps I always thought why not have em both?
That ended abruptly , really loved it though.
Saw Bowie's last Spiders concert in the US March 1973 Hollywood Palladium, life changing ..
In Hollywood, back in 73 we didn't call the sound glam rock, we called it glitter rock. We tossed glitter in our hair, mixed glitter with vaseline and put it on our faces, arms and legs... etc.. hot pants, tube tops and platforms...
Yes Glitter Rock , Rodney Bingenheimer's English Disco was my favorite place at that time
Wow I love this there all so good I grew up listening them to all of them I was lucky thank you for sharing ❤️🌹
Marc Bolan was the best and most ADORABLE, especially with his sexy smile.
Especially those two cute little dimples in his (later on)chubby cheeks, my bedsit was papered with Jacky posters...
@@PAULLONDEN nonce
😳
WHAT!!! Agreed. Bowie was not adorable, just an incredibly funny, compassionate man, with some of the best songs ever written under his belt. He was the supreme ever-changing showman. Could and did put on the best live shows in town. But also a human being. It shined through everything he did, said and sang. The master. And Bolan knew it too.
Gary Glitter: "An oven-ready turkey". Best quote!
The bloke was a joke ! Unfortunately The Glitter Band had to put up with him !
I hate it when people call him Bowwy!
It ended abruptly. I wonder how much more there is and where I can watch the rest.
I loved these times x I saw Bowie 3 times in concert and adored Marc Bolan x But I was only 11 at the time and Donny Osmond came on the scene but even then I realised the music was 🇬🇧 and then Roxy Music hit us oh god xx
I liked Bolan but he ended up just becoming a Pop star. Bowie was so much more. More depth. Edgier. Not afraid to push the boundaries of sound and fashion.
Jay,
Some people just want to do 'pop' and some strive to be 'different' everyone gets someone to listen to.
He didn't have the chance, who knows what he would have achieved if he hadn't died young.
@@lauraarcher6996 His management pushed him in that direction with the TV show etc. He was pushed into the mainstream. Yes he probably would have branched out given the chance but sadly never happened.
he was glam before anyone knew what it was. he was into punk before anyone else. check out his song "rip off". it's a total punk rock song! i love him! KALMIYH.
@@silvergirlie Totally agree. I am a fan. It’s his latter career that ended up in the mainstream. Fare enough but it’s a shame he got pushed in that direction as I believe he could have been as out there as Bowie got given the chance.
Rocky Horror- one the great works of the 20th century, and still so alive, getting its due at last. Love Sweetshop too, could be filling stadiums still., like Ozzy, if they made [serious music]-great riffs in pop songs.
I half lived it with mj's crowd.😕 The girls rapping on the door that was most of my friends 🤷🏼♀️
Love this documentary! Eternal respect and love for the two! Marc especially 🧠brain power 💞
@3:57 "just as he was going on .... she threw glitter...." WTF....and it landed in perfect symmetric designs beneath each eye...? What a line of rot !
It Wasn't Glam Rock it was GLITTER ROCK...EVERYTHING was GLITTER from the platform shoes to the eye makeup!!! Glam Rock was the eighties....I live in New York and I was there....every show and every party....♥️
Not in the UK it wasn't. Glam rock was early 70s. Americans are always late to the party.
Excellent documentary, thank you for posting. It's a shame about the sound quality though...
How Alice Cooper is omitted from that beggars belief - everyone but! Even include those that declare Alice as their influence! Alice Cooper were the first male glam rock band, the first band to suggest gender confusion. They created 'the rock show' and supported teenage angst that would spurn punk, goth and dark and glam metal. Alice was doing this when Bowie and Bolan were sit-down folk singers in 1968.
man david bowie is so pretty
My foot in both camps.David paid for his funeral Mark had no money his manager made sure of that
Woodstock wasn't a free festival either...... until it was. Same at this festival.
I had to pay for my tickets to Woodstock although it ended up a muddy mess that everybody stormed through
Oh holy crap--I just realised that I legit got picked up by one of the Bay City Rollers when i was like 22? I worked at a music store in New Orleans (this would've been like 1998 or 99), and they were performing somewhere local. I worked in piano sales, and as the band were leaving they walked past my desk and this guy just turned around and started chatting me up. He gave me a backstage pass (maybe a business card?) kind of thing and told me where he was staying. But I was young and (mostly) devoutly Mormon--I had literally never heard of the Bay City Rollers. I didn't know they were even real til I went upstairs to tell some of the guys in the band department what happened and they started laughing at me.
So i guess that's my 'I was nearly a Bay City Rollers (at fifty) groupie' story...?
And to think what I "could've" done with my life...!! :)
This and 'The Decline of Western Civilization Part 2' would make for an amazing midnight double feature!
I had Robert Plant's hair - not any more :(
The golden days before mobiles! Marc for ever so sad most of these people passed 😪🙏
John Bonham - They do say only mad dogs and English men go out in the mid day sun.
A whole lotta rock! This is good. Too bad about the very bad sound... and too bad it ends before the end. Is there a better version somewhere?
Thank you for posting. Too bad about the sound dropping out so often.
WTF with the abrupt ending? Gotta love the comments on this one :)
The Sweet from 1972-1977 were criminally underrated
.. not another "Criminally Underrated" remark...
they were rated.
@@iconicshrubbery I'm thinking everyone of the now million's who use that insipid remark are hoping to be rewarded with endless replies and comments saying? Spot on mate clearly your amazing. I could'nt have described it better. Instead of? FFS can you not reach into your sponge (brain) and say simply? A fab band etc and just leave it there. Anything anything than that cringe.
Bolan
Bowie
Biba
Bryan F
Brian E
Too many times wonderful!!
BIBA!!!!!!,♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️
Those were the days. What a boring life teens are having these days.
The young of now ... they have more freedom to be themselves without judgments on sexuality being the base of who they are..
@@AlianaRegos that is good and true but every youngster I see these days live on a screen of some type and I don't believe that's good.
@@paulhargreaves4345 I’m 17, and I really wish we could be out dancing and playing gigs, but I can’t because sadly nobody does that anymore. I wish they did.
One doesn't have fun under communism.
@@AlianaRegos The problem is that there no longer is a culture and maybe think that what and how you define yourself sexually has a lot to do with programming and propaganda. For a minority like the trans community which is 0.008% they take up a lot of airspace and that is why people think that it is being forced down their throats.
And if you don't agree with it you are persecuted for not "understanding" please!
Bowie was lucky enough to have Angie and the supremely gifted Mick Ronson enhancing the talent that he had in the early days, Bolan had no such luck.
Bolan had a great band but was highly egocentric. In contract, Bowie was very open; he encouraged and embraced others input/talent.
So many mistakes in this. No one "threw" glitter in Marc Bolan's face. He famously applied it himself before going on TOTP, and clearly with glue from the photo used. "The Man Who Sold the World's" dress cover did not "go down well in a country by now used to Marc Bolan's glittering forays..." as it was released in 1970, before "Ride a White Swan" made Bolan famous. And how was "Swan" played at the Isle of Wight Festival in August 1970, when it wasn't yet released? I gave up after 20 minutes.
Same here! Got to 17.46. Drag, because the era is interesting.
The narrator gave me the shits!
Marc gave Steve Dexter D.J a white label of white swan for him to play and he played over and over. Marc gave D.J peel a copy of get it on he never played it end of relationship. Marc put glitter February 1971 hot love.
Ride A White Swan was written by that time. They didn’t play the whole track, at the festival, just bits if I remember correctly. The Man Who Sold The World was released in the UK in April 1971. It was released the previous year in the USofA. Bolan wore the glitter in March 1971. I think you’re getting the UK and USA mixed up.
And pray tell where’s THE REST of the documentary?!?!?
Nothing more scary as a 12-yo boy than to have several hundred, tartan-clad Bay City Roller girlie fans chasing you cause you called their band shit.
My older sister had her wall plastered in Bay city rollers & Abba pics, my brother teased her by calling them the tartan terrors lol
I was almost "pretty" in the days of punk. I was so shy, but women hit on me. They said I was non-threatening. Glory days!
Every generation throws up a new set of heroes. Bowie and Bolan were a reaction to the tough guy denim clad rocker that was perhaps played out. Really though what Angie says was the truth. Bowie was doing all he could for well over 6 years before he began to have larger success. Bowie was using every bit of creativity he could muster to stand out, to be noticed. What was revolutionary was embracing their “feminine” was being pushed more fearlessly than ever. (New York Dolls) It had to be encouraging to people like Marc Almond or Morrisey who could relate. The gay players in rock were begun by Little Richard, continued by Lou Reed, Elton John, and Freddie Mercury and at the end of the day the music took precedence over the players actual orientation. It perhaps liberated the culture. Really it made the straights from the post WW2 generation uncomfortable. And that is ultimately the big goal of every new generation.
This is great. Why is it cut off at the end? Would love to watch the rest of it.
Hello John Pewter Suitor Andrews:
Almost 3/4 of an hour & no mention of Elton Motello (Jet Boy, Jet Girl)???
Cool stuff ❤
Is anyone else having difficulty with the sound on this one? Static, and cutting out?
Rip The White Swan Marc Bolan & Zigg the Wonder Kid David Bowie
nice documentary, unfortunately bad sound; pity that The Tubes were not in it (the very first glamrockers)
I was around at the time and glam-rock seemed, and still does, like it was primarily a publicity stunt and a sell-out for fame. Maybe that's what it took to break out, but it's sad because it actually turned me off to Bowie, who I now regard as a musical genius.
It's like saying Andy Kaufman was a terrible wrestler--which he was--but that was his purpose...he used that format for creating his comedy, which was unprecedented and imaginatively excellent.
My scouser partner was dragged to the Isle of White by his hippy older brother & watched Jimi Hendrix live,
lucky duck.
It's back to the Garage for me.
I heard from Steven Severin. He and the Shees were going to work with Bolan. Didn't work out. Would've been wonderful.
I always thought it was ludicrous Cooper singing about schools out when he was in his mid twenties even in 72 when it was first released!
Rubbish. He's just singing a pop song! You lot in the 21st century put all your social media dissecting of past decades. Singers sing about all ages of peoples. It's not paedophille! I find Social Media disturbing as you go on witch hunts like a pack of hyaenas. Go light a candle..
@@seltaeb3302 What are you going on about I made none of these assumptions I was alive at the time and at school and had these thoughts as I was a 10 year on child. Why was Alice Cooper singing about my school holidays when he was a grown man.
@Marty Gabriel Who are you to tell me then and now what I should feel and understand.
Why couldn't there have been subtitles?? I hate when this happens!
Why are words being censored here????
it's just bad audio. it cuts out from time to time. no censoring. its v annoying though.
@@Shalimar_trailsss ok. Yes, that must be it. I watched it till the end.
Yeah...Captain Sensible! !!
His corkscrew hair!
Lived it 🤬🤪🏴☠️
Woodstock didn't start as a free festival...
AWESOMENESS 😁😎👍👍 BLAST ❤️ FROM THE PAST 💜🙌🌈🦋🦋🙏🌹🌹🌹🗽🇬🇧 THANKYOU SUPERRR DOOPERRR BRAVOOO XD NAMASTE KISSES 🧡 & BIG WARM HUGS FROM ENGLAND 💜🙌💋💋🤩💝☺️💓 ABSOLUTELY THUMBS 🤗 UP INDEED XXXXXXX
It cut dead before the end, disappointing
Angie Bowie is scary.
Always not a fan of Angie Bowie. Ugh.
it ended very abruptly?..was that it?
Looking good doesnt get you paid...
39:20 He looks like the very young Steve Jones
Me love trex * bowie
I'll take 20 year old Paul Rodgers any day! Skinny legend.💚
Don’t know how Nina Myskow has the brass neck to call sweet ugly
18;50... There's that bootleg record.where Marc's...complaining boys are fighting....then he says; " Did you know.....me and Mickey Finn ...are married.....?
Mavid Bowliean.
Interesting docu, but very much of it's time: Hey it's cool to slag prog rock! But what does it say that half the punks interviewed will now admit they liked Pink Floyd, and Toyah is happily married to that old curmudgeon of prog, Robert Fripp? But I hope the rest of the video *that we don't see* manages to come back around to the original point of rock giving kids an outlet to express their identity.
. "Bouwie"... Marc Almond (nut)...... _"Marc Bolan sleeping with the bongo player"_ ..been following Bolan from the beginning ,but never heard such dizzgusting silly rumour....seemingly Almond's personal wet dream ?
Jacky editor throws Marc in with The Osmonds ,David Cassidy ....When I dare to suggest that Marc began catering for the wet panty brigade round '72 , I'm being crucified as "hater".....😥
Now even the Rocky Horror Blow is being reevaluated as Glam's highpoint....
Suzy Quatro , Slade , Roy Wood ,Sweet,......yes.... together with Roxy, Bouwie, Reed , all "Glam"......
Biggest joke of this concoction ....Iggy Pop didn't got one mention....which is the ultimate compliment.
Well put.
28:41 "God knows what"-lol
36:52 Wendy Carlos (HUH!)
Toya , forgets to tell us she is a racist,
I always prefered as Nameof the Punk Band SEX ASSASSIN instead SEX PISTOLS, It's more Provo
Oh Yeah Here came the GIRLZ with PUNK ! Golden Age !
4:19 yes please
Hawkwind!!!
If Captain Sensible can play like Genesis, ELP and Yes , play drums like Collins, keyboard like Emerson or Wakeman, guitar like Hackett or Howe and write incredible music like this, than, maybe he can come back and judge again. Cause he, never made it that big. Sorry mate.
In pratica questa e' la breve storia del cattivo gusto nella musica popolare inglese post-1976. L'ho sempre ascoltata, cercando di non vederne questi discustosi aspetti: per me anche la contestazione DEVE avere la sua eleganza, altrimenti e' uguale a quel che contesta, o anche PEGGIO. E ripeto: sto parlando di musica che ascolto da 40 anni. Peccato. Meglio la musica classica e i valori che le sono sottesi.
Woodstock was not a free festival.
Germaine Greer? Really?!??
Hey what's wrong with songs about wizards and pixies sucker ?? :-)
Black sabbath still the best
Tchaikovsky is sabbath
too bad this tape quality sucks
Johnny Rotten and Capt. Sensible sure looks ridiculous at age 60 talking like an angry 18 year old. His recent rants are as boring as he thought everything else was. Pfft.
That Led Zeppelin singer, with his out of shape body?
Humiliating is puttin u in place
23:25 this seems like a different master mix of Moonage Daydream than I'm used to! What is this from? Lots of reverb and piano! Seems more ethereal.
This is the version by Arnold Corns I think. David recorded it a while before the version that ended up on Ziggy stardust
@@markphipps9463 just looked it up and listened! wow! gorgeous!