SmokeyTA wrote:It is your own criteria. You are, with seemingly no hint of irony, arguing that it should be judged as something else to what it presented itself as. It is you has decided it is a ‘concert’ yet the organisers and the director hasn’t tried to put on a concert, they tried to put on a party. To avoid confusion they told us this is what they aimed to do, why you want it to be something else and why you have decided to judge it as something else god along knows.
As I said, calling something by a different name doesn't change its basic nature. You wouldn't film any other 'party' and broadcast it to the world. I'm sure plenty of actual parties took place after the closing ceremony, but this was a concert that was labelled a party.
SmokeyTA wrote:BTW, have you never been to a party with live music?
Glad you mentioned that, actually. I have been to many parties with live music. I've even provided the live music at several (hundred) parties. On each occasion, the quality of that live music was a big factor (the biggest factor, even) in whether or not people enjoyed the party. Conversely, I most certainly haven't been at a party with live music where we weren't allowed to make judgements regarding the quality of that music purely because it was a party.
SmokeyTA wrote:Yet my niece loved Jessie J and loved her performing a rock song she knew with a bunch old men with funny hair she didnt know. As much as i could happily have done without Jessie J, she could have happily done without Queen.
But Queen were good. Jessie J was not. I can't comment on her in general as this is the first thing I've (knowingly) heard her sing, but it was a very poor version of the song. She obviously can sing, but she should never have been allowed anywhere near 'We Will Rock You'.
SmokeyTA wrote:Ray Davies wasnt poor, Ray Davies was a 68 year old man, there isnt a lot the organisers can do about Ray Davies' age.
He was poor. His voice is shot and he was marginally out of tune in places.
SmokeyTA wrote:Now considering you werent happy that Bowie wasnt there (his choice) what could the organisers do other than either a) put Ray Davies out there as he is, or b) ignored him?
Eh? Where did I say I wasn't happy that Bowie wasn't there? I merely stated that he wasn't, without expressing an opinion either way. I'd sooner the organisers picked people who can actually still cut it. Tom Jones, for example, is of a similar age, but still has a fairly formidable voice (or he did have, last time I heard him).
SmokeyTA wrote:And you are trying to argue you arent a miserable f*cker, yet you would stand up and walk out of a pub because one direction came on. What carefree and happy company you must be.
You're being silly again. I would leave a pub if they played
only One Direction and singers/groups/bands of a similar ilk. Of course I wouldn't get up and walk out if one song came on. Only an idiot would suggest such a thing.
SmokeyTA wrote:but the spice girls arent rubbish, the just dont cater to your tastes.
They
are rubbish
and they don't cater to my tastes. There are plenty of excellent singers out there who don't cater to my tastes. George Michael, for example: I don't like the vast majority of his stuff, but I rate him as easily one of the best vocalists of his generation. He's a phenomenal talent. The Spice Girls are manufactured guff.
SmokeyTA wrote: FOr many people the Spice Girls will have been the highlight and they could take or leave madness, for you the other way around. Rather that moaning that not everything was to your tastes why not be impressed that they managed to cater for something as unbelievably diverse as spice girl fans and madness fans
I'm not moaning. I'm expressing an opinion on the concert. If I was organising it, I'd probably have included at least some of the same names - certainly the likes of One Direction and Take That - because that's the way to guarantee to broadest appeal. I'm merely stating that I didn't find the experience very fulfilling, and that certain elements of the show I feel could have been handled better or omitted altogether (the Queen/Jessie J thing and Davies, for example).
SmokeyTA wrote:Similarly, you wouldnt really criticise your 406 estate for being a rubbish rally car when it was advertised as a family car, you bought it to be a family car and it does a perfectly servicable job as a family car
But that wasn't the point. The point was that calling something a 'party' when it's obviously a concert, doesn't make it a party.