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The Wire's '60 Concerts That Shook The World'
Ai-Tal - Tabyik Festival, Yakutsk, Siberia, 1993
The Aka Pygmies - Barbican, London, UK, 2003 Maryanne Amacher - Performing Garage, New York, USA, 1993 Anoyo no dekigoto - Adelphi, Leeds, UK, 2003 Arditti Quartet/Luigi Nono - Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival, UK, 1995 Ascension - Louisiana, Bristol, UK, 1994 Autechre - ATP, Camber Sands, UK, 2001 Derek Bailey Verses Merry Pranksters - The Spitz, London, UK, 1997 Big Black - ULU, London, UK, 1987 The Birthday Party - Xtremes, Brighton, UK, 1981 Jacques Brel - Paris, France, 1966 Don Cherrys Nu - People Theatre, Newcastle, UK, 1987 The Clean - The Empire Tavern, Dunedin, New Zealand, 1981 Coil Presents Time Machines - Royal Festival Hall, London, UK, 2000 Ornette Coleman - Carnegie Hall, New York, USA, 2003 Concerto For Voice And The Machinery - ICA, London, UK, 1984 Tony Conrad - Lumiere Cinema, Christchurch, New Zealand, 1997 Crime And The City Solution - London, UK, 1990 Cut Chemist & J-Roc - Justice League, San Francisco, USA, 1999 The Fall - Surrey University, Guildford, UK, 1983 Faust - Royal Festival Hall, London, UK, 2001 Morton Feldman/Stephen Whittington:Triadic Memories - Performing Arts Technology Unit Studio, Adelaide, Australia, 1998 Fennesz - Cats Cradle, Chapel Hill, USA, 2000 Fushitsusha - Roskilde Festival, Denmark, 2003 Future Sound Of London & Robert Fripp - BBC Radio 1 Essential Mix, UK, 1993 Alastair Galbraith - Regent Theatre 24hr Book Sale, Dunedin, New Zealand, 1988 Godspeed You! Black Emperor - Union Chapel, London, UK, 2000 Grateful Dead - Charlotte Coliseum, Charlotte, USA, 1995 Happy Mondays - Limelight, Belfast, UK, 1989 Hula/Cabaret Voltaire - Various Venues, Sheffield, UK, 1985-88 Jandek - Instal, Glasgow, UK, 2005 Usta Mashkoor Ali Khan & Ustad Hafizullah Khan - Hazrat Alludin Sabris Shrine, Dehra Dun, India, 2001 Laibach - Thermoelectric Power Station, Tabovlje, Yugoslavia, 1990 Last Exit - Shaw Theatre, London, UK, 1987 Live Listening Tour - True Vine, Balitmore, USA, 2004 Merzbow - Upstairs At The Garage, London, UK, 1995 My Bloody Valentine - The Empire Cleveland, USA, 1992 Nico - Squat Theater, New York, USA, 1980 William Parker - Kaffa House, Washington DC, USA 1996 Dean Roberts - Exeter Dining Room, Adelaide, Australia, 2006 The Roots - Lakota, Bristol, UK, 1997 Royal Trux - The Point, Oxford, UK, 1999 Sahko night - Quirky Club, London, UK, 1994 Schooly D/Public Enemy - 1000 Boomboxes and Car Stereos, New York, Usa, 1985-86 70: The Alternative Concept featuring Machel Montano & Xtatic + Maximus Dan + Junko - The Forum, London, UK, 2004 Nina Simone - Palais De Congres, Paris, France, 2001 Patti Smith & Friends - Sheperds Bush Empire, London, UK, 1996 Sonic Youth - Kilburn National Ballroom, London, UK, 1989 Stars - Corn Exchange, Cambridge, UK, 1972 The Stooges - ATP, Minehead, UK, 2006 Sun Ra - Ronnie Scotts, London, UK, 1993 Swans - Berkeley Square, Berkeley, USA, 1995 Teenage Jesus & The Jerks - Max's Kansas City, New York, USA, 1978 James Blood Ulmer/Calvin Weston/Amin Ali/Jamaaladeen Tucuma/Byard Lancaster - Tritone, Philadelphia, USA, 2003 Masayoshi Urabe - All Angels Church, London, UK, 2001 Voyages On Vinlandia Tour - 2037 Frankford Ave, Philadelphia, USA, 2005 I Wayne + Bascom X + Turbulence + Jah Mason - Stratford Rex, London, UK, 2005 La Monte Young & Marian Zazeela - The Dream House: Eight Years of Sound And Light, New York, USA, 1993 Thalia Zedek - Grace Emily Hotel, Adelaide, Australia, 2005 :zoviet*france: - Wilder Hall Disco, Orberlin, USA, 1991 |
Who the fuck are the first 8 bands? How did they shake the world if I've never heard of them??!! I demand answers!!
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Thalia Zedek?? I saw her twice this year. SHe's not that good. Not at all. This list is mostly bullshit!! WHere are the Beatles?? Where is Hendrix?? Where are the Stones??
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too arty for the farty power pop of the beat(le)s
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that is a terrible list
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wow, i wasn't expecting that one of the ones mentioned would have been one that I and about like what 20 people here saw |
My list would be one concert long:
Jimi Hendrix- live at Woodstock That's it. There is no other concert ever as important. Unless they mean rocked as in Rock'n'rolled the world. Then any of those huge benefit concerts live AID would be up there, as well as live concerts on DVD/video/movie/tv that were really good. All those concerts are just ones that The Wires writers were at and enjoyed a lot. But how many people have heard about any of those specific concerts, or seen footage of because they were so famous? |
I have some shows from the same tours as some of these listings. I'm not so sure what the rationale is behind some of these choices, but one hopes it would be interesting.
For instance, why would Grateful Dead's pick be Charlotte '95? Is this the concert that theoretically supercharged the Phish/DMB/Widespread Panic set, Jerry's last great show, or what? It seems to me that The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test (6/07/69) at Berkeley Commons (or the closing of Winterland, playing at the pyramids in '72...on & on) would make the list instead of Charlotte '95. Anyway, this is but one case of many that, for me, makes the list suspect and I feel I could make a better one. Like SpectralJulian points out, there's no Jimi Hendrix Experience at Woodstock (or Monterey, even). ...The Beatles playing Ed Sullivan Theatre, Shea Stadium, the farewell rooftop concert at Abbey Road Studios...hello? Thanks for the topic though, jimbrim; it's nevertheless a fun list, cool thread, & good times. |
that list sucks. it sounds like the 60 greatest shows one dude went to in his lifetime and shook his world, but hardly THE world.
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apparently they've never heard of Radiohead either....
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not many fans of Wire Magazine it seems
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well it's a list of shows that shook the world of people who wrote for the wire. how could people possibly list shows that they haven't been to? fucking hendrix at woodstock... have a good time at that one did you, idiot child?!
i saw two of those shows (stooges & godspeed) and i wouldn't have included either in my list of pivotal musical experiences. |
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Its in alphebetical order though. i think Wire are over pretentious to be honest, no way did Derek Bailey or Autechre 'shake' the world. But you cant expect a 'pop' top 60 gigs in the list. Jimi Hendrix and The Beatles dont have a chance. |
hey the wire caters to a specific set of people with specific tastes. if people wanted a list w/hendrix they could buy "classic rock magazine" or something. they are going to include bands that the people who buy the mag can relate to, and if they haven't heard certain bands, they can check them out on the basis of them being on the list. in my opinion it's a fine list.
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Yes, each of these shows is picked by a different Wire writer or musician in some cases. It's based on their individual experience and the text at the beginning of the article makes it clear that whatever show they picked, they had to be there. Reading peoples personal epiphanies is much more interesting to me than a bunch of journos deciding for everyone else what the most important performances were.
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I didn't read the list. I'm just amused by the phrase "Shook The World".
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60 of The Wire's writers were asked to pick one concert each that has a significance in their own history. Writers for The Wire are mostly pretentious little fuckers, so it's a pretentious list.
A few years ago they did a list of "Albums That Shook The World". That was pretty damn pretentious too. Quote:
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That Ai-Tal gig was pretty awesome.
Hey there, naysayers, read the article. It's a great article, one of my favourite ones for the Wire for ages. It entirely hammers home the point that 1) a gig is an intensely personal experience - for instance, sonicl described NNCK at ATP as 'pretentious artschool bollocks' (or words to that effect), whereas many here thought it was top. My 'best ever' gig would be different to yours, even if it was the same gig. 2) The general list of 'best ofs' are always based on an assumption that all experiences are universally 'good'. I know a few people who saw the pistols in '77 and thought they were shit. None of you were there for the so-called 'best ever' gigs by the Beatles, Hendrix, Stones etc, so it's entirely ridiciulous to suggest, even if you've seen the DVD, that you're opinion on something that you weren't present for is somehow the right one. |
Glad someone has seen some sense in this whole article.Christ!Sometimes you lot come accross as a bunch of whining indie kids!It's a fucking magazine and it's one of the many lists that appear on it.Can you not put things into perspective and enjoy the fact that at least they try to do something different from the many rubbish 'Best Of' nonsenses that you read day in -day out?
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I am mildly shocked to learn that Fushitsusha played Roskilde of all places in 2003. I somehow must've missed that on MTV. But then again they had Merzbow too last year.
Of course gigs are always personal experiences... and if these gigs are slected from personal experience of the magazine's writers and musicians then it entirely explains why practically all of the world shakening concerts happened in the english speaking world and some of them a few decades after the "real thing" (stooges 2006, faust 2001, etc.). It's just that the title "60 concerts that shook the world" is a bit misleading if someone hasn't read the article and just sees this list without any context. I haven't seen the issue this is in yet, but I'll have a look in the kiosks on monday... also to see what they wrote about ATP. The only gig on this list I've been to myself were the Stooges at ATP, provided whoever mentioned it meant the Sunday gig and not the Friday one. I had a great time, but it didn't shook my world or would end up on my personal "best of" list. |
I think it's more opinion than anything. Maybe that list only applies to their audience? Or has someone already said that!
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This surely was one of the greatest concerts ever
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZWmf7r_37eA Search for Devo 1978 |
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its too bad that the real woodstock material never materialized beyond bootlegs. Like the two tune's that Larry Lee sang on, while Jimi played rhythm, as well as the FULL version of Hear My Train A Comin, with Larry's solo, and VoodooChile (slight return) also with Larry's solo....... not too mention that all audio versions available have the classic "Hendrix-Mitchell-Cox". Jimi's whole vibe with that group was to have a more organic, communal band, but the spin doctors fucked it all up. |
The Monterey Pop Festival in June 1967 was the first really big music festival; it was organized by San Francisco & Monterey, CA counter-culture locals and oh yeah, The Beatles and The Beach Boys pretty much funded the whole thing even though they didn't perform. The bands that did perform, did so for free with no problem (unlike Woodstock). It was Paul McCartney that insisted that Hendrix, a guitarist few had heard, headline the last night of the event. And the rest is, as we know, music history, with Jimi performing his "erotic sacrifice" and burning his Stratocaster at the end of the "Wild Thing" closer.
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the rage against the machine writer was being publically stoned that day. |
black flag at City Gardens in Trenton NJ opening for Venom 85 i think?
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Sounds insane. You didn't perhaps attend this bacchanale personally, did you?
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A list made by a bunch of trendies.
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I don't even agree with the picks on that list that i was AT.
(all two of them...) They were good, but I can think of much better (more "earth-shaking") shows those same artists played... But I suppose one persons Best Live Experience EVER is another persons average night out. |
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